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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 ...
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; L'Echo, a French-language financial newspaper published in Belgium
Cork Independent – free Cork city- and county-based weekly newspaper; The Cork News – free Cork city based weekly newspaper, launched 18 September 2009 [16] The Corkman (owned by Mediahuis [17]) The Douglas Post – weekly magazine for Douglas, Cork [18] The Echo (owned by The Irish Times) The Mallow Star (owned by VSO Publications [19])
Thomas Crosbie Holdings (TCH) was a family-owned media and publishing group based in Cork, Ireland. [1] Its largest publication was once the Irish Examiner , the third largest daily broadsheet newspaper in the Republic of Ireland.
Cork General Post Office (GPO) is a historic post office building in Oliver Plunkett Street in Cork, Ireland.Built on the site of an older theatre, it is one of the few An Post offices in Ireland which still retains the General Post Office moniker from the times when the Irish postal service was under the governance of the British General Post Office.
Through its partnership with the Evening Echo, [16] an award-winning regional newspaper in Cork, [17] Feis Maitiú Corcaigh has garnered a media profile that few other festivals in the Federation enjoy. The newspaper carries daily reports from the festival, and prints an annual supplement containing photographs from throughout the event.
Cork Premier Under-21 A Hurling Championship, known for sponsorship reasons as the Evening Echo Cork County Premier Under-21 A Hurling Championship, is an annual hurling competition organised by the Cork County Board of the Gaelic Athletic Association since 1973 for the top tier under-21 hurling teams in the county of Cork in Ireland.
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]