Barossa and Light Herald

The Herald (also styled as Barossa Herald, Barossa and Light Herald, or Barossa & Light Herald) is a weekly newspaper published in Tanunda, South Australia. With its earliest beginnings in 1860, it has been published under the Herald banner since 2005. It was later sold to Rural Press, and is now a member of the Fairfax Media group.

History

The Barossa and Light Herald began publication on 10 May 1951 after Leslie Tilbrook (who had owned the Kapunda Herald since September 1923) sold the newspaper.[1] A new publication was then created by the merger of:

  1. Kapunda Herald (1860-1951): This publication began life as the Northern Star (1860-1863), the first English-language newspaper in regional South Australia.[2] It then transformed into the Kapunda Herald and Northern Intelligencer (1864-1877)[3] when it changed ownership. By 1878, and with another new owner, the title was simplified.[4]
  2. Barossa News (1908-1951): The first newspaper to provide any significant local news coverage to the Barossa towns, the Barossa News, was established by John Birdseye Cant, a Western Australian printer and newspaperman.[5] Initially just 500 copies were printed, but after a few years the circulation had risen to 2,500.

In 1981, the newspaper then absorbed the Eudunda Courier (9 February 1922–15 April 1981).[6] The newspaper was later taken over by the Rural Press in the 1990s and is now part of the Fairfax Media group.[5] In May 2005 the title was again shortened, this time to simply Herald, though the longer variants of the previous name (Barossa Herald, Barossa and Light Herald, or Barossa & Light Herald) are commonly used as well.

Distribution

In 2012, the Herald claimed the largest circulation for a country newspaper in South Australia at 21,400 copies distributed weekly.[5] By 2018, the average issue readership for the print version was calculated to be 29,000 [7] Like other Fairfax Media publications, the newspaper is also available online.[8]

Digitisation

The State Library of South Australia carries microfiche copies of older versions of the newspaper.[9]

gollark: Maybe I should run it on 1908254717975918 incredibly low-resource VMs, for purposes.
gollark: Does that actually *work*, over slow WAN networks?
gollark: Is that secure?
gollark: Not "oops, we accidentally made something exactly like a human but it's in a computer and it doesn't like us".
gollark: The main thing we probably have to worry about is misaligned things being programmed with goals like "ensure there is no mess on the floor" removing the entire floor, and such.

References

  1. "About Us | Barossa & Light Herald". www.barossaherald.com.au. Retrieved 2018-02-28.
  2. "SA Memory: Kapunda Herald". State Library of SA. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  3. "Personalities". Quiz (Adelaide newspaper). XII (603). South Australia. 21 March 1901. p. 6. Retrieved 6 July 2016 via National Library of Australia.
  4. Major shareholders were David James M.P., F. W. Young M.P., W. D. Taylor, and C. B. O'Reilly.
  5. Laube, Anthony. "LibGuides: SA Newspapers: A-B". guides.slsa.sa.gov.au. Retrieved 2018-02-28.
  6. The Eudunda courier [newspaper: microform]: and Murray Flats advertiser. Eudunda [S. Aust.]: H.J. Weckert. 1922.
  7. "Barossa and Light Herald - Fairfax Media ACM Ad Centre". Fairfax Media ACM Ad Centre. Retrieved 2018-02-28.
  8. "BAROSSA & LIGHT HERALD eEdition - Login". eedition.fairfaxregional.com.au. Retrieved 2018-02-28.
  9. The Barossa & Light herald [newspaper]. Tanunda [S. Aust.]: J. Liddy for the Barossa News Ltd. 1951.
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