Bell's Weekly Messenger

{{short description|British Sunday newspaper}}

{{Infobox newspaper

| name = Bell's Weekly Messenger

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| founder = John Bell

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| type = weekly

| format = quarto

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| foundation = 1796

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| ceased publication = 1896

| headquarters = London

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Bell's Weekly Messenger was a British Sunday newspaper that began publication on 1 May 1796, under proprietorship of John Bell.A Catalogue of Books, Newspapers, &c. Printed by John Bell, of the British Library, the Morning Post, Bell's Weekly Messenger, &c. [...] Exhibited at the First Edition Club, London, 15 April-May 5, 1931 (London, 1931). Initially a Sunday paper, from 1799 the London edition was reprinted on Monday for nationwide distribution.Prospectus. ESTC citation no. T124125. By 1803, it was selling 6,000 copies a week, at sixpence a copy.J. C. Reid, Bucks and Bruisers: Pierce Egan and Regency England (London, 1971), p. 28. In 1799 there was even an augmented reprint of the previous year's editions, under the title Bell's Annual Messenger, printed for international distribution under the auspices of the East India Company.

By 1805, Bells weekly messenger was selling 8000 copies per week. Ref. "The Morning Post" newspaper

Saturday 18 May 1805 (verification photo available on request).

From its inception in 1799 the Monday edition carried information on agricultural markets in the U.K. Although Bell's Weekly Messenger began as a general weekly, after it acquired in 1832 Evans and Ruffy's Farmers' Journal it gave extensive coverage to agricultural affairs and was for many years the leading agricultural newspaper in the U.K.{{cite book|author=Morison, Stanley|chapter=The Weekly Messenger as an agricultural newspaper|title=John Bell, 1745-1831: A Memoir|page=54|year=2009|publisher=Cambridge U. Press|isbn=9780521143141 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tRK2d0IE0jkC&pg=PA54}}[http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/4865293 Evans and Ruffy's Farmers' Journal, National Library of Australia]{{cite book|editor=Brake, Laurel|editor2=Demoor, Marysa|chapter=Bell's Weekly Messenger|title=Dictionary of Nineteenth-century Journalism in Great Britain and Ireland|year=2009 |page=47|publisher=Academia Press |isbn=9789038213408 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qVrUTUelE6YC&pg=PA47}}

The newspaper continued under the title Bell's Weekly Messenger until March 1896, after which it was continued as Country Sport.

In 1832 the first recorded British newspaper cartoon was published in Bell's New Weekly Messenger.

References

  • James Grant. The Great Metropolis. Third Edition. Saunders and Otley. Conduit Street, London. 1838. First Series. volume 2. [https://books.google.com/books?id=q35HAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA128 p 128] et seq. Reprinted in Foster's Cabinet Miscellany, New York, Theodore Foster, 1838, volume 1, p 227 et seq.

{{Reflist}}

Category:Defunct weekly newspapers

Category:Defunct newspapers published in the United Kingdom

Category:Publications established in 1796

Category:Publications disestablished in 1896

Category:1796 establishments in Great Britain

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