The first issue of
The Bulletin was launched on 9 July 1861. It is the second oldest business in Rockhampton, the oldest being the
Criterion Hotel which was established in October 1860. The founder and original owner,
William Hitchcock Buzacott (1831–1880, brother of
Charles Hardie Buzacott), brought the press and equipment from
Sydney in 1861 where he operated a small weekly paper. At the time the paper was called the Rockhampton Bulletin and was eagerly read by the town's 698 residents. The newspaper was published as
The Rockhampton Bulletin and Central Queensland Advertiser from July 1861 to 14 January 1871. Then as
The Rockhampton Bulletin from 1871 to 1878. From 1878 onwards the newspaper was published as
The Morning Bulletin.
The Bulletin original home was in Quay Street near the old
Customs House, in a low wooden building. On 14 August 1862, this was burnt down and the presses destroyed. Buzacott quickly obtained new equipment from Sydney and the newspaper was re-established in a two-storey masonry building in Denham Street. By 1926, the Denham Street building was too small and the newspaper returned to Quay Street in their new (and now heritage-listed)
Bulletin Building. In 2007, the printing equipment that had been part of the newspaper's production facilities at the Bulletin Building were relocated to new printing facilities in Hempenstall Street in the Rockhampton suburb of Kawana, a more industrial part of the city. After almost 88 years of newspaper staff working from the Bulletin Building,
The Morning Bulletin ceased operating from the iconic three-storey building on 21 March 2014. The newspaper temporarily relocated to an office at 35 Fitzroy Street opposite the City Centre Plaza shopping centre. Despite The Morning Bulletin's editor Frazer Pearce favourably describing the building at 35 Fitzroy Street as "decades ahead" for the functionality of an evolving business, In May 2020, it was announced
The Morning Bulletin would be one of many regional newspapers owned by
News Corp to cease publishing a print edition, moving to a digital-only edition, available to readers who paid for an online subscription. However, prior to the final edition of The Morning Bulletin being printed, it was announced
The Courier-Mail would commence a "regionalised" print edition which would feature selected stories from Central Queensland in compensation for the local print edition finishing. The final print edition of
The Morning Bulletin was published on 27 June 2020 after which the Rockhampton Print Centre was closed down. The current editor of
The Morning Bulletin is Emma McBryde, who replaced former editor Melanie Plane. == Digitisation ==