Thewestern Morning News

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Thewestern Morning News mediapack The Western Morning News is a regional newspaper for the South West. Editorially it champions the region and has been providing a vibrant mix of local and regional news since 1860. Readership 124,570 COVERAGE Bridgwater Barnstaple Taunton Yeovil Somerset Bude Exeter Bridport Sidmouth Devon Tavistock Cornwall Torquay Newquay Plymouth At Circulationthe heartTruro of all things local 31,971 Falmouth The Western Morning News’ coverage Over the course of a week the Western predominantly covers Devon and Cornwall Morning News’ audience increases by but extends to areas of West Somerset and 119% to 175,170 readers. Dorset. An effective solution for businesses wanting to reach the people in the more rural areas of A STRONG CATCHMENT AREA the region or expand coverage around the for local businesses. larger conurbations. SOUTH WEST MEDIA GROUP LTD Readership JICREG 01.10.10 At the heart of all things local Circulation Monday-Saturday 100% paid-for. Source: ABC July-December 2010 Unique Visitors mediapack Thisisdevon and Thisiscornwall are the devon 194,561 leading regional websites of the Western Morning News and are dedicated to serving the interests of the people of Cornwall, Devon and the South West. cornwall 224,347 The audience for thisisdevon and thisiscornwall.co.uk is continually growing. Page Impressions devon 1.1 million cornwall2.1 million Thisisdevon / cornwall feature regional news, sport and information, plus the popular classified sections of Jobsite, Motors.co.uk and FindaProperty.co.uk 60% Demographic Profile 50% Thanks to their broad appeal the Western Morning News and thisisdevon.co.uk are read by a good cross 40% section of the local community. 30% 20% 10% 46% 47% 54% 53% 13% 8% 35% 25% 52% 67% 45% 16% 20% 34% 22% 23% 29% 0% 13% Male Female 15-34 35-54 55+ AB C1 C2 DE thisiswesternmorningnews.co.uk + thisisdevon.co.uk Western Morning News Source: Audience Dynamics 2009, JICREG 01.10.10. Intellitracker January 2011 To discuss your advertising requirements or to find out SOUTH WEST MEDIA GROUP LLTTDD more information give us a call on 01752 765500 At the heart of all things local.
Recommended publications
  • FREE CAR WASH FREE CAR WASH COUPON Why Not Save Time and Money and Make Your Cars Bright and Shiny with This Rs Cal Ca Find Lo Fantastic Offer
    8NEWS WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 25 2013 WESTERN MORNING NEWS WMN-E01-S2 westernmorningnews.co.uk 2002, living in the same house in Wonford for over 50 years and developing a broad Devon- Project reveals shire accent. Her story has been brought to life by Ghee and volunteer Crystal Carter, originally from California but a resident of multicultural Exeter since 2005 after mar- rying an Englishman while studying here for her degree. Dorothea was something of a heroine, risking her own life history behind to look for casualties during the 1942 blitz of Exeter. It’s this wartime era that is of special interest to Crystal, whose father and grandfather Devon city were black servicemen in the US military; her grandfather served during the Second BY LAURA JOINT about people from minority World War. backgrounds, people from Crystal, 30, researched stor- It’s thought to be the most elsewhere who’ve made their ies of black GIs stationed in comprehensive local history homes here or visited for a Exeter in 1943-44. project of its kind nationally – short time and been part of the She said: “The American and it reveals a rich seam of life of the city. army was still operating se- multiculturalism that has run “It’s not re-writing the his- gregation so when they came through Exeter for longer tory, but adding another over here, they were essen- than you might expect. chapter; it’s like we have a tially two separate armies –a A group of volunteers has white picture and we’re col- black army and a white army.
