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Winnipeg Free Press

The Winnipeg Free Press (or WFP; founded as the Manitoba Free Press) is a daily (excluding Sunday) broadsheet newspaper in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. It provides coverage of local, provincial, national, and international news, as well as current events in sports, business, and entertainment and various consumer-oriented features, such as homes and automobiles appear on a weekly basis.

Type

Daily newspaper

FP Canadian Newspapers Limited Partnership

Bob Cox

Paul Samyn

November 30, 1872 (1872-11-30)

1355 Mountain Avenue
Winnipeg, Manitoba
R2X 3B6

101,229 weekdays
132,697 Saturdays (as of 2015)[1]

The WFP was founded in 1872, only two years after Manitoba had joined Confederation (1870), and predated Winnipeg's own incorporation (1873).[2][3][4] The Winnipeg Free Press has since become the oldest newspaper in Western Canada that is still active.

Strike[edit]

In 2008, at noon on Thanksgiving Day (Monday, October 13), about 1,000 members of the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union, representing editorial, advertising, circulation, and press staff, as well as newspaper carriers, launched a strike action.[7] The strike ended 16 days later, when the union ratified the final offer on Tuesday, October 28.[8] The contract was ratified by 67% of newspaper carriers, 75% of the pressmen, and 91% of the inside workers, including journalists.[9] The recent five-year contract was negotiated, ratified, and signed in 2013, with no threat of a strike. Workers and managers negotiated directly with great success, without the need of a lawyer that previous contracts had required.[10]

(1928 to early-1930s): journalist and news agency executive[15]

Charles Edwards

(1980 to 1993): journalist, writer, sports administrator and member of the Order of Canada[16][17]

Vince Leah

(1948 to 1958): television producer, sports commentator, and journalist[18]

Bob Moir

(1951 to 1963, 1976 to 1996): columnist and sports editor from 1976 to 1989[19]

Hal Sigurdson

(1927 to 1937, 1940 to 1976): columnist and sports editor from 1944 to 1976[20]

Maurice Smith

(1936-1940): sports writer from 1936 to 1940[21]

Scott Young

List of newspapers in Canada

Cook, Ramsay (1963). . Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-5119-6.

The politics of John W. Dafoe and the Free Press

Merrill, John Calhoun (1980). . New York: Hastings House. pp. 351–365. ISBN 978-0-8038-8095-5.

The world's great dailies : profiles of fifty newspapers

Paterson, Edith (1970). . Winnipeg: Winnipeg Free Press.

Tales of early Manitoba from the Winnipeg Free Press

Winnipeg Free Press