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Headlines of the Evening Standard on the day of London bombing on 7 July 2005, at Waterloo station Unloading the Evening Standard at Chancery Lane Station, November 2014. The London Standard, formerly the Evening Standard (1904–2024) and originally The Standard (1827–1904), is a long-established regional newspaper published weekly and distributed free of charge in London, England.
The Standard-Times formed from the 1934 merger of The New Bedford Standard and The New Bedford Times. [5] The Standard had been in operation since being founded as an evening newspaper in 1850. [6] The Cape Cod Times was originally known as The Cape Cod Standard-Times, an edition of the New Bedford paper. It split off in the 1970s.
Evening News, an evening newspaper published in London from 1881 to 1980, when it merged with the Evening Standard; Cambridge Evening News, a daily newspaper published in Cambridge, England
The first national halfpenny paper was the Daily Mail [1] (followed by the Daily Express and the Daily Mirror), which became the first weekday paper to sell one million copies around 1911. Circulation continued to increase, reaching a peak in the mid-1950s; [2] sales of the News of the World reached a peak of more than eight million in 1950. [4]
The London Daily News was a short-lived London newspaper owned by Robert Maxwell. It was published from 24 February to 23 July 1987. [1] it was designed to challenge the local dominance of the Evening Standard in the London market. Despite significant investment and ambitious plans, the paper struggled to gain a substantial readership and was ...
The London Paper free evening London newspaper (2006–2009) Manchester Chronicle (1781–1842) Manchester Evening Chronicle (1897–1963; merged with Manchester Evening News) [63] Manchester Gazette (1795–1828) Manchester Herald (1792–1793) Manchester Observer (1818–1821) Medway News (1859-2011) Mercurius Aulicus (1643–1645)
On 19 September 2024, the Evening Standard printed its last daily edition, becoming a weekly only newspaper under the new name The London Standard as it had become unprofitable to continue daily printing, with an increase in working from home and access to wi-fi on the London Underground being cited as reasons for declining circulation. [45] [46]
The Evening News reappeared for a few months in 1987 when it was launched by the Evening Standard ' s owner Associated Newspapers in order to counter Robert Maxwell's London Daily News; this sparked a price war, by the end of which the Evening News was being sold at 5p, while copies of the London Daily News were 10p. The revived newspaper was ...