|
|
 |
IN 1908 cricketing legend Don Bradman was born, Canberra was chosen
as Australia’s capital and the Beaudesert Times rolled off the presses
for the first time on October 10.
It was born after a merger of two newspapers, The Beaudesert Despatch
and Logan and Albert Leader in Brisbane Street, Beaudesert and The
Beaudesert Herald.
Irish-born politician Patrick James Leahy held the controlling interest
in the new paper.
Part owner of the Despatch, John Adamson Walker, became manager of
the new paper and his partner F. Parker was editor. Mr Parker left
shortly after and Mr Walker became managing editor. |
 |
|
On November 22, 1922 Mr Leahy’s company accountant
and manager of the newspaper division, Frank Hodgson, co-wrote an
editorial for the paper signifying his first foray into the print
media.
Mr Leahy died in 1927 and his estate gradually sold the newspapers.
Mr Hodgson bought Mr Leahy’s interest in the Beaudesert Times in February
1930 and became the controlling shareholder and later the sole owner.
He died in October 1948, aged 59, and his son Roy, 21, became managing
director.
Roy’s son Mark joined the business as a 16-year-old in 1971. At 22
years of age he took over the role of managing director when his father
died in October 1976.
The first edition of the Beaudesert Times cost threepence and it announced
the merger of the two papers.
The company promised to devote more space to local news and its circulation
rose to 1000 copies a week.
Stories from correspondents, movie news, sport and humour were gradually
introduced and sections such as Women’s Realm included.
In 1951 the paper had its first price increase in 43 years when it
rose from threepence to fourpence.
It changed from a broadsheet to a tabloid in 1959. It sparked such
interest that the first edition was 22 pages, up from an expected
16.
Throughout the 1960s the paper modernised and in 1963 it moved two
doors into the School of Arts building.
In March 1967 the paper changed its name to the Logan and Albert Times
to give the paper “a greater significance”. With the new name the
paper reshaped its format.
The masthead returned to the Beaudesert Times in 1985 when the Southern
Times, which ceased publication after nine months, was launched in
the northern end of the Beaudesert Shire and Browns Plains.
AS the Beaudesert Times nears 100 years of printing, it maintains
the same vigour and tenacity of its founding fathers.
Just as Frank Hodgson took a courageous leap into the dicey world
of newspaper publishing when he bought a share in the company in 1930,
his grandson Mark Hodgson, now managing director with fellow directors,
his wife Gail and John Bartlett have bounded into the new millennium
with the same unswerving faith in the future.
A new building and presses are poised to launch the Beaudesert Times
headlong into a new phase.
The new Tensor four-high press and folder, which was purchased from
Indonesia, trebles the capacity of the existing Goss web press.
Production manager Ray Charles said the extra colour capacity allows
four-colour printing back to back.
Historical facts
 |
The first edition of the Beaudesert Times
was printed on October 10, 1908. |
 |
The Beaudesert Times was printed in-house
from 2001 on the Goss Community four-unit web offset press.
|
 |
The Jimboomba Times was first printed on
Thursday, November 14, 1991. |
 |
In 1992 the Beaudesert Times was presented
with a Pacific Area Newspapers Publishers’ Association (PANPA)
Award for Production Excellence. |
 |
The Beaudesert Times was selected to be
on the cover of the 1993 Beaudesert and Districts phone book.
The William Street building was photographed to celebrate the
Telecom theme recognising international achievers. |
 |
In 2002 the Beaudesert Times was a finalist
in the PANPA Newspaper of the Year for a non-daily up to 6000
circulation. |
 |
The Jimboomba Times office at Jimboomba
shopping centre opened in 1999. |
 |
In 2003 the Beaudesert Times won a total
of seven major awards at the annual Queensland Country Press
Association awards. |
Expansion into Jimboomba
IN 1991 The Beaudesert Times made its first successful expansion.
It was in October of that year that managing director Mark Hodgson
called a meeting of all staff and issued a challenge to come back
with ideas on how the company could strengthen its position in the
Jimboomba area.
General manager John Bartlett rose to the challenge. He produced a
mock-up version of a quarter-fold newspaper and called it Jimboomba
Times.
The first issue rolled off the press on Thursday, November 14, 1991.
It was 36 pages with green spot colour on six and was circulated from
Cedar Grove to Maclean Bridge.
It was also printed in-house on the Heidelberg MO two-colour press.
At the beginning of 1992, a decision was made to change the publication
day to Friday and the first edition for that year came out on January
10.
Beaudesert Times advertising reps Rob Brown and David Eichmann initially
sold space in the Jimboomba Times but to cope with the ever-increasing
workload Alan Bruce was hired as the paper’s advertising manager in
August 1992.
In September that year the circulation area was extended to include
Logan Village. In May 1993 it further increased with bulk deliveries
to Park Ridge, Greenbank and Browns Plains.
Against staunch competition from other well-established newspapers
in the area, the Jimboomba Times continued to attract more advertising
and in October 1993 had its first 52-page edition.
The paper has gone from strength to strength. In 1997 it changed its
publication day from Friday to Wednesday to capitalise on advertising
revenue from stage four of the Jimboomba Shopping Centre development
and the opening of the Woolworths supermarket.
Earlier that year it had become a weekly publication which allowed
the paper to introduce new features including a television guide.
Circulation was again expanded to 10,000 taking in Greenbank, Chambers
Flat, Buccan and part of Tamborine Village.
The paper had quickly outgrown its home base in Beaudesert and an
office was set up at Jimboomba Shopping Centre in 1999.
By the end of that year circulation had again increased to 11,000
copies a week and most editions were 48-56 pages.
The company had purchased another press – a Goss Community four-unit
web offset press – and the Jimboomba Times was the first to roll through
in February 2000.
Despite an economic downturn, the paper turned the odds in its favour
and its circulation and page size kept expanding.
In 2001 it hit the 12,000-circulation mark.
Today it goes out to 17,100 homes from Jimboomba to Cedar Grove, Cedar
Vale, Flagstone, Tamborine, Logan Village, Buccan, Park Ridge, Teviot,
New Beith, Greenbank, Spring Mountain, Maclean, Munruben, Chambers
Flat, Reimore Downs, Mundoolun Estate, Collins Estate, Echo Valley,
Munruben Woods and Wonglepong and most editions are usually 96 to
104 pages. |
|
|
|