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Border Watch (newspaper)

The Border Watch
Border Watch (Newspaper) - Cover, 2012.jpg
The cover of The Border Watch (c2012)
Type Newspaper
Format Tabloid
Owner(s) Scott Group of Companies
Founder(s) A F Laurie
Editor Jason Wallace
Sports editor Trevor Jackson
Founded April 26, 1861; 157 years ago (1861-04-26)
Language English
Headquarters 81 Commercial Street East
Mount Gambier, South Australia
City Mount Gambier
Country Australia
ISSN 1329-5195
Website http://www.borderwatch.com.au/

The Border Watch is an Australian newspaper based in Mount Gambier, South Australia, owned by the Scott Group of Companies. Published Tuesday through Friday, the paper services Mount Gambier, the South Australian Limestone Coast, and parts of Western Victoria. It is the oldest and largest regional newspaper in South Australia.

The Border Watch was first published on 26 April 1861 by proprietor and editor Andrew Frederick Laurie (1843–1920), aided by his brother Park Laurie (1846–1928) and their mother, the widow of the Rev. Alexander Laurie, first Presbyterian minister of nearby Portland, Victoria. It started as a 4-page, single broadsheet weekly in Gambierton, as Mount Gambier township was then known. John Watson (ca.1842 – 13 December 1925) joined in 1863 as editor, and he and A. F. Laurie as publisher managed the company for the next 50 years. Laurie was president of the Mount Gambier Racing Club from its inception and Watson was Mount Gambier's first mayor. Laurie and J. Watson founded The Narracoorte Herald in 1875, run initially by Archibald Caldwell and John Baxter Mather, and taken over in 1880 by Mather and George Ash.

The newspaper also incorporated two rivals: the biweekly Mount Gambier Standard (3 May 1866 – 1874), and the South Eastern Star (2 October 1877 – 13 October 1930), which had been run by James Fletcher Jones. It also owns and prints the weekly newspaper The Pennant, which services Penola and district, and the South Eastern Times at Millicent.

It won the "Best Newspaper" category in the South Australian Country Press Awards in 2005, for the first time in 50 years.

In 2006, prominent editorial staff resigned or took leave due to the perceived interference of the newspaper's then owner, Allan Scott.


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