    [Show full text]
  • Sheet1 Page 1 Express & Star (West Midlands) 113,174 Manchester Evening News 90,973 Liverpool Echo 85,463 Aberdeen
    Sheet1 Express & Star (West Midlands) 113,174 Manchester Evening News 90,973 Liverpool Echo 85,463 Aberdeen - Press & Journal 71,044 Dundee Courier & Advertiser 61,981 Norwich - Eastern Daily Press 59,490 Belfast Telegraph 59,319 Shropshire Star 55,606 Newcastle-Upon-Tyne Evening Chronicle 52,486 Glasgow - Evening Times 52,400 Leicester Mercury 51,150 The Sentinel 50,792 Aberdeen - Evening Express 47,849 Birmingham Mail 47,217 Irish News - Morning 43,647 Hull Daily Mail 43,523 Portsmouth - News & Sports Mail 41,442 Darlington - The Northern Echo 41,181 Teesside - Evening Gazette 40,546 South Wales Evening Post 40,149 Edinburgh - Evening News 39,947 Leeds - Yorkshire Post 39,698 Bristol Evening Post 38,344 Sheffield Star & Green 'Un 37,255 Leeds - Yorkshire Evening Post 36,512 Nottingham Post 35,361 Coventry Telegraph 34,359 Sunderland Echo & Football Echo 32,771 Cardiff - South Wales Echo - Evening 32,754 Derby Telegraph 32,356 Southampton - Southern Daily Echo 31,964 Daily Post (Wales) 31,802 Plymouth - Western Morning News 31,058 Southend - Basildon - Castle Point - Echo 30,108 Ipswich - East Anglian Daily Times 29,932 Plymouth - The Herald 29,709 Bristol - Western Daily Press 28,322 Wales - The Western Mail - Morning 26,931 Bournemouth - The Daily Echo 26,818 Bradford - Telegraph & Argus 26,766 Newcastle-Upon-Tyne Journal 26,280 York - The Press 25,989 Grimsby Telegraph 25,974 The Argus Brighton 24,949 Dundee Evening Telegraph 23,631 Ulster - News Letter 23,492 South Wales Argus - Evening 23,332 Lancashire Telegraph - Blackburn 23,260
    [Show full text]
  • Eference Number: FOI 101003134752
    Reference Number: FOI 101003134752 Response provided under: Environmental Information Regulations 2004 Request: “Can you please confirm where if online and which newspaper(S) you advertise all your public notice, including planning TROS Path Diversion to name a few. ascertain how many planning enforcement notices(all) were served in 2016/2017 If your TROS are available online and if not do you have a list of consultees” Response: Planning advertisements are published in the following newspapers: The Cornish Guardian The Cornishman The West Briton The Cornish Times The Cornish and Devon Post The Western Evening Herald Occasionally in the Western Morning News Online publication of Planning Public Notices can be found on each planning application on the Council’s Online Planning Register. Public notices in relation to Traffic Regulation Orders are advertised in the relevant local newspaper publication under the coverage of Cornwall and Devon Media Ltd. The list of local publications where a public notice may appear (but is not limited to), includes: The Cornishman The St Ives Times and Echo The West Briton The Cornish Guardian The Cornwall and Devon Post The Cornish Times 9 Enforcement Notices and 11 Breach of Condition Notices were served from 1 April 2016 – 23 March 2017. All TRO and other traffic consultations are available to view online using Cornwall Council’s Consultation Finder. Users are required to register and are able to view current consultations and see the results of previous consultations. With the exception of the Fire Brigade and the occasional Parish Council, all statutory consultees are registered for online notifications. Traffic Regulation Orders (e.g.
    [Show full text]
  • Abg Partners
    ABG PARTNERS CORNWALL FESTIVAL OF BUSINESS 2020 EQUIP YOUR SKILLS HUB WEBINARS BUSINESS WITH THE 7 SKILLS EVERY NEW SKILLS FOR FOOD & DRINK BUSINESS NEEDS A NEW WAY OF 2 Nov / 1 - 1.30pm WORKING HOW A SKILLS REVIEW CAN HELP YOUR BUSINESS THRIVE 3 Nov / 1 - 1.30pm Q&A WITH LOCAL SKILLS EXPERTS: ADAPT TO SURVIVE AND THRIVE 6 Nov / 1 - 2pm For more information visit www.ciosskillshub.com WHERE TO NEXT? WESTERN MORNING NEWS Thursday, October 22, 2020 ANNUAL BUsiness GUIDE 2020 3 Welcome from Bill Martin, Marketplace Publisher, Reach PLC Region’s unique opportunity £1 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2020 TRUSTED NEWS SINCE 1860 DEVON £1 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2020 TRUSTED NEWS SINCE 1860 CORNWALL £1 MONDAY, MARCH 9, 2020 TRUSTED NEWS SINCE 1860 CORNWALL £1 MONDAY, JULY 13, 2020 TRUSTED NEWS SINCE 1860 DEVON > The Goonhilly Earth Station in Cornwall will get > A pledge by Prime Minister funding for a space institute Boris Johnson to invest in and manufacturing facility offshore wind farms has been BID TO PULL UP A CHAIR FOR welcomed by those behind ambitious plans for a floating turbine array in the Celtic Sea HELP FLYBE A £500 CURRYS THE PERFECT VIEW As tens of millions WORKERS of pounds are pumped WINPC WORLD VOUCHER PAGE 15 into West building projects DETAILS & TOKEn – pAGE 7 – from space engineering and mining to leisure centres and Bids in for cultural venues – it seems that finally... new school Time to deliver for in Cornwall WO separate bids have been submitted to the Gov- Ternment to open a new secondary school in Cornwall.
