Alb messenger

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Alb messenger

description regional daily newspaper
publishing company Südkurier GmbH media company
First edition January 1, 1850
Frequency of publication daily except Sundays
Editor-in-chief since October 1, 2010: Stefan Lutz for the Südkurier,
Roland Gerard for the Alb-Boten
Web link www.suedkurier.de

The Alb-Bote is a regional daily newspaper for the Waldshut district . The paper appears six times a week in the Berlin format (since March 1, 2010, before that in the Rhenish format). Content is largely equal to the Waldshuter edition of Südkurier . However, it is viewed as an independent edition by the Südkurier GmbH Medienhaus publishing house. While the Alb-Bote has the coat part in the rear area, the Südkurier (including the Waldshut issue) begins with the coat. Südkurier and Alb-Bote developed independently of one another. While the Südkurier was created in 1945, the roots of the Alb-Bote lie in the middle of the 19th century.

About history

19th century

On January 1, 1850, the first Alb-Bote appeared as a supplement to official announcements by the Lörrach publisher Carl Rudolf Gutsch. In the same year he took over the printing company from Anna Maier. In the first few years the newspaper appeared weekly. The editor was Julius Fuchs, who later published the trumpeter von Säckingen in Säckingen . On September 1, 1860, the printer and publisher Heinrich Zimmermann took over the editing and publishing. Zimmermann was an apprentice printer at Gutsch and then published Seeblatt in Friedrichshafen .

A year later, the Alb-Bote became an independent newspaper in 1861. The entry in the commercial register took place on January 15, 1863. In 1874 the publication of an additional newspaper was announced: The Waldshuter Zeitung with the Waldshuter storyteller. From 1896, Zimmermann's brother Carl was managing director and later became the owner.

1900 to 1945

From 1901 the Alb-Bote appeared daily. On September 1, 1905, the publishing house of the printing house R. Phillipp published the Neue Waldshuter Zeitung - St. Blasier-Zeitung - anzeiger and free announcement sheet for the districts of Waldshut and St. Blasien . The editor was Alfred Bopp. Like the Alb-Bote at first, it appeared three times a week.

When the National Socialists came to power in 1933, the newspapers were brought into line.

After 1945

After the Second World War, the newspaper was initially banned by the Allies. The first post-war edition of the Alb-Bote appeared on November 1, 1949, almost six months after the Federal Republic was founded. At first the newspaper appeared three times a week: Monday, Wednesday and Friday, later four times. From the mid-1950s, it was published Monday through Saturday.

After the death of publisher Carl Zimmermann, Max Lindemann was his successor in 1961. By the end of April 1966, the publishing house compiled the entire newspaper itself. As of May 2, 1966, like the Markgräfler Tagblatt, the Black Forest messenger took over . Only the local part, which visually clearly differed from the coat, was created locally.

Takeover by the Südkurier

In 1971, Max Lindemann, the last publisher of the Zimmermann family, died. In 1972 the Südkurier took over the publishing house and an editorial cooperation took place. At the end of the 1980s, as part of the technical renewal, production was relocated from Oberndorf (the Black Forest Bote production facility) to Konstanz (the Südkurier production facility). In 1995 the content was redesigned: the local section moved to the beginning of the newspaper.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Contact Editor-in-Chief Südkurier , accessed April 3, 2015.
  2. ^ Local editor Alb-Bote , accessed April 3, 2015.
  3. Local news of the Alb-Boten on the Südkurier's homepage , accessed April 3, 2015.
  4. ^ Südkurier - From newspaper to media house ( Memento from April 9, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  5. ^ Edition of April 30, 1966 and May 2, 1966 available in the Badische Landesbibliothek in Karlsruhe.