Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
0839-4008. OCLC number. 1032969650. Website. thechronicleherald .ca. The Chronicle Herald is a broadsheet newspaper published in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, owned by SaltWire Network of Halifax.
SaltWire Network Inc. is a Canadian newspaper publishing company owned by the Dennis-Lever family of Halifax, Nova Scotia, owners of The Chronicle Herald. Saltwire owns 23 daily and weekly newspapers in Atlantic Canada. The company was formed in 2017 via its purchase of 27 newspapers from Transcontinental.
The Novascotian was a newspaper published in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. It became one of the most influential voices in the British North American colonies in its nearly one century of existence. [citation needed] The paper was founded as the Nova Scotian or Colonial Herald [clarification needed] by George R. Young, in 1824.
It is considered Nova Scotia's newspaper of record. [2] StarMetro Halifax was the city's other daily paper, which was launched as a free handout by Transcontinental Media on February 14, 2008. It replaced The Daily News, a daily tabloid paper, focusing primarily on Halifax, which published from 1974 until February 11, 2008. [3] Transcontinental ...
Headquarters of The Chronicle Herald, a daily newspaper published in Halifax. Halifax is the Atlantic region's central point for radio broadcast and press media. CBC Television, CTV Television Network (CTV), and Global Television Network and other broadcasters all have important regional television concentrators in the municipality.
Novascotian. Categories: Mass media in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Newspapers published in Nova Scotia. Newspapers published in Canada by city.
The Halifax chapter came to end in 2003 when police arrests put the chapter below the 6 man limit, leading to its charter being removed. The Halifax Regional Police and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in a joint operation recruited a small time drug dealer known only as "Bill" due to a court to work as an informer. "
There were five important periods in the history of Canadian newspapers' responsible for the eventual development of the modern newspaper. These are the "Transplant Period" from 1750 to 1800, when printing and newspapers initially came to Canada as publications of government news and proclamations; followed by the "Partisan Period from 1800–1850," when individual printers and editors played ...