Diamond Fields Advertiser

Last updated

DFA
Diamond Fields Advertiser (DFA).gif
Type Daily newspaper
FormatTabloid
Owner(s)Independent Media
EditorJohan du Plessis
HeadquartersKimberley
Websitewww.dfa.co.za

The Diamond Fields Advertiser (DFA) is a daily newspaper published in Kimberley, South Africa, founded on 23 March 1878. [1]

Contents

The early days

The earliest paper on the Diamond Fields was a weekly called the Diamond Field, published from 15 October 1870 at Pniel. It moved the following year first to Du Toit's Pan and then New Rush (later renamed Kimberley), and had a strongly anti-imperial view point. Another of the early papers was the pro-British Diamond News of R. W. Murray. [2]

The Independent, owned by William Ling in 1876, was acquired by J. B. Robinson. By the late 1870s the success of the Independent had forced the Diamond Field to close, but with the Diamond Fields Advertiser then emerging as a third paper alongside the Diamond News and the Independent keeping local politicians on their toes in the turbulent years that followed. [3]

During the Siege of Kimberley, the newspaper was the subject of a feud between Cecil Rhodes and garrison commander, Colonel Robert Kekewich. The local newspaper, which was under Rhodes' control, ignored the military censor and printed information that compromised the military. [4] [5] Kekewich obtained permission from his superior to place Rhodes under arrest if necessary.

Prominent journalists in Kimberley in the early years included R. W. Murray, [2] and F. Y. St Leger, later founder of the Cape Times .

Editors of the DFA

[6] 1878 – 1884 Henry Tucker, secretary of the Kimberley mining board and one time Member of the Cape Parliament. 1884 – 1896 Robert Fisher Wilson, independent spirit and fearless writer. Went on to become editor of the Johannesburg Times. 1896 – 1898 Albert Cartwright. Went on to edit the SA News and the Johannesburg Times. 1898 – 1910 George AL Green, Rhodes's 'Prince of Journalists'. Went on to edit the Cape Argus. 1910 – 1923 Frank Ireland 1923 – 1932 Henry Lissant Collins 1932 – 1938 George A Simpson. Was one of Sol Plaatje's pallbearers at his funeral at the West End cemetery.

1938 – 1939 Hastings H Beck 1939 – 1942 A Harrington 1942 – 1949 Rex Hall. Later helped to establish South Africa's Iron and Steel Corporation. 1949 – 1959 David Brechin 1959 – 1962 Archie Atkinson 1962 – 1967 Conrad Lighton 1967 – 1977 Mike Lloyd 1977 – 1984 Graham Etherington 1985 – 1991 Anthony Ball 1991 – 1992 Charles Guild (acting) 1992 – 2002 Kevin Ritchie 2002 – present Johan du Plessis [6]

DFA today

The Diamond Fields Advertiser, affectionately known to its readers as the DFA, outlived its rivals and has continued as a daily paper (although the Saturday edition was dropped in the late 1960s). Today it is a member of Independent News & Media.

Readership stood at 108,000 in 2015, mainly in Kimberley and the surrounding region, with a distribution of 9,161 copies in Q1 2015. [7]

Distribution areas

Distribution [8]
20082013
Eastern Cape
Free StateY
Gauteng
Kwa-Zulu Natal
Limpopo
Mpumalanga
North West
Northern CapeYY
Western Cape

Distribution figures

Circulation [9]
Net Sales
Jan – Mar 20159 161 [7]
Jan – Mar 20149 754 [7]
Oct – Dec 20129 375
July – Sep 20129 557
Apr – Jun 20129 403
Jan – Mar 20129 927

Readership figures

Estimated Readership [10] [11]
AIR
January – December 201276 000
July 2011 – June 201276 000

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kimberley, Northern Cape</span> Capital of the Northern Cape, South Africa

Kimberley is the capital and largest city of the Northern Cape province of South Africa. It is located approximately 110 km east of the confluence of the Vaal and Orange Rivers. The city has considerable historical significance due to its diamond mining past and the siege during the Second Anglo-Boer war. British businessmen Cecil Rhodes and Barney Barnato made their fortunes in Kimberley, and Rhodes established the De Beers diamond company in the early days of the mining town.

<i>Daily News</i> (Durban)

Daily News is a daily newspaper owned by Independent News & Media SA and published every weekday afternoon in Durban, South Africa. It was called Natal Daily News between 1936 and 1962 and The Natal (Mercantile) Advertiser prior to 1936, going back to the 19th century.

<i>Beeld</i> Afrikaans-language daily newspaper

Beeld is an Afrikaans-language daily newspaper that was launched on 16 September 1974. Beeld is distributed in four provinces of South Africa: Gauteng, Mpumalanga, Limpopo and North West, previously part of the former Transvaal province. Die Beeld was an Afrikaans-language Sunday newspaper in the late 1960s.

<i>The Sowetan</i> Daily newspaper in South Africa

The Sowetan is an English-language South African daily newspaper that started in 1981 as a liberation struggle newspaper and was freely distributed to households in the then apartheid-segregated township of Soweto, Johannesburg, Gauteng Province.

<i>The Witness</i> (newspaper)

The Witness is a daily newspaper published in Pietermaritzburg. It mainly serves readers in Pietermaritzburg, Durban and the inland areas of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

<i>The Star</i> (South Africa) South African daily newspaper

The Star is a daily newspaper based in Gauteng, South Africa. The paper is distributed mainly in Gauteng and other provinces such as Mpumalanga, Limpopo, North West, and Free State.

