The Age |
The Age is a broadsheet daily newspaper, which has been published in Melbourne, Australia since 1854. It is one of Australia s most influential newspapers, as well as one of the most consistently profitable.
=The Symes and The Age =
The Age was founded two Melbourne businessmen, John Cooke (publisher) and Henry Cooke, and its first edition appeared on October 17, 1854. The venture was not initially a success, and in 1856 the Cookes sold the paper to Ebenezer Syme, a Scotland-born businessman, for 2,000 pounds. From its foundation the paper was self-consciously liberalism in its politics: aiming at a wide extension of the rights of free citizenship and a full development of representative institutions, and supporting the removal of all restrictions upon freedom of commerce, freedom of religion and - to the utmost extent that is compatible with public morality - upon freedom of personal action.
Ebenezer Syme was elected to the Victorian Legislative Assembly shortly after buying The Age , and his brother David Syme soon came to dominate the paper, editorially and managerially. When Ebenezer died in 1860, David became editor-in-chief, a position he retained until his death in 1908, although a succession of editors did the day-to-day editorial work. In 1891 Syme bought out Ebenezer s heirs and became sole proprietor. He built up The Age into Victoria (Australia) s leading newspaper. In circulation it soon overtook its conservative rival The Argus (Australia) , and by 1890 it was selling 100,000 copies a day, making it one of the world s most successful newspapers.
Under Syme s control The Age exercised enormous political power in Victoria. It supported liberal politicians such as Graham Berry, George Higinbotham and George Turner, and other leading liberals such as Alfred Deakin and Charles Pearson furthered their careers as Age journalists. Syme was originally a free trade, but converted to protectionism through his belief that Victoria needed to develop its manufacturing industries behind tariff barriers. In the 1890s The Age was a leading supporter of Australian federation and of the White Australia policy.
After Syme s death the paper remained in the hands of his three sons, with his eldest son Herbert Syme becoming general manager until his death in 1939. Syme s will prevented the sale of any equity in the paper during his sons lifetimes, an arrangement designed to protect family control but which had the effect of starving the paper of investment capital for 40 years. Under the management of Sir Geoffrey Syme (1908-1942), and his chosen editors Gottlieb Schuler and Harold Campbell, The Age failed to modernise, and gradually lost market share to The Argus and to the tabloid Herald Sun , although its classfied advertisement sections kept the paper profitable. By the 1940s the paper s circulation was smaller than it had been in 1900, and its political influence also declined. Although it remained more liberal than the extremely conservative Argus , it lost much of its distinct political identity.
The historian Sybil Nolan writes: Accounts of The Age in these years generally suggest that the paper was second-rate, outdated in both its outlook and appearance. Walker described a newspaper which had fallen asleep in the embrace of the Liberal Party; querulous, doddery and turgid are some of the epithets applied by other journalists. It is inevitably criticised not only for its increasing conservatism, but for its failure to keep pace with innovations in layout and editorial technique so dramatically demonstrated in papers like The Sun News-Pictorial and The Herald .
In 1942 David Syme s last surviving son, Oswald Syme, took over the paper. He modernised the paper s appearance and standards of news coverage (removing classified advertisements from the front page and introducing photographs, long after other papers had done so). In 1948, convinced the paper needed outside capital, he persuaded the courts to overturn his father s will and floated David Syme and Co. as a public company, selling 400,000 pounds worth of shares, enabling a badly needed technical modernisation of the newspaper s production. A takeover attempt by the John Fairfax Holdings family, publishers of the Sydney Morning Herald , was beaten off. This new lease on life allowed The Age to recover commercially, and in 1957 it received a great boost when The Argus ceased publication.
=The modern Age=
Oswald Syme retired in 1964, and his grandson Ranald Macdonald became chairman of the company. He was the first chairman to hand over full control of the paper to a professional editor from outside the Syme family. This was Graham Perkin, appointed in 1966, who radically changed the paper s format and shifted its editorial line from the rather conservative liberalism of the Symes to a new left liberalism characterised by attention to issues such as race, gender and the environment, and opposition to White Australia and the death penalty. The Liberal Party of Australia Premier of Victoria, Henry Bolte, called The Age that pinko rag, a view conservatives have maintained ever since.
Perkin s editorship coincided with Gough Whitlam s similar modernisation of the Australian Labor Party, and The Age became a key supporter of the Whitlam government which came to power in 1972. Contrary to subsequent mythology, however, The Age was not an uncritical supporter of Whitlam, and played a leading role in exposing the Loans Affair which led to the demise of the Whitlam government.
