Newry Reporter

The Newry Reporter was established in 1867 by James Burns [1] and is the oldest newspaper serving the Newry and Mourne region of Northern Ireland, UK.

History

After the death of James in 1902 the paper was sold to Joseph Wright who operated a printing works in Hill Street.

The paper would be in Wrights ownership for just seven years before a fire at the works saw Wright move to Canada. Robert Sands acquired the rights to the paper and began printing again after a four-month stoppage since the fire. In 1912 the paper moved offices from Clanrye Grain Mills (owned by Sands) to Margaret Street, where it remains to this day. After Sands' death in 1915 the paper was published by the executors until 1927 when Edward Hodgett bought the rights. The paper remains in the Hodgett family to this day.[2]

The paper today

The paper is now published weekly on a Wednesday (although the front cover states Thursday) after trying both bi- & tri-weekly runs throughout its history. The paper's look and feel had a major refresh in May 2007 when it relaunched as a full colour 'compact'. Today its main competitor in the region is the Newry Democrat. According to ABC figures (Jan-Jun 2013) the Newry Reporter sells 9,842 copies per week, with the Newry Democrat's distribution in the region of 6,000 copies.

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References

  1. "About the Newry Reporter". The Newry Reporter. Archived from the original on 2008-07-06. Retrieved 2008-07-25.
  2. "Story Finders - The Newry Reporter". Story Finders (Google Cache).
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