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Le Petit Journal (newspaper)

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Conservative Parisian daily newspaper published from 1863 to 1944

Le Petit Journal
Le Petit Journal header
Front page ofLe Petit Journal on 3 August 1907, reporting about theBombardment of Casablanca duringFrench conquest of Morocco
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)Moïse Polydore Millaud
Hippolyte Auguste Marinoni
PublisherMoïse Polydore Millaud
Founded1863
Ceased publication1944
HeadquartersParis
Circulation1,000,000 (1890s) daily
ISSN1256-0464

Le Petit Journal (pronounced[ləpətiʒuʁnal]) was a conservative daily Parisiannewspaper founded byMoïse Polydore Millaud; published from 1863 to 1944. Together withLe Petit Parisien,Le Matin, andLe Journal, it was one of the four major French dailies. In 1890, during theBoulangiste crisis, its circulation first reached one million copies. Five years later, it had a circulation of two million copies, making it the world's largest newspaper.[1]

History

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Timothée Trimm [fr], the first Editor of the Journal

Early years

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In 1899 theJournal claimed 5 million readers.

The first issue of the Journal appeared on 1 February 1863 with a printing of 83,000 copies. Its founder, Millaud, was originally fromBordeaux and had begun as a publisher of financial and legal newsletters. For a few years, he was the owner ofLa Presse, an earlypenny paper. The first printing ran to 83,000 copies; a large printing compared to the other serious newspapers.[1] For example,Le Siècle typically had a press run of 50,000 copies.

Within two years the Journal was printing 259,000 copies, making it the largest daily in Paris. By 1870, it had reached 340,000 copies; twice the figure for the other major dailies put together. Much of this progress was made possible by therotary presses that had been designed byHippolyte Auguste Marinoni in 1866 and installed at the Journal in 1872.

Despite its apparent successes, the Millaud family found themselves in financial difficulties and, in 1873, sold their interests in the company to a group headed byÉmile de Girardin. In 1882, Marinoni took control of the Journal, succeeding Girardin. In 1884, he introduced theSupplément illustré, a weekly Sunday supplement that was the first to feature colour illustrations. This became so popular that, in 1889, Marinoni developed a colour rotary press that could print 20,000 sheets per hour. By 1895, one million copies of the supplement were being produced every week and the Journal had a press run of two million copies, 80% of which went to the provinces, making it France's predominant newspaper.[1]

Dreyfus in prison;
20 January 1895

Later years and decline

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By 1900, the paper's growth was slowing considerably. Many of its readers had gone over toLe Petit Parisien because that paper had avoided taking sides in theDreyfus Affair, whereasErnest Judet [fr], the Journal's editor, was staunchly Anti-Dreyfus. Soon after,Le Petit Parisien became France's best-selling newspaper. By 1914, the Journal's printing run had decreased to 850,000. By 1919, it had fallen to 400,000.

In 1936, the Journal became the official organ of theFrench Social Party, with the motto, "Travail, Famille, Patrie", which was borrowed from the "Croix-de-Feu" league and later became the motto of theVichy régime. Despite receiving support from many notable figures, including the press magnateRaymond Patenôtre, its decline continued and, by 1937, the typical press run was only 150,000.

InWorld War II, its headquarters was moved toClermont-Ferrand in 1940. It received a monthly grant from the government, andFrançois de La Rocque became chairman of its board of directors, but the paper could not be saved, and the final issue was published in August 1944.

Metz et la Lorraine returned to France (French: Metz et la Lorraine rendue à la France)

Description and contents

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Share of the SA du Petit Journal, issued 1 April 1896 with the 5 centimes coin at the bottom

Part of the Journal's attraction was its low price. Because in the beginning it officially (if not actually) did not cover politics, it avoided paying the 10 centimes newspaper tax, and therefore could be sold for only 5 centimes, as opposed to 15 centimes for the typical daily. It came in a convenient format of 43×30 cm (17×12 ins.), did not require a subscription and, in addition to the news, offered feature stories, serials (including the popular detective stories ofÉmile Gaboriau), horoscopes and opinion pieces. Also, it was distributed in the evening, so it could be hawked to workers leaving their shops and factories.

One of the Journal's major innovations, that made a substantial contribution to its popularity, was the publishing of detailedminutes from sensational trials, beginning with theTroppmann Affair in 1869. The exploitation of this affair enabled the Journal to almost double its readership. It was also one of the earliest instances of a publication'sjournalistic ethics being called to serious account.[2]

National Library of France – Gallica

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All copies ofLe Petit Journal are stored at the National Library France – Gallica. They can be freely accessed online atGallica, Online Archive,Le Petit Journal Index

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcIvan Chupin, Nicolas Hubé and Nicolas Kaciaf,Histoire politique et économique des médias en France, La Découverte, 2009ISBN 978-2-7071-5465-1
  2. ^François Caron,La France des patriotes, Paris,Fayard, coll. "Histoire de France" (Jean Favier, ed.), 1985ISBN 2-213-65790-4

Further reading

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  • William Howard Schneider,An Empire for the Masses: The French Popular Image of Africa 1870–1900 (Greenwood, 1982)ISBN 0-313-23043-9. An examination of the way French newspapers, andLe Petit Journal in particular, shaped representations of imperialism in the French public mind.

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toLe Petit Journal.
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