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The Advertiser (Adelaide)

The Advertiser is a daily tabloid format newspaper based in the city of Adelaide, South Australia. First published as a broadsheet named The South Australian Advertiser on 12 July 1858,[1] it is currently a tabloid printed from Monday to Saturday. The Advertiser came under the ownership of Keith Murdoch in the 1950s, and the full ownership of Rupert Murdoch in 1987. It is a publication of Advertiser Newspapers Pty Ltd (ADV), a subsidiary of News Corp Australia, itself a subsidiary of News Corp. Through much of the 20th century, The Advertiser was Adelaide's morning broadsheet, The News the afternoon tabloid, with The Sunday Mail covering weekend sport, and Messenger Newspapers community news. The head office was relocated from a former premises in King William Street, to a new News Corp office complex, known as Keith Murdoch House at 31 Waymouth Street.

The Advertiser
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge on front page of The Advertiser on 23 July 2013
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatTabloid
(since November 1997)
Owner(s)Advertiser Newspapers (News Corp Australia)
Founder(s)Rev John Henry Barrow
Editor-in-chiefMatt Deighton
EditorMatt Deighton
Founded1858 as The South Australian Advertiser
Headquarters31 Waymouth Street,
Adelaide, SA, Australia
Websitewww.adelaidenow.com.au

History

 
The office of The Advertiser in Waymouth Street, Adelaide

The South Australian Advertiser

An early major daily colonial newspaper, The Adelaide Times, ceased publication on 9 May 1858. Shortly afterwards, Reverend John Henry Barrow, a former editor of the South Australian Register founded the morning newspaper The South Australian Advertiser and a companion weekly The South Australian Weekly Chronicle. The original owners were Barrow and Charles Henry Goode, and the first issues were published on 12 July 1858 and 17 July 1858 respectively.[1][2][3] It initially consisted of four pages, each of seven columns, and cost 4 pence.[4]

In 1863 the company started an afternoon newspaper The Express as a competitor to The Telegraph, an afternoon/evening daily paper independent of both The Advertiser and the South Australian Register.[5] The company was then re-formed, effective 9 September 1864, with additional shareholders Philip Henry Burden, John Baker, Captain Scott, James Counsell, Thomas Graves and others.[6] Burden, secretary of the company, died in 1864, and Barrow, whose wife had died in 1856, married his widow in 1865, thus owning together a quarter of the company. In December 1866, the syndicate bought the now defunct The Telegraph (by this time renamed The Daily Telegraph with a morning edition and a weekend Weekly Mail) at auction, and incorporated it with The Express to form The Express and Telegraph.[5]

In 1871, when the shareholders were Barrow, Goode, Robert Stuckey, Thomas Graves, William Parkin, Thomas King, James Counsell, and George Williams Chinner, the partnership was dissolved and the business was carried on by Barrow and King.[7] J. H. Barrow died on 22 August 1874, and Thomas King ran the papers for himself and Mrs. Barrow for about five years.[5] In 1879 a new firm was created, consisting of Thomas King, Fred Burden (son of P. H. Burden and adopted son of J. H. Barrow), and John Langdon Bonython. In July 1884, Thomas King dropped out, and the firm of Burden & Bonython was formed to run the paper.[5]

The Advertiser

 
The Advertiser Building on King William Street, Adelaide, 1936

On 1 April 1889, the main publication was re-branded with an abbreviated title, The Advertiser.[1] In December 1891, Burden retired, and sold his share of the company to Bonython,[8] who, from 1894 to 1929, became the sole proprietor of The Advertiser. As well as being a talented newspaper editor, he also supported the movement towards the Federation of Australia. Later, in 1923, after a run of 60 years, The Express was stopped just as its renamed rival, The News, was starting. On 12 January 1929, The Mail announced that Bonython had sold The Advertiser for £1,250,000 to a group of Melbourne financiers[9] The Herald and Weekly Times, an external media company, now had the controlling stake, but Bonython still retained a 48.7% interest. Bonython then retired from his newspapers in 1929, after 65 years' service,[10] and his son, John Lavington Bonython, became editor.[11] In February 1931, in the wake of the Great Depression, The Advertiser took over and shut down its ailing competitors, The Register (published 1836-1931), The Chronicle (Register's Saturday sister publication), and The Observer (published 1843-1931), briefly renaming itself for seven months as The Advertiser and Register.[12]

