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The Globe and Mail

The Globe and Mail
The Globe and Mail frontpage new.jpg
The January 25, 2013 front page of The Globe and Mail
Type Daily newspaper
Format Broadsheet
Owner(s) The Woodbridge Company
Publisher Phillip Crawley
Editor David Walmsley
Founded 1844; 173 years ago (1844)
Political alignment Centrist,
Economic liberalism
Headquarters 351 King Street East
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Circulation 291,571 Daily
354,850 Saturday
(March 2013)
ISSN 0319-0714
Website theglobeandmail.com

The Globe and Mail is a nationally distributed Canadian newspaper owned by The Woodbridge Company, based in Toronto and printed in six cities across the country. With a weekly readership of 2,018,923 in 2015, it is Canada's most widely read newspaper on weekdays and Saturdays, although it falls slightly behind the Toronto Star in overall weekly circulation because the Star publishes a Sunday edition while the Globe does not. The Globe and Mail is regarded by some as Canada's "newspaper of record". Due to its long association with its city of origin, it is sometimes incorrectly referred to as the Toronto Globe and Mail in international citations.

The predecessor to The Globe and Mail was The Globe, founded in 1844 by Scottish immigrant George Brown, who became a Father of Confederation. Brown's liberal politics led him to court the support of the Clear Grits, precursor to the modern Liberal Party of Canada. The Globe began in Toronto as a weekly party organ for Brown's Reform Party, but seeing the economic gains that he could make in the newspaper business, Brown soon targeted a wide audience of liberal minded freeholders. He selected as the motto for the editorial page a quotation from Junius, "The subject who is truly loyal to the Chief Magistrate will neither advise nor submit to arbitrary measures." The quotation is carried on the editorial page to this day.

By the 1850s, The Globe had become an independent and well-regarded daily newspaper. It began distribution by railway to other cities in Ontario shortly after Canadian Confederation. At the dawn of the twentieth century, The Globe added photography, a women's section, and the slogan "Canada's National Newspaper", which remains on its front-page banner. It began opening bureaus and offering subscriptions across Canada.


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