The Border Mail Explained

The Border Mail
Type:Daily newspaper
Format:Tabloid
Foundation:24 October 1903
Owners:Australian Community Media
Headquarters:1 McKoy Street, Wodonga, Victoria, 3690, Australia
Publisher:Australian Community Media
Editor:Julie Coe
Circulation:Mon-Fri: 7,440[1]
Sat: 14,700[2]

The Border Mail is a daily newspaper and online news brand published in Albury-Wodonga, Australia, serving the twin cities and the surrounding region. It was originally published as The Border Morning Mail and Riverina Times and later as the Border Morning Mail before changing its title to The Border Mail.

History

The first edition was printed on 24 October 1903 under the title Border Morning Mail and Riverina Times by editor Hamilton Mott and his brother Decimus, and continued publishing under that title until 19 May 1920.[3] The paper was known as the Border Morning Mail from 20 May 1920 until 1 July 1988,[4] when it changed its title to The Border Mail.[5] Originally published in Dean Street, Albury, the newspaper operated from a number of Albury locations before a shift in 1999 to the former Albury-Wodonga Development Corporation headquarters in Wodonga. A six-days-a-week tabloid, the newspaper predominantly covers local issues in the wider region alongside national and international news. Its editorial and op-ed pieces tend to reflect the quiet rural conservatism of its readership. The newspaper has provided extensive coverage of some of the longest-running political debates in the region, notably the long running saga involving plans to remove the main level crossing from central Wodonga and the route for the Hume Freeway bypass of Albury. The newspaper's editor is Julie Coe. Former editors were Hamilton Mott, Clifton Mott, Rex Mitchell, ex-West Australian Newspapers editor-in-chief Bob Cronin, James Thomson, John McCluskey, Graham Storer, Cameron Thompson, Simon Dulhunty, Newcastle Herald editor Heath Harrison, Di Thomas, Niall Boyle and Xavier Mardling.

Acquisition

On 4 May 2006, the Mott family announced that they would accept a $162 million deal from John Fairfax Holdings to purchase the newspaper and its stake in the associated printing company. The deal ended over a century of family ownership.

Publication history

Publication name Commenced publication Ceased publication
Border Morning Mail and Riverina Times1903 1920
Border Morning Mail19201988
Border Mail1988-

Digitisation

Parts of the paper has been digitised as part of the Australian Newspapers Digitisation Program project of the National Library of Australia.[6] [7]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ABC – Average Net Paid Print Sales – Mon-Fri. AMAA.
  2. Web site: ABC – Average Net Paid Print Sales – Sat. AMAA.
  3. Web site: Border Morning Mail and Riverina Times. catalogue. State Library of NSW. 2013-10-25.
  4. Web site: Border Morning Mail. catalogue. State Library of NSW. 2013-10-25.
  5. Web site: Border Mail. catalogue. State Library of NSW. 2013-10-25.
  6. Web site: Newspaper and magazine titles. Trove . National Library of Australia. 5 June 2013.
  7. Web site: Newspaper Digitisation Program. National Library of Australia. 5 June 2013.