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Down Recorder

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Northern Irish newspaper
Down Recorder office, Church Street, Downpatrick, August 2009

The Down Recorder is a weekly newspaper published in Downpatrick, County Down, Northern Ireland every Wednesday. It is owned by W.Y. Crichton & Co.

History

The paper, then known as The Downpatrick Recorder, was first published on 31 December 1836. It was the first newspaper to be published in the town, and was owned by Conway Pilson, the son of a local historian.

At that time, news from London and abroad came by boat to Belfast in the evening. However, the boat rested for 12 hours at Newry, 44 kilometres (27 mi) from Downpatrick. Pilson organised a horse relay to bring the news from there so he could publish it before any rival papers.

The paper was renamed The Down Recorder in 1878 to reflect its wider circulation.

In 1964, the production moved from the original offices in Irish Street to a former Post Office building on Church Street. In 1966, the actually printing was moved to more modern facilities in Portadown.

References

  1. ^ "Down Recorder". The Devlin Family Online. Retrieved 22 October 2007.
  2. ^ Crichton, Marcus (2017). "A History of the Down Recorder". Lecale Review (15).

External links

Newspapers in Northern Ireland
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Regional
Defunct
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See also: Newspapers founded before 1921  • Newspapers in the Republic of Ireland
Newspapers of Ireland founded in the period before the establishment of Northern Ireland in 1921 and the Republic of Ireland in 1937
National
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Connaught
Leinster
Munster
Ulster
Companies
See also
Northern Ireland newspapers (1921–present)
Republic of Ireland newspapers (1937–present)


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