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The Southern Daily Echo, more commonly known as the Daily Echo or simply The Echo, is a regional tabloid newspaper based in Southampton, covering the county of Hampshire in the United Kingdom. The newspaper is owned by Newsquest, one of the largest publishers of local newspapers in the country, which is in turn owned by Gannett.
The Daily Echo is the name of two daily tabloid newspapers in southern England owned by Newsquest. Bournemouth Daily Echo , covers south-east Dorset Southern Daily Echo , covers Southampton and Hampshire, excluding Portsmouth
Bolton News; Bradford Telegraph & Argus; Colchester Evening Gazette; Daily Echo, Bournemouth; Dorset Echo; Eastern Daily Press, Norfolk; Echo, Essex; Evening Times ...
He then worked as a news reporter on the Southern Evening Echo in Southampton, before joining the BBC as a radio news reporter in 1936 on a salary of £360 per annum, [4] going on to cover the first Royal tour of Canada, [5] In 1938 he was the reporter who covered the infamous "Peace in our Time" story when Chamberlain returned from Berlin ...
He entered professional journalism in 1986 at the Southern Evening Echo in Southampton, along with Tony Gallagher, later editor of The Daily Telegraph and The Sun. MacGregor joined South West News Service in Bristol in 1988. He was then the editor of Metro during 2001, and moved to become Deputy Editor of the Evening Standard at the
Echo or The Echo may refer to the following newspapers: The Echo, formerly the Evening Echo, founded in 1892 in Cork, Ireland; The Echo, formerly the Tallaght Echo based in Dublin, Ireland; The Echo, a London newspaper published 1868–1905; The Echo, an evening newspaper which serves South Essex
Easton joined his local newspaper, the Southern Evening Echo, in 1979 having decided upon a career in journalism after winning a game of Waddington's "Scoop" aged 13. [1] He worked at Radio Victory from 1980–1, at Radio Aire from 1981–2 and at LBC from 1982–6.
Before becoming successful as an artist, O'Hara worked as an agricultural advisor for Spillers and Unilever.After taking evening classes in ceramics at Malvern School of Art, he began selling Earthenware [2] models of traction engines, fairground organs and veteran cars [6] at London department stores such as Harrods and Liberty's, with prices between £25 and £40. [7]