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The Gazette, also known as the Montreal Gazette, is a Canadian English-language broadsheet daily newspaper which is owned by Postmedia Network. It is published in Montreal , Quebec, Canada. It is the only English-language daily newspaper currently published in its eponymous city.
La Gazette canadienne/The Canadian Gazette, 1807, Montréal, Charles Brown, publisher and James Brown, editor Le Vrai Canadien , 1810, Quebec City, Pierre-Amable de Bonne ''The Montreal Herald'' [ fr ] , 1811, Montréal, William Gray and Mungo Kay , founders, owners and publishers
In 1785, he published La Gazette de Montréal, now the Montreal Gazette, the successor to the suspended Gazette Littéraire. In total, he published some seventy or eighty works, in French, English, Latin, and Iroquois; ten of these ran to more than a hundred pages, and another seven were almanacs.
He is the Quebec affairs columnist for the Montreal Gazette. He has covered Quebec political affairs since 1985. [1] Macpherson, who is of Scottish origin, [2] was raised in the Montreal neighbourhood of Rosemont. He attended McGill University and wrote for The McGill Daily. [1]
John Reade (November 13, 1837 – March 26, 1919) was an Irish-born Canadian journalist, essayist, and poet once considered "the grand old man of Canadian letters." He is best known as the literary editor of the Montreal Gazette, a position he held for almost 50 years.
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Edgar Andrew Collard CM (6 September 1911 – 9 September 2000) was a Canadian journalist and historian, best known for his Montreal Gazette column "All Our Yesterdays". He was born in Montreal, Quebec. He received his MA in history from McGill University in 1937. However health problems prevented him from completing his formal studies and ...
The Montreal Daily News was a short-lived English language Canadian daily newspaper in Quebec. Quebecor founder Pierre Péladeau and British tabloid publisher Robert Maxwell teamed up to launch a competing English-language newspaper against The Gazette. The newspaper was published in a tabloid sized format, instead of broadsheet sized.