Grenville Advocate

The Grenville Advocate served the district in later half of the 19th century.

It was established by printer Johann Hermann Vogt who, along with his wife Maria Elisabeth, (née Kellner, a former operatic singer) and family arrived in Melbourne, Australia on the Marco Polo on 6 December 1856. The family lived at Kew before later settling in the Scarsdale district.

Journalist and editor, George Leonard Vogt (1848–1937), also worked on the Grenville Advocate. The son of Johann and Maria, he was born on 1 November 1848 at Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Upon the death of his father in 1864, George was apprenticed to a Ballarat printer. From there he developed a deep interest in political reform movements.

Archives

Microfilm copies of the Grenville Advocate held at the State Library of Victoria span 12 March 1862 to 4 December 1875.

Microfilm for the period 1872 to 1890 are also a part of the newspaper collection preserved by The Woady Yaloak Historical Society. Founded March 1985, the society is located at the old Court House building, Brooke Street, Smythesdale.

gollark: That doesn't really seem incompatible with natural selection on ideas happening.
gollark: Ideas which spread well live. Ideas which don't die. It's not exactly the same.
gollark: Not really.
gollark: Not actually correct fact.
gollark: In some cases the ideas which spread well are just, say, contentious political stuff which you feel like you have to tell everyone.

See also


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