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Monmouthshire Beacon : ウィキペディア英語版
Monmouthshire Beacon

The ''Monmouthshire Beacon'' is a weekly tabloid newspaper covering the areas of Monmouthshire, south Herefordshire and western Gloucestershire. It has been in continuous publication since 1837. Since 1980 the newspaper has been part of the Tindle Newspaper Group of local newspapers owned by Farnham Castle Newspapers and chaired by Sir Ray Tindle.〔(Monmouthshire Beacon ), British Newspapers Online, accessed 20 January 2012〕
The newspaper's editorial office is at Cornwall House, Monnow Street, Monmouth. The ''Beacon'' is published every Wednesday.〔 Its sister paper, the ''Ross Gazette'', covers nearby south Herefordshire.
==History==
The first issue was published on 14 October 1837, priced at 4½d (1.9p). It was printed by Thomas Farror at Castle Hill, Monmouth, and published by him at Agincourt Square. The first editor was Richard Ramsey Dinnis (assisted by the Rev. George Roberts〔). This paper had to compete with the ''Monmouthshire Merlin'' which had started publication eight years earlier. The ''Merlin'' had been started by Charles Hough in 1829, but it had bankrupted him by 1831 and it was his co-owner Reginald James Blewitt who eventually built the ''Merlin'' to have the largest newspaper circulation in Wales by 1854. The Beacon's attacks on R.J.Blewiit were so strong that the Merthyr paper disagreed with the Beacon despite their shared politics. The ''Beacon'' was backed by the Ironmaster Sir Joseph Bailey Bt. and local conservatives. It was said that the ''Beacon''s circulation was only just over 500 and was thought to run at a loss, with copies being given away.
In 1840, the ''Beacon'' produced a 200-page special report on the trial of the Chartist leaders in the Shire Hall.〔( Monmouthshire Beacon: About Us ), accessed 20 January 2012〕 A similar issue was published by the ''Monmouthshire Merlin'' but they took different lines. The ''Merlin'' defended the Whig government whilst the ''Beacon'' blamed it for an uprising that had led to the ring-leaders being sentenced to death. Although the ''Beacon'' did not support the uprising and realised that those involved were obliged to "be dealt with as enemies and aliens". In 1840 there was also a ''Monmouthshire Advertiser'' but this was absorbed into the ''Monmouthshire Beacon and Advertiser'' by 1850. Around 1840, John Dix claimed to have been editor of this paper but supporting evidence is not available.
The ''Beacons printing works and offices moved to the new Market Hall in Priory Street in 1876.〔Monmouth Civic Society, ''Guide to the Monmouth Heritage Blue Plaque Trail'', n.d., p.10〕 In 1963, the newspaper's offices and print works were completely destroyed, together with much of the building itself, when a fire started in its paper store.〔(Gathering the Jewels: The New Market Hall fire, Monmouth, 1963 ), accessed January 2012〕 Its offices then moved to 50 Monnow Street, and in 1987 moved again to Cornwall House, where the new offices were opened during the newspaper's 150th anniversary year by Princess Margaret.〔

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