The
Northampton Mercury was founded in 1720 by
William Dicey, who had moved to Northampton from London and set up a printing office with
Robert Raikes. Ownership of the newspaper remained in the Dicey family through the 19th century. One of its proprietors was Thomas Edward Dicey,
senior wrangler in 1811, Chairman of the
Midland Railway, and father of jurist
A.V. Dicey. In 1931, it merged with the
Northampton Herald, becoming the
Mercury & Herald, and was published under that name until 1988, when it became the
Northampton Mercury & Herald. It was sold in 1992 to the
EMAP newspapers and in 1996 to the
Johnston Press group of regional newspapers. In later years it was distributed as a free tabloid companion to the
Northampton Chronicle & Echo, the paid-for weekly from the Johnston Press. When it ceased publication in 2015, it was according to its website "the UK’s oldest newspaper with a proven record of continuous publication", with a free circulation of 44,000. ==Notes==