When the Montreal Star's long history came to an end

Century-old paper folded after losing money and losing ground to competition

Media | The Montreal Star folds

Caption: Knowlton Nash introduces CBC's coverage on the closing of the Montreal Star.

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The people who worked at the Montreal Star knew it was in trouble, but they had hoped it wasn't going to close.
But that's not the news that was delivered on Sept. 25, 1979, when the 110-year-old newspaper folded, putting hundreds of people out of work.
"A great institution has died in Montreal," said journalist Doris Giller, who had worked at the Star for 15 years.
Asked how she felt about the paper, Giller said: "I loved it and as most Montrealers did, they loved the Montreal Star."

Media Video | Archives : What killed the Montreal Star?

Caption: The National looks at the reasons behind the closure of the Montreal Star in 1979.

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Patrick Finn, a journalist with the Star, said it was a case of "110 years gone down the tube," referring to the long history of the paper, which had been published since 1869.
The Star had struggled in the wake of an eight-month pressmen's strike, as the CBC's David Bazay reported on The National the day the paper closed. Ownership claimed the paper had lost millions in the previous year.

Image | Montreal Gazette building in 1979

Caption: The National reported that the Montreal Gazette had gained ground as a long-lasting pressmen's strike occurred at the Montreal Star. (The National/CBC Archives)

Bazay said the rival Montreal Gazette gained ground over the Star during the strike.
"The Star tried to win back readers and advertisers, but never recovered," he said.
Less than a year later, two other big Canadian cities — Ottawa and Winnipeg — would each lose big papers of their own, in August of 1980.
The demise of the Ottawa Journal and the Winnipeg Tribune spurred the federal government to establish a royal commission on Canada's newspapers(external link).

Image | Montreal Star newspaper worker

Caption: The Montreal Star had struggled in the wake of a lengthy strike by pressmen, according to what CBC's The National reported. (The National/CBC Archives)