News Corp Australia

On the death of Keith Murdoch in 1952, ownership of The News and The Mail passed to his son Rupert Murdoch via News Limited. Following the handover, and in response to suggestions of external influences from Victoria made by competing newspaper The Mail, the Chairman of The Advertiser's board published its policy in The Advertiser as follows:

"It is the same today as when the late Sir Langdon Bonython was in sole control. It is based upon a profound pride and belief in South Australia, and the system of private enterprise which has made this State what it is."[13]

On 24 October 1953 the company launched the Sunday Advertiser in direct competition to News Limited's The Mail,[14] but failed to outreach its rival,[15] though no doubt affecting its profitability. It ceased publication five years or so later, after which the by then renamed Sunday Mail advertised itself as a joint publication of Advertiser Newspapers and News Ltd., and incorporated many of the Sunday Advertiser regular features. It had also introduced colour graphics on the comics page (rather primitive by today's standards), but this was dropped shortly after joint publication commenced.[citation needed]

In addition, The Messenger, published since 1951 was partially purchased in 1962, and fully owned by 1983. When Murdoch acquired The Herald and Weekly Times in 1987, he also acquired the remaining 48.7% share of The Advertiser.[16] He sold The News in 1987, and it was closed in 1992. Murdoch then changed the format of The Advertiser from a broadsheet to a tabloid in November 1997, and the masthead and content font and layout was modernised in September 2009.[17]

Circulation

The Advertiser is available for purchase throughout South Australia and some towns and regions in New South Wales, Victoria and the Northern Territory located near or adjacent to the South Australia state border such as Broken Hill, Mildura, Nhill and Alice Springs. According to The Advertiser's website, the newspaper is read by over 580,000 people each weekday, and by more than 740,000 people each Saturday.[citation needed] Circulation figures reported in May 2016 by Roy Morgan Research showed a continuing decline in readership, of 324,000 on weekdays, and 371,000 on Saturdays.[18]

The Advertiser's website, adelaidenow.com.au, was rated by third-party web analytics providers Alexa and SimilarWeb as, respectively, the 268th and 313rd most visited website in Australia, as of August 2015.[19][20] SimilarWeb rates the site as the 29th most visited news website in Australia, attracting almost 1.8 million visitors per month.[20][21] In 2015, along with other News Corp websites, The Advertiser's website adopted a paywall with non-subscribers being locked out of "premium" content.[22]

Notable personnel

Personnel at The Advertiser include:

Digitisation

The National Library of Australia has digitised, by OCR, photographically archived copies of the following newspapers, accessible through Trove:

