The Globe and Mail

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The Globe and Mail is a Canadian newspaper. It is Canada's most widely read newspaper on weekdays and Saturdays.[2] It is a "newspaper of record".[3][4][5][6]

The Globe and Mail
Canada's National Newspaper
The Globe and Mail (2019-10-31).svg
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)The Woodbridge Company
Founder(s)George Brown[note 1]
PublisherAndrew Saunders
EditorDavid Walmsley
Founded5 March 1844; 182 years ago (1844-03-05)[note 2]
HeadquartersGlobe and Mail Centre
351 King Street East
Toronto, Ontario
M5A 1L1
Circulation65,749 Daily
117,955 Saturday (as of 2022)[1]
ISSN0319-0714
Websitetheglobeandmail.com

History

The Globe was founded in 1844 by Scottish immigrant George Brown. He was a Father of Confederation.

By the 1850s, The Globe had become a well-known daily newspaper.

The Globe and Mail formed when The Globe merged with another newspaper called The Mail and Empire in 1936.[7]

Since the 1980s, the newspaper has been printed in six Canadian cities: Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg, Calgary and Vancouver.

At the end of 2010, the Thomson family, bought The Globe and Mail with an 85-percent stake.[8][9]

In October 2012, The Globe and Mail launched online.[10]

The Globe And Mail Media

Notes

  1. Brown founded the earliest predecessor to The Globe and Mail, The Globe. The Toronto Mail was another predecessor newspaper founded by Thomas Patteson. The Empire was another predecessor newspaper founded by John A. Macdonald. The merger of The Globe and The Mail and Empire was arranged by George McCullagh and was financed by William Henry Wright.
  2. The following date was when The Globe published its first edition. The Globe later merged with The Mail and Empire to form The Globe and Mail on 23 November 1936.

References