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・ Surrey Advertiser
・ Surrey Ambulance Service
・ Surrey and Borders Partnership NHS Foundation Trust
・ Surrey and Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust
・ Surrey and Sussex Junction Railway
・ Surrey Archaeological Society
・ Surrey Canal
・ Surrey CCC Women
・ Surrey Central
・ Surrey Central Station
・ Surrey Centre
・ Surrey Championship
・ Surrey Chapel
・ Surrey City Centre Public Library
・ Surrey City Council
Surrey Comet
・ Surrey Commercial Docks
・ Surrey County
・ Surrey County Council
・ Surrey County Council election, 1965, Guildford
・ Surrey County Council election, 1967, Guildford
・ Surrey County Council election, 1970, Guildford
・ Surrey County Council election, 1973, Guildford
・ Surrey County Council election, 1977
・ Surrey County Council election, 1977, Guildford
・ Surrey County Council election, 1981, Guildford
・ Surrey County Council election, 1985, Guildford
・ Surrey County Council election, 1989, Guildford
・ Surrey County Council election, 1993, Guildford
・ Surrey County Council election, 1997, Guildford


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Surrey Comet : ウィキペディア英語版
Surrey Comet

The ''Surrey Comet'' is a weekly paid-for local newspaper covering the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames, in South West London, and surrounding areas. It was founded in 1854 and is among the oldest London newspapers and the oldest newspaper covering Surrey. The newspaper is published once a week, every Friday, and is sold in Kingston upon Thames, Norbiton, Surbiton, Tolworth, New Malden, Old Malden, Worcester Park, Hook and Chessington.
==History==

The ''Surrey Comet'' was founded in 1854 by Thomas Philpott, a printer from Surbiton, after he experienced a religious vision.〔(''Surrey Comet'' 150th anniversary ) Retrieved 23 September 2013.〕 He aimed to “expose the bad and promote the good”. Subjects for the paper included The Crimean War and the cholera epidemic of 1854.
Philpott was forced to sell to Russell Knapp in 1859 due to ill health. When Knapp died suddenly in 1867 his wife Mary Ann ran the business for 33 years, before merging with rival operator and former Comet editor William Drewett, who ran the ''Kingston and Surbiton News'', forming Knapp Drewett.
The ''Kingston and Surbiton News'' continued as the mid-week Surrey Comet, published on a Wednesday until at least the late 1980s.
In 1982, the ''Comet'' was acquired by Argus Press and moved from its historic home in Church Street, Kingston, to a former furniture factory in Lower Ham Road (later renamed Skerne Road).
In 1993 it was bought by Reed Regional Newspapers, who in turn sold it to Newsquest, a management buyout group in 1996.
During its existence it has interviewed notable personalities, including a 34-year-old Alan Turing on the development of his 'electronic brain' at the nearby National Physical Laboratory in Teddington.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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