This article needs additional citations for verification .(April 2019) |
Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Founder(s) | G. S. Porter |
Founded | 1852 |
Circulation | 42,319 as of September 2018 |
ISSN | 1707-9195 |
Website | www |
The Newmarket Era is a weekly newspaper that has been published in Newmarket, Ontario, Canada, since 1852. [1]
The state is the servant, not the master, of the people; the state is their guarantee against infringement on their rights, their agent in international and national issues; it is not the function of the state to assume the direction of those activities which rest on individual choice.— Newmarket editorial page
The New Era began as a four-page weekly on February 5, 1852, under George S. Porter, born in 1813 and originally from Norwich, England. [2] He controlled the paper for a year before heading to Australia where he lived into his 100th year. [3] [4] During his tenure the paper reprinted long tracts on topics of the day, but struggled to find a readership among the 500 members of the pre-incorporation village of Newmarket. This was attributed to a lack of money and the education potential of readers. [5] He sold the paper to new arrivals from Toronto, Erastus Jackson and A. E. R. Henderson. [6]
Erastus was born August 29, 1829, in Merrickville, Grenville County, son of tanner/shoemaker Christoper Stroud Jackson. [7] [8] Erastus' first apprenticeship in the paper trade was at 16 years of age, and from 1845 to 1852 worked at papers in Cobourg (Canadian Christian Advocate), Guelph (the Advertiser and Mercury), and in Toronto for the Hon. William McDougall’s Toronto North American. [9] [10] There he met partner A. E. R. Henderson with whom he arrived in Newmarket on June 20, 1853, though their partnership would only last a year leaving Jackson as sole proprietor of the paper for many hard years. [11] The lack of public and grammar schools that had caused Porter to relinquish the paper did indeed affect Jackson as well, but perseverance would pay off. [12] By the 1860s, paid subscribers for the re-named Newmarket Era totalled 1,200 when the town’s population was only 1,000. [13] For a time the paper was known as the Era and North York General Intelligencer and Advertiser, having absorbed the Intelligencer in the 1860s. [14]
A Methodist and Reformer, Jackson befriended Father of Confederation George Brown. [15] He served on the party’s executive and stood as an Independent Reform candidate for the provincial assembly in 1875, [16] campaigned for by Alexander Muir. [17] Jackson occupied many positions during his life: coroner and issuer of marriage licenses during and after the Sandfield-Dorion administration of Old Canada, welcomed dignitaries such as the Prince of Wales in 1861 and Lord Dufferin, as a municipal councillor and reeve. [18] He was an executive of the Canadian Press Association, president of Newmarket Mechanics’ Institute, Masonic member and mayor for two years after incorporation as town in 1880. [19] Erastus even introduced newsboys to Newmarket when the Fenian Raid broke out in 1866 and an emergency edition was issued. Erastus would bring his son Lyman into the fold in 1883, and stayed involved with the paper until close to his death on January 6, 1919. [20]
During Erastus' time the paper moved from its original location on the east side of Main Street by Park Avenue, then Mill (Queen), Ontario Street and finally atop a hill at 142 Main St. [21] [22] [23]
Lyman George Jackson, son of Sophia Wright and Erastus, would steward the paper from February 1883 until his death on August 8, 1934. [24] [25] From early 1931 to May 1932, he sold and subsequently bought back the paper from Arthur Hawkes and his daughter Evelyn Crickmore, as the Depression affected sales. [26] [27]
After L. G.'s passing Andrew Olding Hebb, a Nova Scotian who reported for papers in his home province as well as Quebec and Ontario, took over the paper until 1946. Four years prior, shoemaker and editor of the Conservative Newmarket ExpressHerald Angus West merged with the Era to form the Era and Express. [28] Hebb becoming co-owner with former-Postmaster and Express publisher Col. William Pate Mulock, who was married to the Hon. Frederick Johnston's daughter Kathleen. [29] John A. Meyer and John E. Struthers would succeed Hebb as editor. [30] Meyer and Struthers would rack an impressive amount of awards during their time with the paper: Three Charles Clark trophies in the 1930s, a Pearce Trophy for Best Editorial Page in 1942, as well as Legge Memorial trophies and a David Williams trophy in the 1950s. [31]
1950s Onward
On June 14, 1953, the Era’s offices were ravaged by a fire and a new location arranged at 30 Charles Street by publisher Cecil Alexander “Tiny” Cathers, a Progressive Conservative MP. [32] [33]
In 1958 Maj. James McCollum Baxter of Windsor would take over the paper, himself a former city editor of the Windsor Record in 1913. [34] Like Jackson, Baxter's son Ian would eventually join the paper, but in 1965 the paper was sold to John Bassett and the Toronto Telegram , establishing Inland Publishing Ltd., which would eventually be purchased by Torstar, Inc. [35] [36] The paper absorbed the Newmarket Post in 1966. [37]
The 1970s saw David R. Haskell as publisher, with Robert Terrence “Terry” Carter, who would write a fair bit about the history of the paper, as editor-in-chief. The paper moved to a larger premise on Steven Court in 1982. [38] The paper merged with the Aurora Banner in 1989 to form the Era-Banner. The Era-Banner continues today under Metroland Media Group, with Ian Proudfoot publishing from 1996 to 2016 and Dana Robbins next. On September 15, 2023 Metroland Media moved the newspaper to an online only format.
