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Petersburg Times


The Times and Northern Advertiser (originally Petersburg Times) was a weekly newspaper published in Peterborough, South Australia from 1887 to 1970.

Petersburg was a very small town in 1887 when the railway to Broken Hill was being built, and a decision had to be made whether the ore from the mines should be shipped from Port Augusta, Port Pirie or Port Adelaide. If it were to be Port Pirie, the line would pass through Petersburg. Anxious to improve the status of the town (particularly as against rival Terowie), mayor W. Thredgold approached Robert M. Osborne with a view to establishing a newspaper (Terowie had its Enterprise, founded by James O'Loghlin). The old Anglican church building would have been an ideal premises, but it could not be got ready soon enough, so an old iron shed near the mill crossing was made available. Osborne found a likely assistant in H. P. Colebatch (later Premier of Western Australia, Agent-general and, as Sir Hal, Senator for Western Australia). The first issue (full title: The Petersburg Times, Orroroo Chronicle and Northern Advertiser), of a single sheet (four pages), appeared on 12 August 1887. Barton Pullen was appointed the paper's agent and correspondent in Orroroo. A new building was erected by Osborne in 1891 on the corner of Bismarck and Jervois streets.

Managing editor of the Times from 1896 was James J. "Jim" Bennett (c. 1873 – 7 March 1900), who was succeeded by Kinso C. H. Ewins, of Burra. In 1909 R. M. Osborne sold The Times and the Quorn Mercury to W. H. Bennett, brother of the late editor and had been successfully managing the Quorn Mercury for the previous nine years. The building, which was still owned by Osborne, was destroyed by fire 23 December 1909, at a great loss to Mr. Bennett, who persisted, and built the paper into a thriving business.

The change of name in May 1919, from Petersburg Times to The Times and Northern Advertiser, Peterborough, South Australia was made in response to the government's wish to expunge Germanic placenames, but was not done gladly.


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