Die Burger is a daily Afrikaans-language newspaper, published by Naspers. By 2008, it had a circulation of 91,665 in the Western and Eastern Cape Provinces of South Africa. Along with Beeld and Volksblad, it is one of three broadsheet dailies in the Media24 stable.

<i>Cape Argus</i> Newspaper from Cape Town, South Africa

The Cape Argus is a daily newspaper co-founded in 1857 by Saul Solomon and published by Sekunjalo in Cape Town, South Africa. It is commonly referred to as The Argus.

<i>Isolezwe</i>

Isolezwe is a Zulu-language newspaper launched in 2002 by Independent News & Media. It is published daily in Durban, South Africa, in the tabloid format. Editor Kiki Ntuli describes their target market as "the modernising Zulu ... [s]omeone who may go back home to the rural areas to slaughter a cow to amadlozi [the ancestors], but is as equally comfortable taking his family out for dinner and a movie in a shopping mall".

<i>Die Son</i>

Die Son is a mixed Afrikaans-language South African tabloid reporting sensational news essentially after the model of British tabloids. It is the South African newspaper with the largest increase in readership in recent years. In the Western Cape province, it appears as a daily; in other provinces, it is a weekly paper. The editorial seat is in Cape Town.

<i>Daily Sun</i> (South Africa) South African newspaper

The Daily Sun is a tabloid daily newspaper in South Africa. It has a circulation of more than 28,006 copies per making it the second largest daily newspaper in the country to the Sunday Times in terms of largest circulation among all papers.

<i>Daily Dispatch</i>

The Daily Dispatch is a South African newspaper published in East London in the province of Eastern Cape.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Siege of Kimberley</span> 1899–1900 battle of the Second Boer War

The siege of Kimberley took place during the Second Boer War at Kimberley, Cape Colony, when Boer forces from the Orange Free State and the Transvaal besieged the diamond mining town. The Boers moved quickly to try to capture the area when war broke out between the British and the two Boer republics in October 1899. The town was ill-prepared, but the defenders organised an energetic and effective improvised defence that was able to prevent it from being taken.

The Sunday Independent is a weekly English-language newspaper based in Gauteng, South Africa. It is one of the titles under the Independent News & Media South Africa group acquired by the Sekunjalo Media Consortium largely funded by Chinese state media and was owned previously by Independent News & Media. The paper is distributed mainly in the Gauteng region, but is distributed across South Africa.

Pretoria News is a daily English-medium newspaper established in 1898 in South Africa's capital city Pretoria. It is distributed in the Tshwane Metropolitan area. Pretoria News covers a range of local news, as well as national and international news, comment and analysis by experts, sport, entertainment and lifestyle. It publishes a daily edition from Monday to Friday and also offers a weekend edition. Pretoria News is part of the Independent Media South Africa group and is available online via the Independent Online website.

TimesLIVE is a South African online newspaper that started as The Times daily newspaper. The Times print version was an offshoot of Sunday Times, to whose subscribers it was delivered gratis; non-subscribers paid R2.50 per edition in the early years. It has been owned by Arena Holdings since November 2019 and is the second-largest news website in South Africa.

<i>Volksblad</i> Newspaper

The Volksblad is an Afrikaans-language daily newspaper published in Bloemfontein, South Africa, and distributed in the Free State and Northern Cape provinces, where it is the largest Afrikaans daily. It is South Africa's oldest Afrikaans The paper is owned by Media24.

Business Day is a national daily newspaper in South Africa, published weekdays and also available as an e-paper. Based in Parktown, Johannesburg, it is edited by Alexander Parker and published by Arena Holdings, which is also the parent company of the Financial Mail magazine and Business Day TV.

<i>Daily Voice</i> (South African newspaper) Newspaper

Daily Voice is a South African tabloid newspaper that is distributed on weekdays and published by Independent Newspapers (Pty) Limited in the Western Cape province. It is published in English, with Afrikaans mixed in. In late 2013, the Daily Voice was the most-read daily newspaper in the Cape Town metropolitan area with 456,000 readers, and a total daily readership of 528,000.

References

  1. du Toit, Anneke (10 September 2008). "A lot of news, a lot of newspapers". Volksblad . Archived from the original on 7 April 2015. Retrieved 7 April 2015.
  2. 1 2 Van Niekerk, F. (ed), Knights of the Shovel. Kimberley: Africana Library, 1996, pp. 86–87.
  3. Roberts, Brian, Kimberley, Turbulent City, Cape Town & Kimberley: David Philip and Historical Society of Kimberley and the Northern Cape, 1976, p. 173.
  4. "Siege of Kimberley—Mr. Rhodes and Colonel Kekewich". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard) . 22 March 1900. Retrieved 29 August 2009.
  5. "Censorship—Diamond Fields Advertiser—Mr. Rhodes and Col. Kekewich". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard) . 11 June 1901. Retrieved 29 August 2009.
  6. 1 2 Diamond Fields Advertiser Monday 23 March 1998 'Commemorative Edition' p. 31
  7. 1 2 3 "ABC Analysis Q1 2015: The biggest-circulating newspapers in South Africa •". 8 May 2015.
  8. "DFA Website". Archived from the original on 8 July 2012. Retrieved 24 July 2019.
  9. Audit Bureau of Circulations (S.A)
  10. SAARF AMPS (Previous Presentations)
  11. SAARF AMPS (Industry Presentations)