Geographic Coverage
The paper historically served the communities of Newmarket, Ravenshoe, Holt, Aurora, Schomberg, Glenville, Pine Orchard, Sharon, Holland Landing, Roche's Point, Belhaven, Baldwin, Keswick, East Gwillimbury, Sutton, Queensville, Mount Zion, Mount Pisgah, Mount Albert and Kettleby.
Newmarket is a town and regional seat of the Regional Municipality of York in the Canadian province of Ontario. It is part of Greater Toronto in the Golden Horseshoe region of Southern Ontario. The name stems from the fact that the settlement was a "New Market", in contrast to York as the Old Market.
Thomas Sterry Hunt was an American geologist and chemist.
Alexander Murray, was a Scottish geologist. He is best known for his career with the Geological Survey of Canada and the Geological Survey of Newfoundland. He is credited as the discoverer of the first known pre-Cambrian (Ediacaran) fossil, later named Aspidella.
Aurora GO Station is a railway station and bus station in the GO Transit network located on Wellington Street East between Yonge Street and Bayview Avenue in Aurora, Ontario, Canada. It is a stop on the Barrie line train service, and connects with York Region Transit local bus routes, and the GO Express Bus between Newmarket Bus Terminal and Union Station Bus Terminal.
Mazo de la Roche was a Canadian writer who was the author of the Jalna novels, one of the most popular series of books of her time.
Bogarttown is a community located at Mulock Drive and Leslie Street between Bayview Avenue and Woodbine Avenue in York Region, Ontario, Canada. Formerly a distinct rural hamlet, it is now a part of the Town of Newmarket, Ontario both administratively and more recently geographically owing to sprawling suburban development. The name is occasionally seen misspelled as Bogartown.
Sir William Mulock Secondary School is a secondary school located at 705 Columbus Way, off Mulock Drive in Newmarket, Ontario, Canada. It is one of four high schools in Newmarket under the jurisdiction of the York Region District School Board and currently educates students from Grades 9 to 12. It opened in December 2001. Prior to that, most of its students went to Newmarket High School. The founding students have demonstrated the initiative of character traits by creating original 'character feathers' which can be found in the main hall.
James Miller Williams was a Canadian-American businessman and politician. Williams is best known for establishing the first commercially successful oil well in 1858 and igniting the first oil boom in North America. Williams is commonly viewed as the father of the petroleum industry in Canada.
Upper Canada Mall is the 25th largest shopping mall in Canada, located in Newmarket, Ontario, Canada. The mall is situated on the northwest corner of the Davis Drive West and Yonge Street intersection. The mall is owned and operated by Oxford Properties, one of the largest shopping centre development companies in Canada. It opened in 1974, at which time its layout was a north-south arrangement with two sunken sitting areas surrounded by brick planters on the lower level.
John Henry Fairbank was variously a surveyor, oilman, inventor, banker, politician and fire chief in Lambton County, Ontario. Fairbank is best known for his invention of the jerker-line pumping system, which quickly spread across the world its introduction in the mid-1860s. Fairbank Oil, established by Fairbank in 1861, is the oldest continually operating petroleum company, and the company's property, known as the "First Commercial Oil Field", is included in the List of National Historic Sites of Canada in Ontario.
Lake Wilcox is a kettle lake in the Oak Ridges neighbourhood of Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada. The lake measures 1.5 kilometers across and covers 55.6 hectares or 0.55 square kilometres, making it the largest kettle lake on the Oak Ridges Moraine. Lake Wilcox, Lake St. George and their associated wetlands form a "provincially significant wetland".
Charles Nelson Tripp was a bitumen businessman in Ontario. Tripp is best known for his role in the formation of the International Mining and Manufacturing Company in 1854, the world's first incorporated oil company. Tripp and his brother Henry were among the first to exploit Enniskillen Township's bitumen deposits following Thomas Sterry Hunt and Alexander Murray's reports on the region and helped kickstart the first oil boom in Enniskillen Township.
Joan Arden Charlat Murray is an American-born Canadian art historian, writer and curator who is an advocate for Canadian art and curators.
William Henry McGarvey was a Canadian business magnate, entrepreneur and politician. McGarvey is best known for his exploits in Galicia, where he operated a highly successful petroleum company. McGarvey was one of the most successful "foreign drillers" of Petrolia, becoming a multimillionaire before the outbreak of the First World War destroyed his business.
The Newmarket Citizens' Band is a concert band based in Newmarket, Ontario, Canada. It is Canada's oldest continuously operating community concert band, and one of the country's oldest marching bands. It is a member of the Canadian Band Association, Ontario chapter. Its most recent conductor was Les Saville, who succeeded Bob Thiel in 1990 and retired in 2021.
William Allen was an American Quaker minister, known as the only Black Quaker minister in 19th century Canada.
Mike Filey was a Canadian historian, radio host, journalist and author. He was awarded the Jean Hibbert Memorial Award in 2009 for promoting the city of Toronto and its history.
Goodbye Sousa is a Canadian short documentary film, directed by Tony Ianzelo and released in 1973. It profiles the Newmarket Citizens' Band, one of Canada's oldest active marching bands.
Jacob Lewis Englehart was a Canadian-American business magnate, entrepreneur and philanthropist. Englehart is best known for his role in the formation of Imperial Oil in 1880 to combat the growing influence of John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil. Englehart was one of the most successful oil refiners in Canada during the 1800s and oversaw the completion of the Temiskaming and North Ontario Railway.
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