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Echo Boy statue, Cork City Echo seller with distinctive cry. The Evening Echo was first published in 1892. [9] It was launched as an evening paper by Thomas Crosbie, then proprietor of the Cork Examiner. Crosbie had himself joined the Examiner in 1841, taking over as editor—and later owner—after the death of founder John Francis Maguire in ...
In a 2013 court case the company said "everyone in the organisation, was highly attuned to the fact it was a difficult business". [5] On 6 March 2013, TCH went into receivership. Landmark Media Investments Ltd acquired most of the old TCH assets. [6] Thomas Crosbie Holdings was sued by WebPrint Concepts in March 2013.
The Enniscorthy Echo was a local newspaper published once per week (every Wednesday) in County Wexford, Ireland. It was published in colour. It was published in colour. History
Published as The Cork Examiner from 1841 until 1996, the newspaper was renamed The Examiner in 1996. Since 2000 it has been published as The Irish Examiner, to appeal to a wider national readership. [10] The newspaper, along with 'sister paper' the Evening Echo, [11] was part of the Thomas Crosbie Holdings group.
Echo or The Echo may refer to the following newspapers: The Echo, formerly the Evening Echo, founded in 1892 in Cork, Ireland; The Echo, formerly the Tallaght Echo based in Dublin, Ireland; The Echo, a London newspaper published 1868–1905; The Echo, an evening newspaper which serves South Essex
East Cork Journal [73] – launched September 2007. Ceased publication in 2020 during pandemic lockdown. The East Cork News – discontinued in 1991 after several years, was a sister publication of the Waterford News and Star (owned by Examiner/TCH) The East Cork Post – short-lived Youghal based newspaper in the mid-1980s; The East Galway ...
Timothy Quill (9 May 1901 – 10 June 1960) was an Irish Labour Party politician, farmer and a figure in the history of the cooperative movement in Ireland. [1] [2] He was a founder of the City of Cork Co-operative Society (also serving as the society's secretary), [3] and was the editor of The Cork Co-Operator publication. [4]
Cork Courthouse, Anglesea Street, which hosts the criminal division of both the Cork District Court and Circuit Court [19] The seventeen-year-old was arrested on 23 January 2020, [20] and brought before a special sitting of the Cork District Court the following night. [21] He was charged with the murder of Blair by Judge Olann Kelleher.