Sunday Mail(Adelaide)

(Redirected fromThe Mail (Adelaide))

TheSunday Mail(originally titledThe Mail) is anAdelaidenewspaper first published on 4 May 1912 byClarence P. Moody.[1]Through much of the 20th century,The Advertiserwas Adelaide's morning broadsheet,The Newsthe afternoon tabloid,The Sunday Maila vehicle for covering weekend sport, andMessenger Newspaperscovering community news.

TypeNewspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)News Corp Australia
Founder(s)Clarence P. Moody
EditorGeorge Brickhill
Founded4 May 1912

"Sunday Mail" is a business name of Advertiser Newspapers Pty Ltd, a private company that is part ofNews Corp Australia,which since 2004 has been a component of the U.S. multinational mass media company,News Corp.[2][3][4]

History

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Mail

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In 1912, Clarence Moody initially set up three newspapers – theSporting Mail(1912–1914),Saturday Mail(1912–1917), and theMail.The first two titles lasted only a few years, and theMailitself went into liquidation in late 1914. Ownership passed briefly to George Annells and Frank Stone, and then to Herbert Syme. In May 1923News Limitedpurchased theMailand moved the newspaper toNorth Terrace.By this timeThe Newshad developed a strong sporting focus, and results of Saturday sporting matches of all types and grades were reported in theMail.

Sunday Mail

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The paper's name briefly changed toThe SA Sunday Mailon 6 February 1954,[5]and thenSunday Mailin 1955. The original 1912 circulation of 15,000 had risen to 213,000 by 1962. For its first 60 years theMailwas printed on Saturday nights. Initially two editions were published, with a "street" edition coming out at about 7:00 pm, followed by a midnight edition which was sold to theatre crowds later in the evening, and distributed throughout the state on Sunday mornings. TheSunday Mailwas first published on a Sunday on 5 November 1972, and went on to survive the closure ofThe Newsin March 1992.

Content

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A particular focus was given to football and horse racing, with many fine sporting photographs and articles being printed. West Torrens footballer and yachtsman Ossie O'Grady became sports writer in 1926 and wrote sometimes controversial sporting feature articles. In the 1930s Ron Boland began his newspaper career as the horse racing writer, "Trafalgar". He was later to become editor of theNews.Early motoring was another important feature of the newspaper from the 1920s, as was the advent of commercial radio and aviation. From 1922 under the editorship of George Brickhill, theMailwas a well-presented newspaper with quality reading on a range of topics. No doubt the professionally presented real-estate pages helped fund the improvements.

The much-loved "Possum's pages" were born in 1921 as "the Mail Club" with letters to "clubmates" written by "Possum". The page was called "Mates own corner". In 1924May Gibbs's gumnut babies, "Bib and Bub", were the first full-scale comic page in theMail.They were joined in 1932 by Bancks'sGinger Meggs.During theSecond World WarLionel Coventry's "Alec the Airman" joined the pages of the paper. Colour was introduced to the comics at the end of the war. Oswald Pryor was cartoonist for theMailin 1922-1923, followed byHal Gyeand, in the late 1920s, R. W. Blundell.Harry Longsonwas cartoonist during the war years.

The Second World War had a major impact, not least on newspaper reporting and production. Although horse racing and other sports were still covered in the pages of theMail,space was also given to war news and the activities of the armed forces. During the war the "Gossip by Deidre" page gave way to the less frivolous "Diana's notebook" with photographs such as "Miss Patricia Hubbard at work in her father's factory"[6]and other reflections of women's war effort activities. Even the "Suburban acre" gardening page took on a more serious tone as "Weeders digest".

References

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  1. ^"About | The Advertiser".Retrieved15 February2018.
  2. ^"Sunday Mail ABN 77 007 872 997".ASIC Connect.Australian Securities and Investments Commission.10 September 2022.Retrieved10 September2022.
  3. ^"About us".The Advertiser.Advertiser Newspapers Pty Ltd. 10 September 2022.Retrieved10 September2022.
  4. ^"New News Corp starts trading at $15 per share".The Australian.Retrieved19 June2013.
  5. ^"The Mail (Adelaide, SA: 1912 – 1954) – 6 Feb 1954 – p.1".Trove.Retrieved15 February2018.
  6. ^Mail,5 October 1940, p. 10
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