After Perkins s early death in 1975 The Age returned to a more moderate liberal position. It supported Malcolm Fraser s Liberal government in its early years, but after 1980 became increasingly critical and was a leading supporter of Bob Hawke s reforming government after 1983. But from the 1970s the political influence of The Age , as with other broadsheet newspapers, derived less from what it said in its editorial columns (which relatively few people read) than from the opinions expressed by journalists, cartoonists, feature writers and guest columnists. The Age has always kept a stable of leading editorial cartoonists, notably Bruce Petty, Ron Tandberg and Michael Leunig.
In 1966 Macdonald took the fateful step of allowing the Fairfaxes to acquire a stake in the paper, although an agreement was signed guaranteeing the editorial independence of The Age . In 1972 Fairfax bought a majority of David Syme shares, and in 1983 bought out all the remaining shares. David Syme and Co. became a subsidiary of John Fairfax and Co. Macdonald was denounced as a traitor by the remaining members of the Syme family (who nevertheless accepted Fairfax s generous offer for their shares), but he argued that The Age and the Sydney Morning Herald were natural partners and that the greater resources of the Fairfax group would enable The Age to remain competitive. By the 1980s a new competitor had appeared in Rupert Murdoch s national daily The Australian . In 1999 David Syme and Co. became The Age Company Ltd as part of John Fairfax Holdings Ltd., finally ending the Syme connection.
Since the 1980s The Age , despite the loss of its corporate independence, has remained a highly influential and generally successful newspaper. Under strong editors such as Creighton Burns and Michael Gawenda, it has attracted a range of high quality contributors. The research efforts of the Age Insight team have broken a number of major stories. Its arts and lifestyle content - increasingly important in all newspapers as the leading role in news coverage is lost to television and the Internet - is generally regarded as excellent. Its sports journalism is also extensive, although it does not try to compete with The Herald Sun in volume of sports coverage. Its classified advertising section remains the foundation of its prosperity. The status and profitability of The Age , The Sydney Morning Herald and The Australian Financial Review continue to make Fairfax one of Australia s most desirable public companies, as evidenced by several titanic takeover battles.
Nevertheless The Age is under challenge, as are all major daily newspapers, from new trends in media. Its dependence on classified advertising for a large part of its revenue makes vulnerable to the growth of online classified alternatives such as Seek, realestate.com.au and EBay. The Sydney media magnate Kerry Packer, long considered to be interested in acquiring Fairfax, is reportedly no longer interested because of this, and has extensively invested in online competitors of The Age .
In 2004 Gawenda was succeeded as editor by United Kingdom journalist Andrew Jaspan. Jaspan has aroused controversy by sacking Gerard Henderson, a prominent conservative columnist, from the paper and by making remarks critical of Douglas Wood, an Australian who was held hostage in Iraq. These actions were seen by some as marking a new shift to the left at The Age .
The relationship between The Age s political views (or perceived views) and its commercial success remains complex. Although the Liberals under John Howard have won four federal elections since 1996, the tertiary educated middle classes of Melbourne, who are the bedrock of The Age s readership, are generally seen as holding liberal views on many issues, which The Age continues to reflect, particularly on conscience issues such as the treatment of asylum seekers. Although The Australian and The Herald Sun offer outspokenly conservative alternatives, The Age has generally maintained its circulation share and its domination of the classified advertisement market.
The Age was published from offices in Collins St until 1969, when it moved to its current headquarters at 250 Spencer St (hence the nickname The Spencer Street Soviet favoured by conservative critics). Recently The Age has opened a new printing centre at Tullamarine, Victoria. The Age currently has an average weekday circulation of 196,250, increasing to 292,250 on Saturdays (in a city of 3.8 million). The Sunday Age has a circulation of 194,750. According to The Age , the paper currently has a Monday to Friday readership average of 658,000, reaching an average of 1,049,000 on Saturdays. The Sunday Age attracts an average of 666,000 readers.
=Editors of The Age =
Under David Syme
Under Geoffrey Syme
Under Oswald Syme
Recent editors
= External links =
*[http://www.theage.com.au/ The Age website] *[http://www.ejournalism.au.com/ejournalist/nolan.pdf Half a century of obscurity] (Sybil Nolan on the history of The Age) *[http://www.theageprintcentre.com.au/view_article.aspintid=9 The Age: A part of Victoria for over 147 years] *[http://www.theageprintcentre.com.au/view_article.aspintid=24 The Age s new print centre] *[http://www.crikey.com.au/articles/2005/06/09-1542-8829.html Gerard Henderson: how I was sacked by The Age] (critique published by Crikey)
=Further reading=
*C. E. Sayers, David Syme , Cheshire 1965|
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