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The Chronicle Herald has seen like most Canadian daily newspapers a decline in circulation. Its total circulation dropped by 15 percent to 91,490 copies daily from 2009 to 2015. [ 37 ] The Chronicle Herald is the highest circulation newspaper in the Atlantic provinces , although it briefly lost that title to the now-defunct StarMetro Halifax ...
The company was formed in Halifax, Nova Scotia on April 13, 2017, via its purchase of 27 newspapers from Transcontinental. The company owned 23 daily and weekly newspapers in Atlantic Canada including The Chronicle Herald in Halifax, the Cape Breton Post in Sydney, Nova Scotia, and the The Telegram in St. John's, Newfoundland.
The 1937 election saw Chambers' cartoons appearing in both newspapers, as the Chronicle reprinted some from four years before. [3] The two newspapers merged in 1949 and Chambers continued to work for the Halifax Chronicle-Herald for the rest of his career. Chambers was a prolific cartoonists, who at his peak produced as many as nine cartoons a ...
Headquarters of The Chronicle Herald, a daily newspaper published in Halifax. Halifax is the Atlantic region's central point for radio broadcast and press media. CBC Television, CTV Television Network (CTV), and Global Television Network and other broadcasters all have important regional television concentrators in the municipality.
In November 2014, the Halifax Chronicle Herald violated the ban by publishing the name and photo of Parsons on its front page and online; the story was accompanied by an editor's note, stating: "We've decided to publish the name of the victim in this story, despite a court-ordered ban. We believe it's in the public interest in this unique case ...
Local Xpress was an online newspaper based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. It was founded in 2016 by 57 members of the Halifax Typographical Union's newsroom unit while on strike from The Chronicle Herald, the city's daily newspaper. [1] The Herald continued to publish during the strike using strikebreakers writing anonymously.
The station was established on November 14, 1944 by The Halifax Chronicle at 1320 AM. [1] It was the second radio station to sign on in Halifax, after CHNS, which was founded in 1926. In 1945, CJCH was authorized to increase output power and move to a lower frequency on the AM dial (920 kHz).
On April 13, 2017, Transcontinental announced that it had sold all of its newspapers in Atlantic Canada to SaltWire Network, a newly formed parent company of The Chronicle Herald. [7] [8] [9] In March 2024, Saltwire declared bankruptcy. [10] Postmedia Network bought the remains of Saltwire in late summer 2024, including the Cape Breton Post. [11]