  • The South Australian Advertiser – 12 July 1858 Vol. I No. 1 to 30 March 1889 (Vol XXXXI No. 9,500)
  • The Adelaide Express 2 December 1863 (Vol 1. No. 3) to 29 December 1866 (Vol. IV No. 923)
  • Express and Telegraph from 2 January 1867 (Vol. IV, No. 925) to 3 November 1922 (Vol LIX No. 17,780)
  • The Advertiser – 1 April 1889 (Vol. XXXI No. 9,501) to 20 February 1931 (LXXIII No. 22,579)
  • The Advertiser and The Register
  • The Advertiser – 1 October 1931 (Vol. LXXIV No. 22,769) to 31 December 1954 (Vol. 97 No. 30,019)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c The South Australian Advertiser, published 1858–1889, National Library of Australia, digital newspaper library.
  2. ^ C. M. Sinclair, 'Barrow, John Henry (1817–1874)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 3, Melbourne University Press, 1969, pp 104–105.
  3. ^ "NLA – Australian Newspaper Plan – Australia's most significant 'at risk' newspapers". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 24 August 2008.
  4. ^ "About | The Advertiser". Retrieved 15 February 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d A. T. Saunders (19 July 1921). "A Newspaper's History". The Advertiser. South Australia. p. 10. Retrieved 31 May 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  6. ^ "Interesting People". The Mail. Adelaide. 1 June 1912. p. 2 Section: Second section. Retrieved 4 April 2013 – via National Library of Australia.
  7. ^ "Dissolution of Partnership: Special Notice". The South Australian Advertiser. Adelaide. 2 December 1871. p. 2. Retrieved 4 April 2013 – via National Library of Australia.
  8. ^ W. B. Pitcher, Bonython, Sir John Langdon (1848–1939), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 7, Melbourne University Press, 1979, pp 339–341
  9. ^ "Sir Langdon Bonython Sells 'The Advertiser' for More Than £1,000,000". The Mail. Trove (trove.nla.gov.au). 12 January 1929. p. 1. Retrieved 17 June 2012.
  10. ^ Serle, Percival (1949). "Bonython, John Langdon". Dictionary of Australian Biography. Sydney: Angus and Robertson. Retrieved 19 November 2008.
  11. ^ W. B. Pitcher, Bonython, Sir John Lavington (1875–1960), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 7, Melbourne University Press, 1979, pp 341–342.
  12. ^ "South Australia Online Historical Newspapers – Online Historical Newspapers". sites.google.com. Retrieved 15 February 2018.
  13. ^ "The Newspapers of South Australia" The Advertiser (24 November 1953). Retrieved 2 January 2014.
  14. ^ Rod Kirkpatrick. "Press Timeline". Australian Newspaper History Group. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  15. ^ "Company Meeting". The Advertiser (Adelaide). Vol. 97, no. 29, 942. South Australia. 1 October 1954. p. 8. Retrieved 1 June 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  16. ^ "News Corp moves to 'tie up a few loose ends'" The Canberra Times (2 September 1987). Retrieved 2014-01-02.
  17. ^ Evans, Matt. "Page, masthead re-design revitalises a newspaper brand". INMA. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  18. ^ Messenger newspapers to reduce home deliveries InDaily, 6 May 2016. Retrieved 25 September 2017.
  19. ^ "adelaidenow.com.au Site Overview". Alexa. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
  20. ^ a b "Adelaidenow.com.au Analytics". SimilarWeb. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
  21. ^ . SimilarWeb. Archived from the original on 25 August 2015. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
  22. ^ Media Week: Jars, master media agency & paywalls InDaily, 15 May 2015. Retrieved 25 September 2017.

External links

  • Official site
  • The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1889 – 1931) at Trove
  • The South Australian Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1858 – 1889) at Trove

