翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Banco Banespa
・ Banco Best
・ Banco BICE
・ Banco Bicentenario
・ Banco Bilbao Vizcaya (building)
・ Banbury Academy
・ Banbury and Bicester College
・ Banbury and Cheltenham Direct Railway
・ Banbury by-election, 1918
・ Banbury by-election, 1922
・ Banbury cake
・ Banbury Cake (newspaper)
・ Banbury Castle
・ Banbury Cricket Club Ground
・ Banbury District and Lord Jersey FA
Banbury Guardian
・ Banbury Lido
・ Banbury lock
・ Banbury Merton Street railway station
・ Banbury Mosque
・ Banbury Museum
・ Banbury Music Radio
・ Banbury mutiny
・ Banbury Oaks, Pasadena, California
・ Banbury railway station
・ Banbury Reservoir
・ Banbury Road
・ Banbury Rural District
・ Banbury sex gang
・ Banbury Sound


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Banbury Guardian : ウィキペディア英語版
Banbury Guardian

The ''Banbury Guardian'' is a local tabloid newspaper published in Banbury, Oxfordshire. It serves north Oxfordshire, southwest Northamptonshire and southeast Warwickshire. Its sister paper, ''The Banbury & District Review'', is a free weekly tabloid.
==History==
The ''Banbury Guardian'' was owned and edited by three generations of the same family for its first 109 years of publication.〔Lisle, 2008, pages 61-63〕
In 1822 William Potts moved from Daventry to Banbury where he traded as a printer and bookseller.〔Lisle, 2008, page 61〕 Potts supported the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834, and on 5 April 1838 he launched ''The Guardian'', or ''Monthly Poor Law Register'' to
''"disabuse the public mind when unfounded reports, likely to create alarm, and excite suspicion are circulated by those who, from the situations they occupy, may be supposed to possess better information than do the public generally."''〔

William Potts increased the frequency of publication to weekly from 1843〔(Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Board: Potts, William 1868 - 1949, Author and editor of the Banbury Guardian, at 16 Parson Street, Banbury )〕 and changed its name to the ''Banbury Guardian'' on 4 May 1853. He remained its owner and editor until his death on 4 March 1867.〔Lisle, 2008, page 63〕
Upon William's death his son John Potts took over as owner and manager. When John Potts died in 1892 his newspaper published an obituary commemorating him as an ''"urbane and conscientious chief"''.〔 John's successor was his son, another William Potts (1868–1949), who edited the paper until 1947.〔
The younger William Potts was also a local historian, publishing in his lifetime four historical booklets plus a booklet in 1897 to commemorate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.〔 Potts also spent 50 years researching a full history of Banbury. He completed the first draft by 1939, but paper for printing was rationed during the Second World War and for several years thereafter, preventing its publication.〔 Potts spent the years immediately after the war revising and condensing his draft to comply with rationing limits, but had not completed this revision by the time of his death.〔
Potts was succeeded as ''Banbury Guardian'' editor by Edward Clark, the first holder of that post not from the Potts family. Clark also took over Potts' history project, finally publishing it in 1958 as ''History of Banbury: Story of the Development of a Country Town''.〔 Clark went on to prepare a revised, expanded second edition that was published in 1978.〔 Since 2002 the younger William Potts has been commemorated by an Oxfordshire Blue Plaque at 16 Parsons Street, Banbury.〔
On 25 March 2010 the ''Banbury Guardian'' converted from broadsheet to tabloid format.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Banbury Guardian」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.