Shropshire Star | |
Type: | Daily regional newspaper |
Political: | Conservative |
Circulation: | 9,914 |
Circulation Date: | 2023 |
Foundation: | 5 October 1964 |
Owners: | Midland News Association |
Headquarters: | Head office: Midland News Association, 51-53 Queen Street, Wolverhampton, WV1 1ES |
Editor: | Martin Wright |
Circulation Ref: | [1] |
Sister Newspapers: | Express & Star |
Website: | shropshirestar.com |
The Shropshire Star is reputedly the twelfth biggest-selling regional newspaper in the UK.[2] It is based at Grosvenor House, Telford where it covers the whole of Shropshire plus parts of Herefordshire, Worcestershire, Staffordshire, Cheshire and Mid Wales. It is printed by Newsquest at their Deeside office.
Currently edited by Martin Wright,[3] the Shropshire Star publishes daily, except for Sunday. In the first half of 2012, the newspaper had a daily circulation of 49,751.[4] Ten years later paid print circulation had fallen by 80% to less than 10,000 (ABC Jan-Jun 2023). In 2023, in an attempt to reverse its declining fortunes the newspaper began the process to monetize its online views by placing the majority of its news content behind a paywall.
The Shropshire Star was under the ownership of the Graham family from its inception to September 2023. The Shropshire Star is published by the Midland News Association (MNA), which also owns the Express & Star newspaper.
The Shropshire Star has been in circulation since Monday 5 October 1964,[5] inheriting a nightly circulation of around 19,000 from the old Shropshire edition of the Express & Star.[6]
The Midland News Association board saw an opportunity with the growth of Dawley New Town - later renamed Telford - and produced a successful news and advertising product to serve a county which is a mixture of agriculture and industrial areas.
It was the first British newspaper to bring readers colour pictures of the Moon landing. In 1980 the Shropshire Star became the first newspaper in Britain to introduce an editorial computer system as part of an investment in their former site at Ketley.
The Shropshire Star later became the first evening newspaper in Europe to use web-fed offset printing, which refers to the use of rolls (or webs) of paper supplied to the printing press.[7]
In September 2023, the paper was sold by the family-owned Claverley Group to National World.[8]
The Shropshire Star publishes breaking news and sport content online each day, in addition to regular blogs and unique video content. Its website, shropshirestar.com,[9] was launched in 1997.
A Shropshire Star App for iPad and iPhone was launched in January 2012, using page-turning technology to mimic the look and feel of the actual newspaper.
August 2012 saw the website re-launched in a responsive web design alongside its sister title expressandstar.com[10] – believed to be the first of any other regional newspaper websites in the UK.[11]
By 2015, the term Shropshire Star was being inputted into search engines more than 200,000 times per calendar month, which made it the most popular search string with the word Shropshire in the request.[12]