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Looking back 50 years: newsagent and newspaper

By Andrew Grant-Adamson • Nov 24th, 2008 • Category: Newspapers

It is good to have your choice of place to live confirmed by a survey as having the second best quality of life in Great Britain. Even nicer that the East Anglian Daily Times chooses to illustrate the story with a picture of our village with our house in the foreground.

Despite my distrust of polls carried out by businesses to promote their wares (this one was from the Halifax which like most of the house lenders could probably spend its money better at present) the choice of Mid Suffolk as number two in the country is a useful “feel-good” story.

The East Anglian Daily Times reached edition 42,330 today. Last week I delved back in the county records for 50 years to look for the day our village newsagents started their business (November 17, 1958). They wanted to see it again.

In that half-a-century Grace and Bob Webster have sold well over six million copies of the regional morning. They wanted to see what it said on day they started their still thriving business where Grace, at the age of 80, continues to get up at 4.30 in the morning to sort large piles of papers for delivery. The provide their service to many of the villages around.

What struck me as the old microfilm image came up on the records office  screen was that the Aglian is now providing more local news than it was. First there was the size: eight pages broadsheet then and 48 tabloid now (Mondays).

That is a tripling of the area of newsprint to be filled. Granted pictures and much much bigger headlines fill much of that extra space. Yet the paper clearly provides a larger volume of local news now than it did in 1958.

Then it was very much an agency filled national and international plus local newspaper. The Cyprus problems, a car strike in the midlands, Russia, Ghana and free trade talks were all on the front page. Twenty three stories and a briefs column on the front page.

But even the weather story was hardly given a local spin and and the egg marketing scheme none at all.

* The Halifax survey which takes into account environment, education and health suggests that Elmbridge in Surrey has the best quality of life in Great Britain.

Andrew Grant-Adamson is Andrew Grant-Adamson is a journalist who now teaches a new generation of writers, subs and editors at the University of Westminster.
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4 Responses »

  1. [...] Grant-Adamson found out whilst doing a little research for his local newsagent. The East Anglian Daily Times reached [...]

  2. Wordblog: Looking back 50 years: newsagent and newspaper

  3. I’m glad thatAndrew Grant Adamsonis back on the blogging scene. He doesn’t post too often but he provides valuable insights into the media. Today is no exception and he reminds us that looking back through rose tinted spectacles is not always the best thing to do as he looks back 50

  4. t say: a speech ignoring the real shortcomings of press self-regulation [Journalism.co.uk] (from amonck) - “Until deficiencies in the existing system are addressed, press self-regulation in its current form will not survive the next decade.”Looking back 50 years: newsagent and newspaper [wordblog] (from vizeds) - Andrew Grant-Adamson finds that The East Anglian Daily Times now provides more local news than when it debuted. Why the New York Times should show its sources [contentious.com] (from

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