La Liberté (Canada)
La Liberté is a Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada based newspaper founded on May 20, 1913 by Archbishop Adélard Langevin of Saint-Boniface.[1]
Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Tabloid |
Owner(s) | Presse-Ouest Limitée |
Founder(s) | Archbishop Louis-Philippe-Adélard Langevin |
Associate editor | Sophie Gaulin |
Staff writers | Morgane Lemée, Amandine Cange, Mathilde Errard |
Founded | 1913 |
Language | French |
Headquarters | 420, rue des Meurons St. Boniface, Man. R2H 2N9 |
Circulation | 6,200 |
ISSN | 0845-0455 |
Website | https://www.la-liberte.ca |
Free online archives | http://la-liberte.mb.ca/celebrations-du-100e/la-liberte%20numerisee |
La Liberté is currently the only French-speaking provincial weekly newspaper in Manitoba.
History
In 1970, the publication was taken over by Presse-Ouest Limitée which is owned by the francophone cultural organization la Société Franco-Manitobaine (SFM). Its headquarters are at 123 Marion Street in St. Boniface.
The newspaper celebrated its 85th anniversary in 1998. It has a staff of ten people. In 2013, La Liberté celebrated a hundred years of news in Manitoba, en français.[2]
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See also
References
- "Manitoba Newspapers Listing". Histoire Manitobaine. Retrieved October 9, 2015.
- Gwiazda, Woytek (May 23, 2013). "La Liberté: 100 yr old newspaper weekly celebrates with online archive". Radio Canada International. Retrieved September 1, 2019.
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