The Monitor was a biweekly English language newspaper published in Sydney, New South Wales and founded in 1826.[1] It is one of the earlier newspapers in the colony commencing publication twenty three years after the Sydney Gazette, the first paper to appear in 1803, and more than seventy years before the federation of Australia. The Monitor changed name several times, subsequently being known as The Sydney Monitor, and in June 1838 Francis O'Brien and Edwyn Henry Statham introduced themselves as the new editors of the re-branded Sydney Monitor and Commercial Advertiser.[2]
History
The newspaper was first published on 19 May 1826[3] by Edward Smith Hall[4] and Arthur Hill.[5] The paper was not without controversy in the colony, publicly taking up the cause of the poor and convicts with a motto that "nothing extenuate nor set down aught in malice" and being openly critical of the governing authorities.[5]
^"The Monitor, Volume 1, Number 1". The Monitor. Vol. I, no. 1. New South Wales, Australia. 19 May 1826. p. 1 – via National Library of Australia.
^Ihde, Erin (2005). A Manifestor for the New South Wales: Edward Smith Hall and the Sydney Monitor, 1826–1840. Melbourne: Australian Scholarly. ISBN1740970519.
^Brown, Jerelynn (2011). "Tabloids in the State Library of NSW collection: A reflection of life in Australia". Australian Journal of Communication. 38 (2): 107–121.
Further reading
Holden, W. Sprague (Willis Sprague) (1962). Australia goes to press. Melbourne University Press.