    [Show full text]
  • Copyright Statement This Copy of The
    University of Plymouth PEARL https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk 04 University of Plymouth Research Theses 01 Research Theses Main Collection 2014 Working-class housing in Plymouth 1870-1914 Bond, Ann http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/3144 Plymouth University All content in PEARL is protected by copyright law. Author manuscripts are made available in accordance with publisher policies. Please cite only the published version using the details provided on the item record or document. In the absence of an open licence (e.g. Creative Commons), permissions for further reuse of content should be sought from the publisher or author. Copyright statement This copy of the thesis has been supplied on condition that anyone who consults it is understood to recognise that its copyright rests with its author and that no quotation from the thesis and no information derived from it may be published without the author’s prior consent. i WORKING-CLASS HOUSING IN PLYMOUTH 1870-1914 by ANN BOND A thesis submitted to the University of Plymouth In partial fulfilment for the degree of Master of Research (MRes) in History School of Humanities & Performing Arts Faculty of Arts & Humanities August 2014 ii Abstract Working-Class Housing in Plymouth 1870-1914 This thesis sets out to explore the development of working-class housing in Plymouth, East Stonehouse and Devonport in the period between 1870 and 1914. Housing reform has been well documented with particular reference to London and other large urban areas, but has been little explored in the context of the greater Plymouth area – the Three Towns. These three towns with their similarities and variances have demonstrated that a London-centric study of housing will fail to capture the full range of complex challenges faced by provincial towns and cities in effecting improvements to the living conditions of the labouring and artizan classes.
    [Show full text]
  • Newspapers (Online) the Online Newspapers Are Available in “Edzter”
    Newspapers (Online) The Online Newspapers are available in “Edzter”. Follow the steps to activate “edzter” Steps to activate EDZTER 1. Download the APP for IOS or Click www.edzter.com 2. Click - CONTINUE WITH EMAIL ADDRESS 3. Enter University email ID and submit; an OTP will be generated. 4. Check your mail inbox for the OTP. 5. Enter the OTP; enter your NAME and Click Submit 6. Access EDZTER - Magazines and Newspapers at your convenience. Newspapers Aadab Hyderabad Dainik Bharat Rashtramat Jansatta Delhi Prabhat Khabar Kolkata The Chester Chronicle The Times of India Aaj Samaaj Dainik Bhaskar Jabalpur Jansatta Kolkata Punjab Kesari Chandigarh The Chronicle The Weekly Packet Agro Spectrum Disha daily Jansatta Lucknow Retford Times The Cornishman Udayavani (Manipal) Amruth Godavari Essex Chronicle Kalakamudi Kollam Rising Indore The Daily Guardian Vaartha Andhra Pradesh Art Observer Evening Standard Kalakaumudi Trivandrum Rokthok Lekhani Newspaper The Free Press Journal Vaartha Hyderabad Ashbourne News Financial Express Kashmir Observer Royal Sutton Coldfield The Gazette Vartha Bharati (Mangalore) telegraph Observer Ayrshire Post First India Ahmedabad Kids Herald Sakshi Hyderabad The Guardian Vijayavani (Belgavi) Bath Chronicle First India Jaipur Kidz Herald samagya The Guardian Weekly Vijayavani (Bengaluru) Big News First India Lucknow Leicester Mercury Sanjeevni Today The Herald Vijayavani (Chitradurga) Birmingham Mail Folkestone Herald Lincoln Shire Echo Scottish Daily Express The Huddersfield Daily Vijayavani (Gangavathi) Examiner
    [Show full text]
  • WEEKLY MEDIA REPORT: 4 January 2015 Summary of Media Coverage for 04.01.15 Which Lists 150 Pieces of Coverage Comprising Of: •
    WEEKLY MEDIA REPORT: 4 January 2015 Summary of media coverage for 04.01.15 which lists 150 pieces of coverage comprising of: 42 pieces of newspaper coverage of which 18 pieces are from National newspapers and 11 pieces are from Devon & Cornwall publications. 21 pieces of broadcast coverage of which 8 are from National broadcasts and 8 are from Devon & Cornwall broadcasts. 87 pieces of on-line coverage of which 22 are National and 29 are from Devon & Cornwall. INTERNATIONAL A New York Times article about research into the genetic determinants of obesity included expert opinion from Timothy Frayling (Medical School). The Age (Australia), watoday.com.au, Sidney Morning Herald, and Canberra Times reported on research by Mathew White (Medical School / ECEHH) and colleagues which found people who live in urban areas with more green space tend to report greater wellbeing - less mental distress and higher life satisfaction - than city dwellers who don't have parks, gardens or other green space nearby. It was also reported in the Huffington Post. Eureka Alert reported that this research was its 7th most visited news releases of 2014, with 81,972 page visits. Our press release concerning research by Thomas Morton (Psychology) and colleagues which suggested training the elderly to use social media improves well-being and combats isolation was further reported in ANSA.it, paradisi.de, The Hindu, Canberra Times, Sydney Moring Herald, Watoday.com.au, The Age, EHealthNews, Express and Echo, The Daily Mail, Gmjournal.co.uk, Firstpost.com, Daily Express, The Scotsman, The Daily Star, and 29 other international media outlets.
