As Newfoundlanders say goodbye to a daily print paper, some worry culture will suffer
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — The final edition of The Telegram newspaper’s daily print hit the stands in St. John’s, N.L., on Saturday, marking the end of a 145-year run and a move to weekly print version with daily stories online.
The People’s Paper, as it is also known, was part of SaltWire Network, which was sold to Postmedia for $1-million in an agreement approved earlier this month. The sale did not include The Telegram’s printing press — the last of its kind in the province — which has left several other papers scrambling to find a new plan.
On Friday night, the plant fired up for what could be the very last time to print the last daily Telegram. The building is on the market for $5.9 million, and if nobody comes forward to buy it, it will be lost for good.
Nicole Penney, with Memorial University’s Folklore and Language Archive, said people have long turned to print newspapers to help them catalogue local life and family stories. The carefully curated folders of documents people bring to the archive are always stuffed with Telegram clippings.