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{{Short description|Weekly English newspaper}} |
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{{other uses|Graphic (disambiguation)}} |
{{other uses|Graphic (disambiguation)}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}} |
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}} |
Revision as of 17:13, 30 July 2024
Type | Weekly newspaper |
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Format | Tabloid |
Owner(s) | Allied Newspapers/Kemsley Newspapers (1925-1952) Associated Newspapers (1952–1960) |
Editor | Reginald Simpson (1935–1947) |
Founded | 1915 | as the Sunday Herald
Ceased publication | December 4, 1960 |
Headquarters | Fleet Street, London |
Sister newspapers | Daily Sketch (1927–1960) |
The Sunday Graphic was a weekly English tabloid newspaper that was published in Fleet Street.
The newspaper was founded in 1915 as the Sunday Herald and was later renamed the Illustrated Sunday Herald.
It was acquired by Allied Newspapers in 1925; in 1927 it changed its name to the Sunday Graphic, becoming the sister paper of the Daily Sketch, which had recently taken over the Daily Graphic[1] (and was renamed the Daily Graphic again from 1946[2] to 1952).[3] In 1931 it was merged with the Sunday News.
The paper was acquired by Associated Newspapers in 1952.
The Sunday Graphic ceased publication on 4 December 1960.[4]
Editors
- 1926: T. Hill
- 1931: Alan Sinclair
- 1935: Reginald Simpson
- 1947: M. Watts
- 1947: N. Hamilton
- 1948: Iain Lang
- 1949: A. J. Josey
- 1950: Barry Horniblow
- 1952: Philip Brownrigg
- 1953: Mike Randall
- 1953: Gordon McKenzie
- 1958: Allan Hall
- 1959: Robert Anderson
- 1960: Andrew Ewart[4]
References
- ^ "Amalgamation of Daily Graphic and Daily Sketch". The Times. 16 October 1926. p. 4.
- ^ "A Graphic Sketch". Daily Mirror. 2 July 1946. p. 2.
- ^ "Our London Correspondence". Manchester Guardian. 2 January 1953. p. 4.
- ^ a b Butler, David; Sloman, Anne (1980). British Political Facts, 1900-1979. St. Martin's Press. p. 445. ISBN 978-0312104665.