In 1879, the
Liverpool Echo was published as a cheaper sister paper to the
Liverpool Daily Post. From its inception until 1917 the newspaper cost a halfpenny. It is now £1.40p Monday to Friday, £1.80p on Saturday and £1.40p on Sunday. In 1973, the paper moved from Victoria Street to a building in Old Hall Street. The limited company expanded internationally and underwent restructuring in 1985, becoming Trinity International Holdings Plc. Prior to this restructuring, the two original newspapers had recently been re-launched in
tabloid format. A special Sunday edition of the
Echo was published on 16 April 1989, for reporting on the previous day's
Hillsborough disaster, in which 97
Liverpool F.C. fans were fatally injured at the
FA Cup semi-final tie in
Sheffield. Every single one of the 75,000 copies printed was sold. In 1999 Trinity merged with
Mirror Group Newspapers to become Trinity Mirror, the largest stable of newspapers in the country. In 2018, Trinity Mirror was rebranded as
Reach plc. On 7 January 2014 it was announced that a regular Sunday edition of the paper would be launched. The
Sunday Echo is "a seventh day of publication, not an independent product", according to the paper. In 2008 the paper moved printing from Liverpool to Trinity Mirror Plc, Oldham, Greater Manchester, while journalists remain based at St Paul's Square in Liverpool city centre, where they had relocated to in 2018. In 2020, editor-in-chief Alistair Machray stood down and was replaced by Maria Breslin. Criticism has been directed at the
Echo for its perceived bias towards local politicians. In 2024, Liam Thorp, the paper's political editor, collaborated on a book titled "Head North: A Rallying Cry for a More Equal Britain" with the metro mayors of Manchester and Liverpool,
Andy Burnham and
Steve Rotheram. ==References==