Kent Messenger

This article is about the weekly paper for the Maidstone region. For the Kent Messenger Group, see KM Group.

Kent Messenger
Type Weekly newspaper
Format Tabloid
Owner(s) KM Group
Publisher KM Group
Editor Denise Eaton
Founded 1859
Language English
Headquarters Maidstone
Circulation 44,492 (August 2009)[1]
Website Kent Messenger

The Kent Messenger is a weekly newspaper serving the mid-Kent area. It is published in three editions - Maidstone, Malling, and the Weald. It is owned by the KM Group and is published on Thursdays.

History

The Kent Messenger grew from the Maidstone Telegraph founded in the county town of Kent in 1859.[2] It changed to its current name two years later.[3] It was sold to the Boorman family in 1890 after its then owners, the Masters brothers, were jailed.

In 1942 the Kent Messenger offices were used by the Canterbury newspaper the Kentish Gazette (then not owned by the Kent Messenger Group) after the Gazette's offices were destroyed by a Luftwaffe raid on Canterbury, in order to produce that week's copy of the Gazette.[4]

The Kent Messenger remains the flagship newspaper for the KM Group. Besides the main edition for Maidstone, editions are also published for Malling and the Weald. Along with the rest of the KM-owned papers, the Kent Messenger was given a design overhaul in May 2005.[5]

The current editor is Denise Eaton.

Offices

The Kent Messenger is based at the KM Group's Maidstone office. The offices also housed the paper's sister radio station KMFM Maidstone until the station moved to the Medway offices in 2008.[6]

Circulation

The paper's circulation as of the first half of 2009 was 44,492. This represented a drop of 10.7% against the same period the previous year.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2 December 2010. Retrieved 2009-12-06.
  2. Over 150 years of history
  3. KM Timeline
  4. About the team - Kentish Gazette
  5. New KM is aimed at busy readers Archived 16 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. Maidstone's KMFM leaves town Archived 17 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.