Andrew Murray (journalist)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Andrew_Murray_(journalist) an entity of type: Thing

أندرو موراي (بالإنجليزية: Andrew Murray)‏ هو صحفي أسترالي، ولد في 16 مايو 1813 في Kirkbean ‏ في المملكة المتحدة، وتوفي في 8 أكتوبر 1880 في Yarragon ‏ في أستراليا. rdf:langString
Andrew Murray (1813–1880) was an Australian journalist. Andrew Murray was born in Scotland, and educated at the Andersonian University in Glasgow, winning prizes as an essayist. He emigrated to Adelaide in 1839, and founded a drapery business in Hindley Street (at that time Adelaide's foremost shopping precinct) with George Greig as Murray, Greig, & Co. Murray married Jessie Spence, sister of Catherine Helen Spence, in 1841. He died at Waterloo (now Yarragon), Gippsland and is buried in Boroondara General Cemetery. rdf:langString
rdf:langString أندرو موراي (صحفي)
rdf:langString Andrew Murray (journalist)
rdf:langString Andrew Murray
rdf:langString Andrew Murray
rdf:langString Yarragon, Victoria, Australia
xsd:date 1880-10-08
xsd:date 1813-05-16
xsd:integer 44474158
xsd:integer 1116703542
xsd:date 1813-05-16
xsd:date 1880-10-08
rdf:langString Journalist
rdf:langString Draper
rdf:langString Newspaper editor
rdf:langString Landowner
rdf:langString Newspaper owner
rdf:langString Government printer
rdf:langString Political writer
rdf:langString Winemaker
rdf:langString Jessie Spence
rdf:langString أندرو موراي (بالإنجليزية: Andrew Murray)‏ هو صحفي أسترالي، ولد في 16 مايو 1813 في Kirkbean ‏ في المملكة المتحدة، وتوفي في 8 أكتوبر 1880 في Yarragon ‏ في أستراليا.
rdf:langString Andrew Murray (1813–1880) was an Australian journalist. Andrew Murray was born in Scotland, and educated at the Andersonian University in Glasgow, winning prizes as an essayist. He emigrated to Adelaide in 1839, and founded a drapery business in Hindley Street (at that time Adelaide's foremost shopping precinct) with George Greig as Murray, Greig, & Co. Murray married Jessie Spence, sister of Catherine Helen Spence, in 1841. In 1841, the business failed, and Murray was able to find employment as a journalist with the Southern Australian, the second newspaper to be established in South Australia. In 1844, he purchased the Southern Australian from the proprietor, Richard Blackham, and was its editor and proprietor till the exodus of workers to the gold-fields of Victoria severely strained South Australia's economy, and the South Australian, as Murray had renamed it, reverted from bi-weekly to weekly, then in July 1851 was forced to fold. He was responsible for printing at least one other newspaper, the German-language Suedaustralische Zeitung and its successor Adelaider Deutsche Zeitung. Murray then migrated to Victoria, and worked as commercial editor with The Argus, and acted as editor in 1855 and 1856. He was subsequently the editor and proprietor of the (Melbourne) Economist. He published Murray's Prices Current and an almanac book, and also traded in wines, but was forced to declare insolvency in 1874. In the late 1850s, Murray bought land in Boroondara, 10 km East of Melbourne. He named his house 'Balwyn' from the Gaelic bal and the Saxon wyn, meaning 'the home of the vine'. Balwyn Road and the suburb of Balwyn were named after it. The house was located on the site now occupied by Fintona Girls' School. He died at Waterloo (now Yarragon), Gippsland and is buried in Boroondara General Cemetery.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5686
xsd:gYear 1813
xsd:gYear 1880

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