Richard Thompson Richard Thompson i(A119725 works by) (birth name: William Fane)
Born: Established: Jun 1810
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England,
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United Kingdom (UK),
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Western Europe, Europe,
; Died: Ceased: 1865 Sydney, New South Wales,
Gender: Male
Arrived in Australia: 1834
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Works By

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1 y separately published work icon The Spectator Richard Thompson (editor), 1846 Sydney : Richard Thompson , 1846 Z1909400 1846 newspaper 'A well-written weekly paper, apparently started on behalf of the squatters. Its term of existence was limited to a year or so.' G. B. Barton, Literature in New South Wales (1866): 44.
1 1 y separately published work icon The Examiner The Examiner : Political, Literary and Commercial Journal Richard Thompson (editor), 1845 Sydney : Richard Thompson , 1845 Z1879908 1845 newspaper

Continues the Commercial Journal and General Advertiser. A prospectus for the Examiner was issued 5 August 1845 announcing the demise of the Commercial Journal and General Advertiser and the 'intention of raising ... another periodical to be styled the Examiner... Mr Richard Thompson is retained to conduct the Editorial deparment, and Mr. Reading to be printer.'

Source: 'The Press', The Morning Chronicle (6 August 1845): 3.

1 y separately published work icon Commercial Journal and General Advertiser Commercial Journal, General Advertiser and Odd Fellows' Advocate William Jones (editor), Richard Thompson (editor), 1845 Sydney : W. Jones , 1845 Z1879746 1845 newspaper (4 issues) G. B. Barton in Literature in New South Wales (1866): 44, describes the newspaper as '[v]ery well printed and edited, but not successful.'
1 23 y separately published work icon The Atlas The Atlas : The Sydney Weekly Journal of Politics, Commerce and Literature Angus Mackay (editor), Richard Thompson (editor), James Martin (editor), Robert Lowe (editor), 1844 Sydney : D. L. Welch , 1844-1848 Z1121897 1844 newspaper (212 issues)

The Atlas, a weekly newspaper published in Sydney, was largely devoted to reporting and commenting on the political activities of the New South Wales colony, and advancing the political agenda of its editors. Detailed reports were included on the debates and decisions of the Legislative Council and opinion pieces criticised and satirised the main political protagonists. (The Atlas was particularly strident in its denunciation of Governor George Gipps's administration.) In the issue of 23 August 1845, the editors declared: 'All along it has been our aim to speak of public measures and of public men with an honest, fearless independence, and to show the people of this colony what a free press really is ... our independent tone may have given offence to some parties, but ... we shall have no cause to regret the line of conduct which we have adopted.' (1.39 (1845): 466)

The activities of the courts and the conflicts within the Anglican Church (largely over Puseyism) were covered extensively. Columns announcing 'Births, Deaths and Marriages' and shipping movements were regular features, together with occasional sections on theatricals and musical entertainments. Advertising columns were included and featured promotions for drapers, tailors, wine merchants, stock and station agencies, and other small businesses.

In an editorial column headed 'Literature', in the first issue of the Atlas, the editors declared their resolve 'to reserve one green and pleasant spot, where the turbulence, the virulence, the personality of politics shall not come; where the mind shall be able, without toil or labour, to turn from the converse of factious controversy, and saunter through the instructive paths of science, and over the widespread and flower-spangled fields of literature! Here we will elevate our readers above the vapours and the storms which deform and disturb the political hemisphere.' The column notes that, 'in looking about us for the materials to begin our course', little has yet been found of a suitable nature from Australian sources. Because of this, 'we must for the present content ourselves with looking to Europe for the materials for the main department of the Literary Atlas, and with proffering a quiet niche for the offerings of such of our colonial friends as may occasionally wander from the cold realms of utilitarianism to the warm regions of the emotional and the imaginative.'

Early in the Atlas's publication life, sales agents outside Sydney were established in Bathurst, Melbourne and London. Additional agents were soon found in Berrima, Wollongong, the Clarence River, Singleton, Maitland, Gundagai, Jerry's Plains, Parramatta, Windsor and Yass. In early 1846, an agent for Hobart and Launceston (the bookseller U. B. Barfoot) was added.

The Atlas ceased publication in December 1848. The proprietors announced the decision in the 16 December issue, stating: 'we now find it impossible to obtain from our subscribers that measure of justice so long withheld from us, the payment of their accounts, amounting now nearly to the sum of [pounds]1,000, much of it very long standing'. Rather than 'throw away our time and labour for such an unworthy return', they decided to 'withdraw the publication altogether' (4.212 (16 December 1848): 613) and 'suspend our labours at the end of the present year'. (4.214 (30 December 1848: 629)

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