Grenville Advocate
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The Grenville Advocate served the district in later half of the 1800s.
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.
[edit] Archives
Microfilm copies of the Grenville Advocate held at the State Library of Victoria span 12 March 1862 to 4 December 1875.
Mircrofilm 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.