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Public Advertiser : ウィキペディア英語版 | Public Advertiser
The ''Public Advertiser'' was a London newspaper in the 18th century. The ''Public Advertiser'' was originally known as the ''London Daily Post and General Advertiser'', then simply the ''General Advertiser'' consisting more or less exclusively of adverts. It was taken over by its printer, Henry Woodfall (1713 – 1769), and relaunched as the ''Public Advertiser''〔(1752–1793, "The Public Advertiser", published in London by H. S. Woodfall — National Library of Australia, Trove )〕 with much more news content. In 1758, the printer's nineteen-year-old son, Henry Sampson Woodfall took it over. H. S. Woodfall sold his interest in the ''Public Advertiser'' in November 1793. A successor ''Public Advertiser, or Political and Literary Diary'' was printed for some months by N. Byrne but was out of business by 1795.〔(''Public Advertiser, or Political and Literary Diary'', worldcat.org )〕 The anonymous polemicist Junius sent his public letters to the Public Advertiser. ==References==
*''From Grub Street to Fleet Street: An Illustrated History of English Newspapers to 1899'' by Bob Clarke, Ashgate Press, 2005
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