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The Daily Advertiser (Wagga Wagga)

The Daily Advertiser
FrontPageImageDailyAdvertiser.jpg
Front page of The Daily Advertiser
on 5 November 2009
Type Daily newspaper
Format Tabloid
Owner(s) Fairfax Media
Founded 10 December 1868
Headquarters 48 Trail Street Wagga Wagga, NSW, 2650
ISSN 1322-8110
OCLC number 220658139
Website http://www.dailyadvertiser.com.au

The Daily Advertiser is the regional newspaper which services Wagga Wagga, New South Wales Australia and much of the surrounding region. It is published Monday to Friday but also appears as a sister publication called The Weekend Advertiser on Saturdays. The paper reaches about 31,000 people during its Monday to Friday printing, equating to 85% of all people aged over 14 that live in the paper's main coverage area.

The paper started its life as The Wagga Wagga Advertiser and was founded by two wealthy local pastoralists, Auber George Jones and Thomas Darlow. It was first printed on 10 December 1868, only 80 years after the commencement of European settlement in Australia. The paper is older than a large number of city newspapers and is one of the oldest regional newspapers in the country.

The first edition was edited by Frank Hutchison, who was an Oxford graduate, and the paper was initially managed by E G Wilton, who had been trained in London. When it commenced publication, Wagga Wagga was also serviced by the Wagga Wagga Express and Murrumbidgee District Advertiser.

The Wagga Wagga Advertiser originally sold for sixpence and was printed bi-weekly in the form of a four-page broadsheet, but became a tri-weekly publication in 1880. On 3 January 1911 the newspaper was renamed The Daily Advertiser and became a "daily" on 31 December 1918.

Other than normal daily publication the paper has on occasion printed a special edition such as the issue of 7.30pm on 11 November 1918. On that day the paper's office, learning of the end of World War I, rushed its special The Daily Advertiser Extraordinary on to the streets and it was through that medium that the citizens of Wagga Wagga first heard of the end of the War.

In 1962 the newspaper reduced in size from a broadsheet to a tabloid format.

The paper has for some years printed the following quote by John Milton on its front page, to profess its ethos:


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