Charles Kemp and John Fairfax Charles Kemp and John Fairfax i(A65890 works by) (Organisation) assertion
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1 1 y separately published work icon A Key to the Structure of the Aboriginal Language : Being an Analysis of the Particles Used as Affixes, to Form the Various Modifications of the Verbs; Shewing the Essential Powers, Abstract Roots, and Other Peculiarities of the Language Spoken by the Aborigines in the Vicinity of Hunter River, Lake Macquarie, etc , New South Wales: Together with Comparisons of Polynesian and Other Dialects Lancelot Edward Threlkeld , Sydney : Charles Kemp and John Fairfax , 1850 Z1902244 1850 reference
1 y separately published work icon Narrative of an Expedition, Undertaken under the Direction of the late Mr. Assistant Surveyor E. B. Kennedy, for the Exploration of the Country Lying between Rockingham Bay and Cape York William Carron , Sydney : Charles Kemp and John Fairfax , 1849 20341301 1849 single work prose travel
1 1 y separately published work icon The Sydney Guardian : A Journal of Religious, Literary and Scientific Information 1848 Sydney : Charles Kemp and John Fairfax , 1848-1850 Z1609103 1848 periodical
3 y separately published work icon The Case of Mr. W.H. Barber, (late of the Firm of Barber and Bircham, Solicitors, London,) Convicted in 1844 of a Supposed Guilty Knowledge of Certain Will Forgeries: Consisting of Copies of His Memorial to Sir James Graham and Other Documents, Establishing, It Is Confidently Submitted, His Perfect Innocence of the Crime for Which He Has Endured Three Years of Convict Suffering, Embittered in Norfolk Island by Marked and Revolting Cruelty William Henry Barber , Sydney : Charles Kemp and John Fairfax , 1847 6911227 1847 single work autobiography
1 y separately published work icon The Shipping Gazette and Sydney General Trade List 1844 Sydney : Charles Kemp and John Fairfax , 1844-1860 Z1916975 1844 newspaper

G. B. Barton describes the Shipping Gazette and Sydney General Trade List as '[a] purely commercial publication, issued by the proprietors of the Herald [Charles Kemp and John Fairfax]... ceasing in 1860. Its contents were then transferred to the Sydney Mail, a weekly edition of the Herald.'

Source: G. B. Barton, Literature in New South Wales (1866): 36

1 81 y separately published work icon The Sydney Morning Herald 1842 Sydney : Charles Kemp and John Fairfax , 1842- Z937117 1842 newspaper (10416 issues)
1 26 y separately published work icon The Sydney Herald William McGarvie (editor), Frederick Michael Stokes (editor), Alfred Ward Stephens (editor), Frederick Michael Stokes (editor), Alfred Ward Stephens (editor), Alfred Ward Stephens (editor), Frederick Michael Stokes (editor), John Fairfax (editor), Charles Kemp (editor), 1831 Sydney : Charles Kemp and John Fairfax , 1841-1842 Z930858 1831 newspaper (120 issues) In line with the impartial meaning of the epigraphs displayed on the Sydney Herald's masthead and above the leader, the Leader of the first issue of the Sydney Herald states the newspaper's editorial policy: 'Our Editorial management shall be conducted upon principles of candour, honesty, and honor. Respect and deference shall be paid to all classes. Freedom of thinking and speaking shall be conceded, and demanded. We have no wish to mislead; no interests to gratify by unsparing abuse, or indiscriminate approbation. We shall regret opposition, when we could wish to concur, and bestow the meed of praise. We shall dissent with respect, and reason with a desire, not to gain a point, but to establish a principle. By these sentiments we shall be guided, and, whether friends or foes, by these we shall judge others; we have a right, therefore, to expect that by these we shall be judged.'

The editorial lists the subjects, in order, '... to which [the paper's] attention shall be more exclusively directed ... The Colony of New South Wales, and its best interests, as a dependency of the Crown ... Van Diemen's Land, the Islands in the South Seas and Pacific, and the commercial and social relations of Australasia in general ... English and Foreign news ... The well-being of the merchant, manufacturer, farmer, and local and civil functionary ... the interests of literature and of those connected with its advancement ... Education ... the youth of the Colony ... the dissemination of medical knowledge ... law reports, and trials of Colonial importance in our Courts of Justice...'

The first editors, publishers, printers and sole proprietors of the Sydney Herald, Alfred Ward Stephens, Frederick Stokes and William McGarvie worked together on the Sydney Gazette. They formed a partnership in a printing business and imported a printing press from London. However, as J. V. Byrnes, in his biography of Stephens, 'Stephens, Alfred Ward (1804-1852)', published in the Australian Dictionary of Biography Online, writes ' ... orders being fewer than they expected, they decided to publish a newspaper instead.' McGarvie sold his share of the business to Stephens and Ward after only five issues and Byrnes writes '... although Stephens and Stokes were joint proprietors, Stephens seems to have been the acknowledged editor.' However, according to Byrnes in his biography of McGarvie, 'McGarvie, William (1810-1841)', published in the Australian Dictionary of Biography Online, McGarvie edited the first issues of the Herald. Byrnes also writes that 'McGarvie is credited with naming the paper after the Glasgow Herald'.

Despite its editorial policy of impartiality, J. V. Byrnes notes in his biography of Stephens that '... [b]efore the Herald appeared, the Tories in Sydney and the Hunter River district had no newspaper to express their political and economic opinions. The Herald filled this gap ... The Herald was also involved in libel actions and accused of using underhand methods to score off its opponents.' In 1836 Stephens bought out Frederick Stokes. Byrnes states in his biography of Stephens that '... [a]s sole editor and proprietor Stephens for the next three years exerted a strong influence on colonial affairs with [Edward] O'Shaughnessy as his leader writer'.

In 1839 Stephens sold the Herald back to Frederick Stokes. The paper incorporated the Colonist newspaper from 1 January 1841. Stokes sold the paper to Charles Kemp and John Fairfax in February 1841 and from 1 August 1842 the paper changed its name to the Sydney Morning Herald.
Sources: J. V. Byrnes, 'Stephens, Alfred Ward (1804-1852)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/stephens-alfred-ward-2695/text3777, accessed 23 April 2013. J. V. Byrnes, 'McGarvie, William (1810-1841)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/mcgarvie-william-2400/text3171, accessed 23 April 2013.
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