    [Show full text]
  • Template for Dominic V2
    https://blog.bham.ac.uk/everydaycyborgs/ [email protected] Figure 1 - Supporting InFormation R e t u r n e d r e s u l t s f o r s e a r c h o f ' m e d i c a l ' 1 9 8 4 - p r e s e n t . T h e n u m b e r i n b r a c k e t s i s t h e n u m b e r o f r e t u r n e d r e s u l t s , a r r a n g e d f r o m h i g h e s t n u m b e r t o l o w e s t . Birmingham Daily Post (103566 Wicklow People (12055) Liverpool Echo (90889) Kensington Post (12041) Irish Independent (88222) Marylebone Mercury (11882) Aberdeen Press and Journal (79319) Sunday Tribune (11862) Aberdeen Evening Express (54990) Sunday Mirror (11820) Coventry Evening Telegraph (53531) Belfast News-Letter (11569) Belfast Telegraph (53107) Drogheda Independent (11245) Evening Herald (Dublin) (50668) Daily Herald (10018) Daily Mirror (42315) Northern Whig (9954) Newcastle Journal (37710) Middlesex County Times (9927) Newcastle Evening Chronicle (36846) North Wales Weekly News (9686) Reading Evening Post (34264) Bradford Observer (8915) Sunday Independent (Dublin) (24609) Drogheda Argus and Leinster Journal Dundee Courier (24191) (8708) Sandwell Evening Mail (21006) Cheshire Observer (8388) Western Mail (17575) Birmingham Daily Gazette (8285) Staffordshire Sentinel (17386) Sunday World (Dublin) (7984) Harrow Observer (15047) Kent & Sussex Courier (7948) New Ross Standard (14808) Lichfield Mercury (7882) Yorkshire Post and Leeds Torbay Express and South Devon Intelligencer (14237) Echo (7715) Leicester Evening Mail (13098) Sunday Life (7659) Sligo Champion (12812)
    [Show full text]
  • Access UK & Ireland Newspapers
    Access U.K. & Ireland Newspapers Source List ENGLAND Star, The (Sheffield) Birmingham Post, The Sun, The (London) Burnley Express Sunday Business (London) Coventry Telegraph Sunday Mercury (Birmingham) Daily Express (London) Sunday Mirror (London) Daily Mail (London) Sunday People*(London) Daily Mirror (London) Sunday Telegraph (London) Daily Post (Liverpool) Sunday Times, The (London) Daily Telegraph (London) Times, The (London) Dewsbury Reporter Visitor, The (Morcambe) Western Daily Press (Bristol) Economist, The (magazine) Western Morning News (Plymouth) Evening Chronicle (Newcastle) (pending publisher approval) Wigan Observer Evening Gazette (Middlesbrough) (pending publisher approval) Yorkshire Evening Post Evening Mail (Birmingham) Yorkshire Post Evening Post (Bristol) Evening Standard (London) County Publications** Evening Telegraph (Peterborough) Express on Sunday, The (London) East Anglia Region Financial News (London) Financial Times Essex County Publications**: Gazette, The (Blackpool) Basildon Recorder Guardian, The (London) Braintree & Witham Weekly News Harrogate Advertiser Brentwood & Billericay Weekly News Chelmsford Weekly News Hull Daily Mail Clacton, Frinton & Walton Gazette Independent on Sunday (London) Colchester Evening Gazette Independent, The (London) Essex County Standard Journal, The (Newcastle) (pending publisher approval) Evening Echo (Basildon) Lancaster Guardian Frinton & Walton Gazette Colchester Leicester Mercury Halstead Gazette Liverpool Echo Harwich & Manningtree Standard Mail on Sunday (London) Maldon
    [Show full text]
  • Making Soap in Plymouth
    Making Soap in Plymouth Dr James Gregory, Department of History, University of Plymouth May 2020 e.mail: [email protected] ​ That the consumption of Soap in England does not increase with population, wealth, commerce, or civilisation of the nation. That the people of England, high and low, consume a less average quality of Soap per head than they allow the convicts in the 1 prisons, or the paupers in the workhouses. Who can deny my claim? Health’s truest friend, I cleanse the skin of rich and poor alike: Disease flies from me, as from mortal foe, From kingly palace down to cottage hearth, Are constant records of my service found. Each garment worn, by king, queen, knight, or peasant, 2 Bears witness of my power, my wondrous power. As these two quotations indicate, soap stimulated some controversy in England in the first half of the nineteenth century, before the tax which had long been imposed on