The News Letter

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The Belfast Newsletter
Type Daily newspaper
Format Tabloid

Owner Johnston Press
Editor Darwin Templeton
Founded 1737
Political allegiance Unionism
Headquarters Belfast, Northern Ireland

Website: www.newsletter.co.uk

The News Letter is one of Northern Ireland's main daily newspapers, published Monday to Saturday. It is the oldest English language general daily newspaper still in publication in the world, having first been printed in 1737.[1][2]

The newspaper's editorial stance and readership, while originally Republican,[3] is strongly unionist. Its primary competitors are the Belfast Telegraph (which is moderately unionist in outlook) and the Irish News which adopts a largely Irish nationalist perspective.[citation needed]

The News Letter was part of the Trinity Mirror newspaper group until late-2003 when it was acquired by the 3i group advised by former Mirror Group Newspapers chairman, David Montgomery. It is now operated by a holding company entitled Local Press Ltd (which also publishes the Derry Journal and the Donegal Democrat), part of Johnston Press.

Contents

The full legal title of the newspaper is the "Belfast News Letter" though the word Belfast does not appear on the masthead any more.

Founded in 1737, the News Letter was printed in Joy's Entry in Belfast. The Joys were a family of Huguenot who added much to eighteenth-century Belfast, noted for their compiling materials for its history. Francis Joy, the father of Henry and Robert, had come to Belfast early in the century from the County Antrim village of Killead. In Belfast he married the daughter of the town sovereign, and set up a practice as an attorney. In 1737, he obtained a small printing-press which was in settlement of a debt, and used it to publish the town’s first newspaper at the sign of ‘The Peacock’ in Bridge Street. The family later bought a paper mill in Ballymena, and were able to produce enough paper not only for their own publication but for the whole Province of Ulster.[4][5]

Originally published three times weekly, it became daily in 1855. The title is now located in the Boucher Road industrial estate in the south of Belfast.

According to the newspaper's owners:

The News Letter [can claim] the first genuine "world exclusive". The boat carrying the first copy to leave America of the Declaration of Independence, and bound for London, hit stormy waters off the north coast of Ireland. The boat sought refuge in Londonderry port and arrangements were made for the declaration to be sent on horseback to Belfast, where it would be met by another ship for delivery to King George III.

Somehow, and in the best traditions of revelatory journalism, the News Letter editor of the day gained access to the priceless document and duly published it on the front page of the August 23, 1776 edition. Today there is a constant demand for copies of that famous and historical front page.[6]

—The Belfast Newsletter

Before the partition of Ireland in 1922, the Newsletter was distributed island-wide. Since then it has become a northern newspaper specifically with a predominantly unionist political outlook.

The News Letter was historically linked with Republicans,[7] then becoming a Unionist title. Editor Geoff Martin was succeeded in 2003 by Nigel Wareing, formerly of the Guardian Media Group.[citation needed]

The paper publishes several weekly and infrequent supplements, such as Farming Life and Catwalk. It also prints many titles for other publishers including Trinity Mirror and Guardian Media Group. It also prints the Ulster-Scots Agency publication, The Ulster-Scot.

Circulation currently stands at approximately 29,000, but this does not include the Farming Life supplement. When Farming Life is sold with the News Letter on Wednesdays and Saturdays circulation peaks at around 40,000 and is read across the sectarian divide in Northern Ireland.[citation needed]

  1. ^ Research guide: Irish news & newspapers, Boston College, 13 December 2004, accessed 25 September 2006
  2. ^ Ruth Johnston, Your place and mine: Belfast News Letter, BBC, accessed 25 September 2006
  3. ^ A Deeper Silence: The Hidden Origins of the United Irishmen, A. T. Q. Stewart, The Blackstaff Press, 1998, ISBN 0 85640 642 2 pg. 134-164
  4. ^ The Life and Times of Mary Ann McCracken, 1770-1866: a Belfast Panorama, Mary McNeill, The Blackstaff Press, rpt 1988
  5. ^ A Deeper Silence: The Hidden Origins of the United Irishmen, A. T. Q. Stewart, The Blackstaff Press, 1998, ISBN 0 85640 642 2
  6. ^ The history of the News Letter, Belfast Today, accessed 25 September 2006
  7. ^ A Deeper Silence: The Hidden Origins of the United Irishmen, A. T. Q. Stewart, The Blackstaff Press, 1998, ISBN 0 85640 642 2 pg. 134-164

Northern Ireland-based Newspapers
National

The Belfast Telegraph | The Irish News | The News Letter | Ireland's Saturday Night | Sunday Life | Lá Nua


Regional
Andersonstown News | Antrim Times | Ballyclare Gazette | Ballymena Times | Ballymoney and Moyle Times | Banbridge Leader | Belfast News | Carrick & East Antrim Times | Carrickfergus Advertiser | Coleraine Journal | Coleraine Times | Community Telegraph | County Down Spectator | Craigavon Echo | Derry Journal | Down Democrat | Down Recorder | Dromore Leader | Dromore Star | East Antrim Advertiser | East Belfast Observer | Farmweek | Fermanagh Herald | Foyle News | Impartial Reporter| Larne Gazette | Larne Times | Lisburn Echo | Londonderry Sentinel | Lurgan Mail | Mid Ulster Echo | Mid Ulster Mail | Newry Democrat | Newtownabbey Times | Newtownards Chronical | Newtownards Spectator | North Belfast News | North West Echo | The North West Telegraph | The Outlook | Portadown Times | Roe Valley Sentinal | South Belfast News | Strabane Chronicle | Sunday Journal | Tyrone Constitution | Tyrone Courier | Tyrone Times | Ulster Gazette | Ulster Star | Ulster Herald


Defunct
Daily Ireland | Protestant Telegraph

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