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There are many newspapers published in New South Wales, serving both the capital, Sydney, and the regions. Some newspapers are defunct; some have been renamed; some have been amalgamated. The two main Sydney newspapers are The Sydney Morning Herald, which was founded in 1831, and The Daily Telegraph, founded in 1879.
Newspapers such Guardian Australia, Crikey and The Saturday Paper are not listed. There are several measures of circulation of newspapers. The Australian Bureau of Circulations (ABC) Paid Media Audit Data provides independent verification of paid media distribution in Australia. Measures are also divided by electronic and print versions.
In response, newspapers in Australia closed, amalgamated or laid off staff – by 2011, the top two newspaper owners accounted for 86% of newspaper sales in Australia. [10] All major newspapers and most minor newspapers in Australia now produce a digital version of their publication. Many periodicals produce a digital version only. [11] Further ...
Up to 1971 for one newspaper; only up to 1950 for many newspapers. Trove – digitization project of the National Library of Australia; over 23 million Australian newspaper pages. Welsh Newspapers Online, over 15 million articles from 1804 to 1919 in over 100 newspapers primarily published in Wales.
National Indigenous Times was first published in newspaper form on 27 February 2002. [1] It was established by Owen Carriage, the founder of the Koori Mail. [2]In 2006, NIT published a major story about government staff anonymously representing themselves as independent witnesses in the Lateline report on child abuse in remote communities, with particular reference to Mutitjulu, in the ...
Australia's most-read newspaper apologised for its coverage of a massacre two centuries ago in which it campaigned against prosecuting colonists who slaughtered dozens of Indigenous people, saying ...
This is a list of newspapers published in New South Wales, Australia, in Languages other than English (LOTE). It reflects the many people who have migrated to this part of the world. It reflects the many people who have migrated to this part of the world.
Adelaide's three earliest newspapers all commenced in 1839: The Egotist, the Adelaide Guardian, both of which folded in their first year, and the Adelaide Chronicle published by Robert Thomas of 37 Hindley Street, and the founder of the South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register (edited by George Stevenson). [2]