this important commodity was removed by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, William Gladstone, in 1853. This meant that English manufacturers were in competition with Irish soap-makers who did not have the tax. Into the early 1840s, soap makers were subject to regulations which controlled the shape and size of soap bars, the ingredients, the methods of boiling, and the specific gravities of the 1 Western Courier, 29 November 1849. ​ 2 Western Courier, 19 February 1851. The soap industry is referred to in previously ​ published local histories such as C. Gill, Plymouth a New History: 1603 to the Present Day ​ (Newton Abbot: David & Charles, 1979); see also the recent E.
    [Show full text]
  • 5 Wales in Print
    Broadcasting Sub-committee BSC(3)-01-09 : Paper 2 : 22 January 2009 Evidence gathering on the current state of the Welsh Newspaper Industry - Institute of Welsh Affairs Media in Wales – Serving Public Values 5 Wales in Print For commercial reasons newspaper providers have begun to tackle the widespread threat of reducing circulations, which presents challenges to revenue 5.1 Introduction and business viability. By modifying media delivery away from traditional newspaper provision Consumption of newspapers in the UK has, newspapers have been able to offer news in a more traditionally, been high by international flexible and market-driven format. standards, and newspapers remain important in the UK as a source of information and a setter Reduced readership results in a smaller base for of news agendas. However, print media are in a advertising – the lifeblood of commercial media state of flux, not only in Wales but throughout providers. The Newspaper Society’s Regional Press the UK and much of the industrialised world. In Survey 2006 found that 73 per cent of revenue in many cases the circulations of print media in UK regional operations came from advertising and Wales and the UK have been declining for some sponsorship while circulation sales accounted for 15 time, reflecting changes in news consumption per cent. Advertising is not likely to diminish in not caused solely by technological importance for the time being. Print media developments. providers find in the internet a potential new delivery mechanism for their media and thus But decline is not universal. English and Welsh sources of revenue, albeit in a different form.
    [Show full text]
  • Devon and the General Strike, 19261
    /. H. PORTER DEVON AND THE GENERAL STRIKE, 19261 i Rural areas have generally been ignored in recent studies of the General Strike of 3-12 May 1926 on the implicit assumption that its impact in such areas would be negligible. To see if this assumption is correct this article examines the course of the strike in Devon and reaction to it. The likeli- hood of militant action in Devon in part depended upon the structure of the occupied population. In 1921 16 per cent of the occupied population of Devon County and the County Boroughs was in agriculture, and this rises to 25 per cent if we take the administrative county alone. In Exeter 49 per cent of the occupied population was in commerce, the professions, public administration, defence and personal service; in Plymouth the percentage for this group was 52 per cent. Consequently even the industrial areas were likely to be relatively weakly organised. Once out of the County Boroughs the industrial population, apart from a concentration of railwaymen at Newton Abbot, was so scattered as to make organisation and co-ordination difficult.2 There was no tradition of militancy in the county.3 II besides these difficulties more formal opposition was to face the strikers. The first opposition body to form was the Organisation for the Mainte- nance of Supplies. At a meeting of the Torquay Chamber of Trade and Commerce members were urged in January to join the OMS, and in May this was backed by the local newspaper, the Torquay Directory* OMS organisers in Dawlish were attacked by one Labour supporter as "the gallant knights, these would be trade union wreckers, these class war 1 All dates cited refer to this year, unless otherwise specified.
    [Show full text]