advertiser, adelaide, advertiser, daily, tabloid, format, newspaper, based, city, adelaide, south, australia, first, published, broadsheet, named, south, australian, advertiser, july, 1858, currently, tabloid, printed, from, monday, saturday, advertiser, came,. The Advertiser is a daily tabloid format newspaper based in the city of Adelaide South Australia First published as a broadsheet named The South Australian Advertiser on 12 July 1858 1 it is currently a tabloid printed from Monday to Saturday The Advertiser came under the ownership of Keith Murdoch in the 1950s and the full ownership of Rupert Murdoch in 1987 It is a publication of Advertiser Newspapers Pty Ltd ADV a subsidiary of News Corp Australia itself a subsidiary of News Corp Through much of the 20th century The Advertiser was Adelaide s morning broadsheet The News the afternoon tabloid with The Sunday Mail covering weekend sport and Messenger Newspapers community news The head office was relocated from a former premises in King William Street to a new News Corp office complex known as Keith Murdoch House at 31 Waymouth Street The AdvertiserThe Duke and Duchess of Cambridge on front page of The Advertiser on 23 July 2013TypeDaily newspaperFormatTabloid since November 1997 Owner s Advertiser Newspapers News Corp Australia Founder s Rev John Henry BarrowEditor in chiefMatt DeightonEditorMatt DeightonFounded1858 as The South Australian AdvertiserHeadquarters31 Waymouth Street Adelaide SA AustraliaWebsitewww wbr adelaidenow wbr com wbr au Contents 1 History 1 1 The South Australian Advertiser 1 2 The Advertiser 1 3 News Corp Australia 2 Circulation 3 Notable personnel 4 Digitisation 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit The office of The Advertiser in Waymouth Street Adelaide The South Australian Advertiser Edit An early major daily colonial newspaper The Adelaide Times ceased publication on 9 May 1858 Shortly afterwards Reverend John Henry Barrow a former editor of the South Australian Register founded the morning newspaper The South Australian Advertiser and a companion weekly The South Australian Weekly Chronicle The original owners were Barrow and Charles Henry Goode and the first issues were published on 12 July 1858 and 17 July 1858 respectively 1 2 3 It initially consisted of four pages each of seven columns and cost 4 pence 4 In 1863 the company started an afternoon newspaper The Express as a competitor to The Telegraph an afternoon evening daily paper independent of both The Advertiser and the South Australian Register 5 The company was then re formed effective 9 September 1864 with additional shareholders Philip Henry Burden John Baker Captain Scott James Counsell Thomas Graves and others 6 Burden secretary of the company died in 1864 and Barrow whose wife had died in 1856 married his widow in 1865 thus owning together a quarter of the company In December 1866 the syndicate bought the now defunct The Telegraph by this time renamed The Daily Telegraph with a morning edition and a weekend Weekly Mail at auction and incorporated it with The Express to form The Express and Telegraph 5 In 1871 when the shareholders were Barrow Goode Robert Stuckey Thomas Graves William Parkin Thomas King James Counsell and George Williams Chinner the partnership was dissolved and the business was carried on by Barrow and King 7 J H Barrow died on 22 August 1874 and Thomas King ran the papers for himself and Mrs Barrow for about five years 5 In 1879 a new firm was created consisting of Thomas King Fred Burden son of P H Burden and adopted son of J H Barrow and John Langdon Bonython In July 1884 Thomas King dropped out and the firm of Burden amp Bonython was formed to run the paper 5 The Advertiser Edit The Advertiser Building on King William Street Adelaide 1936 On 1 April 1889 the main publication was re branded with an abbreviated title The Advertiser 1 In December 1891 Burden retired and sold his share of the company to Bonython 8 who from 1894 to 1929 became the sole proprietor of The Advertiser As well as being a talented newspaper editor he also supported the movement towards the Federation of Australia Later in 1923 after a run of 60 years The Express was stopped just as its renamed rival The News was starting On 12 January 1929 The Mail announced that Bonython had sold The Advertiser for 1 250 000 to a group of Melbourne financiers 9 The Herald and Weekly Times an external media company now had the controlling stake but Bonython still retained a 48 7 interest Bonython then retired from his newspapers in 1929 after 65 years service 10 and his son John Lavington Bonython became editor 11 In February 1931 in the wake of the Great Depression The Advertiser took over and shut down its ailing competitors The Register published 1836 1931 The Chronicle Register s Saturday sister publication and The Observer published 1843 1931 briefly renaming itself for seven months as The Advertiser and Register 12 News Corp Australia Edit On the death of Keith Murdoch in 1952 ownership of The News and The Mail passed to his son Rupert Murdoch via News Limited Following the handover and in response to suggestions of external influences from Victoria made by competing newspaper The Mail the Chairman of The Advertiser s board published its policy in The Advertiser as follows It is the same today as when the late Sir Langdon Bonython was in sole control It is based upon a profound pride and belief in South Australia and the system of private enterprise which has made this State what it is 13 On 24 October 1953 the company launched the Sunday Advertiser in direct competition to News Limited s The Mail 14 but failed to outreach its rival 15 though no doubt affecting its profitability It ceased publication five years or so later after which the by