Chester Chronicle

The Chester Chronicle is a British newspaper for the Chester and Cheshire area, which was first introduced in the 18th century. It is one of the best selling British newspapers and appears on Fridays.

Structure

The newspaper has multiple outputs. Those are currently Chester City, Chester Country, Frodham & Helsby and Flintshire. In June 2006, the Wirral output was set in July 2006, spending Deeside, Mold & Buckley and Flint & Holywell have been combined to Flintshire output. While the Flintshire Chronicle advertising and sale terms is part of the Chester Chronicle, it is editorially independent. Since June 2006, the City edition no longer bears the word "City" in the imprint. The newspaper was originally printed as broadsheets. More recently, she switched to tabloid format. The newspaper belongs to Trinity Mirror. She has a free sister publication, the Midweek Chronicle.

Others

In February 2003, the newspaper conducted a morality based on wrong information campaign against a website that the bawdy - jokingly articles Chester 's guide to: offering Picking up little girls on their pages. Many readers and politicians followed uncritically the protest call and urged the Google search engine for temporary censorship of the page.

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