St Arnaud Mercury

The St Arnaud Mercury was a newspaper first published on 13 February 1864 by the proprietors, Evans and Somerton, who also owned the Maryborough Advertiser.

It was purchased in 1868 by mining entrepreneur Charles Ferris Lewis (1828–1900). He bound yearly volumes and donated them to the Borough Council of St Arnaud, the Shire of Kara Kara and the Mechanics' Institute.[1] The Lewis family owned the paper for 61 years with his two sons, (eponymously named) Charles Ferris and Thomas George, continued the Mercury until 1929.

Printer, journalist and parliamentarian Edward William O'Sullivan (1864–1910) worked as an editor for the paper for about three years before going to The Argus in 1879.

Now serving the region is the North Central News which published a 32-page supplement on 28 September 2005, to mark the 150th anniversary of St Arnaud. Two pages were devoted to articles and photographs related to the history of newspapers in the town and the neighbouring Charlton.

Archives

Excluding a six-day gap from 26 December 1876, the microfilm archive of the newspaper held at the State Library of Victoria spans uninterrupted from 5 March 1864 to 24 December 1976.

gollark: The exact content of my "thoughts" is determined only by an algorithm which optimizes atemporal bee density.
gollark: It was in fact discovered recently that the well-known isomorphism between your statements and the concept of incorrectness was actually an *auto*morphism.
gollark: Clowns *have* been known to communicate via high-frequency electromagnetic signalling, so this isn't entirely ridiculous.
gollark: Become 27 rotating apioforms, Tux1.
gollark: Sounds like what someone afflicted by cognitohazards would say.

See also

References

  1. Gittins, Jean (1974). "Lewis, Charles Ferris (1828–1900)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. 5. Melbourne University Press. ISSN 1833-7538 via National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.


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