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The Manchester Evening News (MEN) is a regional daily newspaper covering Greater Manchester in North West England, founded in 1868.It is published Monday–Saturday; a Sunday edition, the MEN on Sunday, was launched in February 2019. [3]
An exception to this was the Manchester Guardian, which dropped the 'Manchester' from its name in 1959 and relocated its main operations to London in 1964. The Guardian Media Group produced a Mancunian paper, the Manchester Evening News , until 2010 when along with its other local newspapers in the Greater Manchester area it was sold to Trinity ...
The News on Sunday was a left-wing British tabloid newspaper. It was launched in April 1987. It was launched in April 1987. Publication ceased seven months later, in November 1987.
Sales of The Times were around 40,000, [2] and it had around 80% of the entire daily newspaper market, [3] but Sunday papers were more popular, some boasting sales of more than 100,000. [2] Later in the century, the Daily News came to prominence, selling 150,000 copies a day in the 1870s, [ 1 ] while by 1890, The Daily Telegraph had a ...
Manchester Evening Chronicle; Manchester Evening News; Manchester Examiner; Manchester Gazette; Manchester Mercury; Manchester Metro News; Manchester Observer; Manchester Times; The Mancunion; The Mill (newspaper) Mule (newspaper)
Guardian and Manchester Evening News P.L.C., then without a national Sunday title, also became involved acquiring a 16.6% stake and gave the struggling company a substantial loan. [6] The company had said the paper's break-even point was a circulation of 350,000, but the title was then selling only 220,000 copies. [6]
The Manchester Evening Chronicle was renamed Evening Chronicle in 1914. [3] Edward Hulton and Co., of London and Manchester, a private company of proprietors, printers and publishers, was sold for £6 million when Hulton retired due to illness in 1923. The newspapers were sold, including the Manchester Evening Chronicle.
The newspaper was founded in 1884 in Manchester as The Umpire.A penny newspaper, it was the first successful provincial Sunday newspaper in England. Owned by H. S. Jennings, the Umpire was subtitled "A Sporting, Athletic, Theatrical and General Newspaper", and focused on sports and theatre news. [1]