Novascotian
The
Novascotian was a
newspaper published in
Halifax,
Nova Scotia,
Canada.
The paper was founded as the
Nova Scotian or
Colonial Herald, by George R. Young, in 1824.
Joseph Howe took control of it in 1827, establishing the paper's motto: "The free constitution which guards the British press." Published as a weekly, the paper played a key role in the intellectual and political life of Nova Scotia. A letter published in the
Novascotian in 1835 led to charges of libel against Howe. When acquitted, he proclaimed: "the Press of Nova Scotia is free."
With a circulation of 3000 subscribers, the
Novascotian became the leading provincial newspaper in the 1840's. A well-known contributor was
Thomas Chandler Haliburton, creator of the immensly popular character,
Sam Slick. Howe's entry into politics necessitated selling the paper. Nevertheless, the
Novascotian remained a
liberal voice in the province until the
First World War, reaching a peak
circulation of 20,000. Later it was published as the
Nova Scotian and then
Nova Scotia's Farm and Home Journal. It was discontinued in the 1920s after years of dwindling circulation following a change of its political allegiances to the Union Government.
The name
Novascotian is still in use. It is now printed as a human interest section of
The Chronicle-Herald newspaper of
Halifax.