then renamed Sunday Mail advertised itself as a joint publication of Advertiser Newspapers and News Ltd and incorporated many of the Sunday Advertiser regular features It had also introduced colour graphics on the comics page rather primitive by today s standards but this was dropped shortly after joint publication commenced citation needed In addition The Messenger published since 1951 was partially purchased in 1962 and fully owned by 1983 When Murdoch acquired The Herald and Weekly Times in 1987 he also acquired the remaining 48 7 share of The Advertiser 16 He sold The News in 1987 and it was closed in 1992 Murdoch then changed the format of The Advertiser from a broadsheet to a tabloid in November 1997 and the masthead and content font and layout was modernised in September 2009 17 Circulation EditThe Advertiser is available for purchase throughout South Australia and some towns and regions in New South Wales Victoria and the Northern Territory located near or adjacent to the South Australia state border such as Broken Hill Mildura Nhill and Alice Springs According to The Advertiser s website the newspaper is read by over 580 000 people each weekday and by more than 740 000 people each Saturday citation needed Circulation figures reported in May 2016 by Roy Morgan Research showed a continuing decline in readership of 324 000 on weekdays and 371 000 on Saturdays 18 The Advertiser s website adelaidenow com au was rated by third party web analytics providers Alexa and SimilarWeb as respectively the 268th and 313rd most visited website in Australia as of August 2015 19 20 SimilarWeb rates the site as the 29th most visited news website in Australia attracting almost 1 8 million visitors per month 20 21 In 2015 along with other News Corp websites The Advertiser s website adopted a paywall with non subscribers being locked out of premium content 22 Notable personnel EditPersonnel at The Advertiser include Sir John Langdon Bonython editor Sir John Lavington Bonython management Michael Atchison OAM cartoonist Natalie von Bertouch Nick Cater Alfred Thomas Chandler Annabel Crabb Tanya Denver Sidney Downer Brady Haran OAM Andrew Kirkpatrick Pat Oliphant Tory Shepherd Frederick Samuel WallisDigitisation EditThe National Library of Australia has digitised by OCR photographically archived copies of the following newspapers accessible through Trove The South Australian Advertiser 12 July 1858 Vol I No 1 to 30 March 1889 Vol XXXXI No 9 500 The Adelaide Express 2 December 1863 Vol 1 No 3 to 29 December 1866 Vol IV No 923 Express and Telegraph from 2 January 1867 Vol IV No 925 to 3 November 1922 Vol LIX No 17 780 The Advertiser 1 April 1889 Vol XXXI No 9 501 to 20 February 1931 LXXIII No 22 579 The Advertiser and The Register The Advertiser 1 October 1931 Vol LXXIV No 22 769 to 31 December 1954 Vol 97 No 30 019 See also Edit Journalism portalList of newspapers in AustraliaReferences Edit a b c The South Australian Advertiser published 1858 1889 National Library of Australia digital newspaper library C M Sinclair Barrow John Henry 1817 1874 Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 3 Melbourne University Press 1969 pp 104 105 NLA Australian Newspaper Plan Australia s most significant at risk newspapers National Library of Australia Retrieved 24 August 2008 About The Advertiser Retrieved 15 February 2018 a b c d A T Saunders 19 July 1921 A Newspaper s History The Advertiser South Australia p 10 Retrieved 31 May 2016 via National Library of Australia Interesting People The Mail Adelaide 1 June 1912 p 2 Section Second section Retrieved 4 April 2013 via National Library of Australia Dissolution of Partnership Special Notice The South Australian Advertiser Adelaide 2 December 1871 p 2 Retrieved 4 April 2013 via National Library of Australia W B Pitcher Bonython Sir John Langdon 1848 1939 Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 7 Melbourne University Press 1979 pp 339 341 Sir Langdon Bonython Sells The Advertiser for More Than 1 000 000 The Mail Trove trove nla gov au 12 January 1929 p 1 Retrieved 17 June 2012 Serle Percival 1949 Bonython John Langdon Dictionary of Australian Biography Sydney Angus and Robertson Retrieved 19 November 2008 W B Pitcher Bonython Sir John Lavington 1875 1960 Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 7 Melbourne University Press 1979 pp 341 342 South Australia Online Historical Newspapers Online Historical Newspapers sites google com Retrieved 15 February 2018 The Newspapers of South Australia The Advertiser 24 November 1953 Retrieved 2 January 2014 Rod Kirkpatrick Press Timeline Australian Newspaper History Group Retrieved 1 June 2016 Company Meeting The Advertiser Adelaide Vol 97 no 29 942 South Australia 1 October 1954 p 8 Retrieved 1 June 2016 via National Library of Australia News Corp moves to tie up a few loose ends The Canberra Times 2 September 1987 Retrieved 2014 01 02 Evans Matt Page masthead re design revitalises a newspaper brand INMA Retrieved 16 February 2018 Messenger newspapers to reduce home deliveries InDaily 6 May 2016 Retrieved 25 September 2017 adelaidenow com au Site Overview Alexa Retrieved 2 August 2015 a b Adelaidenow com au Analytics SimilarWeb Retrieved 2 August 2015 Top 50 sites in Australia for News And Media SimilarWeb Archived from the original on 25 August 2015 Retrieved 2 August 2015 Media Week Jars master media agency amp paywalls InDaily 15 May 2015 Retrieved 25 September 2017 External links EditOfficial site The Advertiser Adelaide SA 1889 1931 at Trove The South Australian Advertiser Adelaide SA 1858 1889 at Trove Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Advertiser Adelaide amp oldid 1104205849, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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