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La Gazette du commerce et littéraire pour la Ville & District de Montréal, 1778, Montréal, Fleury Mesplet, printer, and Valentin Jautard, editor and journalist; La Gazette de Montréal/The Montreal Gazette, 1785, Montréal, Fleury Mesplet, printer
The Montreal Daily News adopted a tabloid format and introduced a Sunday edition, forcing The Gazette to respond. After the Montreal Daily News closed in 1989, after less than two years in operation, The Gazette kept its Sunday edition going until August 2010. In 1996, the Southam papers were bought by Conrad Black's Hollinger Inc.
Edgar Andrew Collard CM (6 September 1911 – 9 September 2000) was a Canadian journalist and historian, best known for his Montreal Gazette column "All Our Yesterdays". He was born in Montreal, Quebec. He received his MA in history from McGill University in 1937. However health problems prevented him from completing his formal studies and ...
Montreal – Parc-Extension News, Nouvelles Saint-Laurent News, Courrier Ahuntsic & Bordeaux-Cartierville, Avenir de l'est, Le Flambeau de l'Est, L'Informateur de Rivière-des-Prairies, Nouvelles Hochelaga-Maisonneuve, Cités Nouvelles, Le Messager Verdun, Progrès Villeray – Parc-Extension, Progrès Saint-Léonard, Guide Montréal-Nord ...
He then joined the Montreal Gazette as sports editor (for a short time), where his columns continued to appear. [6] He covered the Montreal Canadiens when they won five Stanley Cups in a row in the 1950s, and during their dynasty years in the 1960s and 1970s. [7] Fisher said Habs legend Dickie Moore was his closest friend. [8]
Fleury Mesplet (January 10, 1734 – January 24, 1794) was a French-born Canadian printer best known for founding the Montreal Gazette, Quebec's oldest daily newspaper, in 1778. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Biography
John Reade (November 13, 1837 – March 26, 1919) was an Irish-born Canadian journalist, essayist, and poet once considered "the grand old man of Canadian letters." He is best known as the literary editor of the Montreal Gazette, a position he held for almost 50 years.
John Alton Collins (7 October 1917 – 16 September 2007) was born in Washington D.C., and moved with his family to Canada in 1920. He studied art at Sir George Williams University and the Montreal School of Fine Arts.