On
the 11th March 1702, Britain’s first newspaper – the Daily Courant – began
publishing from rooms above the White Hart pub in Fleet Street. It was more like
a leaflet than a newspaper as it was just a single page with two collumns.
Fleet Street
Publishing
started in Fleet Street around 1500 when William Caxton's apprentice, Wynkyn de
Worde, set up a printing shop near Shoe Lane.
Fleet Street was the home of the British press until
the 1980s. Most of the major national papers were located here. Since the
digital printing revolution, most have moved, and only Reuters remains. The
Times and The Sun moved to Wapping. The Guardian went to the Isle of Dogs, and
the rest went to London’s Docklands.
Fleet
Street is named after the Fleet River, one of the many rivers that now flow
beneath London's streets to the Thames.
Who was WilliamCaxton?
William
Caxton was the first English person to work as a printer and the first person to
introduce a printing press into England.
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