The Sunday Press

For the Australian paper, see Sunday Press.
The Sunday Press

Front page of first issue
Type Sunday newspaper
Format Broadsheet
Owner(s) The Irish Press
Editor Matt Feehan (1949-1968), Francis Carty (1968), Vincent Jennings (1968-1995)
Founded September 4, 1949 (1949-09-04)
Political alignment Nationalist / republican; supported Fianna Fáil
Ceased publication 1995 (1995)
Headquarters Burgh Quay, Dublin

The Sunday Press was a weekly newspaper published in Ireland from 1949 until 1995. It was launched by Éamon de Valera's Irish Press group following the defeat of his Fianna Fáil party in the Irish general election, 1948. Like its sister newspaper, the daily Irish Press, politically the paper loyally supported Fianna Fáil.

The future Taoiseach Seán Lemass was the managing editor of the Irish Press who spearheaded the launch of the Sunday paper, with the first editor Colonel Matt Feehan. Many of the Irish Press journalists contributed to the paper. 'When I open the pages, I duck' was Brendan Behan’s description of reading the Sunday Press, for the habit of published memoirs of veterans (usually those aligned to Fianna Fáil) of the Irish War of Independence.[1]

It soon built up a large readership, and overtook its main competitor the Sunday Independent, which tended to support Fine Gael. At its peak The Sunday Press sold up to 475,000 copies every week, and had a readership of over one million, around one third of the Irish population.

Like the Evening Press, the paper's readership held up better over the years than that of the flagship title in the group, the Irish Press, and it might have survived as a stand-alone title had it been sold. However, with the collapse of the Irish Press Newspapers group in May 1995, all three titles ceased publication immediately. The launch of Ireland on Sunday in 1997 was initially interpreted by many observers as an attempt to appeal to the former Sunday Press readership, seen as generally rural, fairly conservative Catholic, and with a traditional Irish nationalist political outlook.

When Christmas Day fell on Sunday in 1949, 1955, 1960, 1966, 1977, 1983, 1988 and 1994 the paper came out on the Saturday.

References

  1. TV Review By Emmanuel Kehoe, The Post, 6 March 2011
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