Cambridge Reporter

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cambridge_Reporter an entity of type: Thing

The Cambridge Reporter was a local daily newspaper in Southern Ontario serving the community of Cambridge, Ontario, Canada. It was founded in 1846 as the Galt Reporter by Peter Jaffray, a Scottish settler who was originally from Stirlingshire and who immigrated to Galt in 1844. Before immigrating, Jaffray had worked at the Edinburgh printing and publishing firm of Oliver and Boyd, then worked for twenty-two years at the Shrewsbury Chronicle in Shrewsbury, England. Jaffray founded the Reporter after resigning from a predecessor newspaper named the Dumfries Courier, which was the first newspaper published in Galt. James Ainslie was an early partner in the Reporter's publication, and for some time it was published out of a building he owned, which was at the corner of Main Street and Ainslie rdf:langString
rdf:langString Cambridge Reporter
rdf:langString Cambridge Reporter
xsd:integer 7380123
xsd:integer 1068079133
xsd:date 2003-09-19
rdf:langString Peter Jaffray
xsd:integer 841
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Daily newspaper
rdf:langString Biweekly newspaper
rdf:langString The Cambridge Reporter was a local daily newspaper in Southern Ontario serving the community of Cambridge, Ontario, Canada. It was founded in 1846 as the Galt Reporter by Peter Jaffray, a Scottish settler who was originally from Stirlingshire and who immigrated to Galt in 1844. Before immigrating, Jaffray had worked at the Edinburgh printing and publishing firm of Oliver and Boyd, then worked for twenty-two years at the Shrewsbury Chronicle in Shrewsbury, England. Jaffray founded the Reporter after resigning from a predecessor newspaper named the Dumfries Courier, which was the first newspaper published in Galt. James Ainslie was an early partner in the Reporter's publication, and for some time it was published out of a building he owned, which was at the corner of Main Street and Ainslie Street in Galt. Ainslie and Jaffray had a falling out over political content in the newspaper, however, and the partnership was dissolved; Ainslie followed the Reform movement, while Jaffray was "an unyielding and sturdy Conservative." Afterward, Ainslie founded his own rival weekly newspaper, the , which was later purchased by James Young in 1853. In 1973 the paper changed its name to the Cambridge Reporter after the city of Galt merged with the towns of Preston and Hespeler, and parts of the townships of Waterloo and North Dumfries, to form Cambridge. In February 2002, the publication frequency was reduced from daily to twice-weekly. In 2003 the Cambridge Reporter was closed by parent Torstar Corporation, with a final paper published on September 19, 2003. The Cambridge Reporter at the time was Canada's oldest operating newspaper. Metroland Media Group, owned by Torstar, operates the Waterloo Region Record and the Cambridge Times, which has expanded since the closure of the Cambridge Reporter.
rdf:langString Canada
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5297

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