Birmingham Gazette
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The Birmingham Gazette, known for much of its existence as Aris's Birmingham Gazette, was a newspaper that was published and circulated in Birmingham, England from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries. Founded as a weekly publication in 1741, it moved to daily production in 1862, and was absorbed by the Birmingham Post in 1956.
[edit] History
The Gazette was founded as the Birmingham Gazette and General Correspondent by Thomas Aris, a stationer from London who had moved to Birmingham in May 1740 and started a bookselling and printing business in the High Street. The first edition was issued on 16 November 1741, just under ten years after the town's first known newspaper, the Birmingham Journal.[1] By 1743 it had absorbed its rival Warwick and Staffordshire Gazette - which had been founded in London in 1737 and moved to Birmingham in 1741 - and become the town's only newspaper.[2]
Although decried by its rivals as "Mere register of sales or ... broker's guide" due its high number of advertisements, Asa Briggs described the eighteenth century Gazette as "one of the most lucrative and important provincial papers, ranking with the Liverpool Mercury and the Edinburgh Courant".[3]
[edit] References
- ^ Newspaper history in the West Midlands region. NEWSPLAN West Midlands (2005). Retrieved on 2008-05-26.
- ^ (1964) "Economic and Social History: Social History before 1815", in Stephens, W. B.: A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 7: The City of Birmingham. University of London & History of Parliament Trust, 209-222. Retrieved on 2008-05-26.
- ^ Money, John (1971). "TAVERNS, COFFEE HOUSES AND CLUBS: LOCAL POLITICS AND POPULAR ARTICULACY IN THE BIRMINGHAM AREA, IN THE AGE OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION". The Historical Journal xiv (I): 15-47.