Stephen Kimber

The 4th Estate: digitizing a remarkable decade in Nova Scotia

by Stephen Kimber on April 23, 2010 | 1 Comment

On the evening of April 16, 1969, the editorial staff of The People went about the usual business of putting together their still-less-than-year-old Halifax alternative biweekly newspaper. But, just before shipping it off to the printer, Managing Editor Nick Fillmore remembers, “we pulled off The People masthead, dad [Frank Fillmore] wrote an editorial explaining why Nova Scotia needed an independent paper, and The 4th Estate was born.”

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That dramatic “little scheme” not only ended a simmering dispute among the five owners of the paper—Fillmore says the three non-family owners wanted to make money “so they tried to influence us to tone down the content”—but the first issue of The 4th Estate also marked the beginning of one of the most remarkable decades in Nova Scotia’s long and storied journalism history. (Full disclosure: I was a contributor to the paper.)

This afternoon, Libraries Nova Scotia, the Nova Scotia Archives and Cape Breton’s Beaton Institute will launch “Nova Scotia Historical Newspapers: An Online Resource,” a project that has so far digitized 18 provincial newspapers, ranging from the Nova Scotia Chronicle and Weekly Advertiser (1769) to the Micmac News (1991).

And, of course, The 4th Estate.

During its nine-year run, the feisty little tabloid challenged—and often bettered—its establishment rivals, the Chronicle-Herald and Mail-Star, which the Fillmores called “the Old Women of Argyle Street.” Fillmore recalls an incident when “one well-known but angry Herald journalist walked into my office with the story about the incompetence in the construction of the Glace Bay heavy water plant—a story of national importance. I was told the Herald wouldn't publish it because it would reflect poorly on Nova Scotians.”

The 4th Estate, which Nick says brought together “my father's social conscience and my journalism skills,” had no such compunctions. It campaigned against slum landlords—threatening to publish side-by-side photos of slums and their owners' private residences—and laws that sent poor people to jail for debt or allowed the power company to shut off their electricity.

Perhaps not surprisingly, Fillmore believes Halifax could still use a 4th Estate-style newspaper. “Independent media, where policies are not dictated by corporate owners and where advertising is not heavily relied on, are needed across the country,” he says.

And so are resources like the newspaper digitization project, which showcase our history. But, while organizers have done a remarkable job of digitizing 19,000 newspaper pages with a budget of just $24,000, there’s no money left to continue the work, which is estimated to cost about $150,000. “There are many, many newspapers left to do,” says Michael Colborne, one of the organizers, “and with every passing year their condition deteriorates.”

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To see Nova Scotia Historical Newspapers: An Online Resource,” visit: http://gov.ns.ca/nsarm/new.asp.

And for more from my email interview with Nick Fillmore, check out this link.

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Copyright 2010 Stephen Kimber

Comments

One Response to “The 4th Estate: digitizing a remarkable decade in Nova Scotia”

  1. Pauline J.
    April 24th, 2010 @ 1:09 pm

    Hello Stephen,

    We did run the photos side by side. The three-storey rooming house had one bathroom for all the tenants.It consisted of a sink and a plugged toilet which the landlord refused to fix.The rooms were infested with cockroaches. The tenement was also the home of Elmer Briand. He came from Cape Breton, played the fiddle, and painted wild birds in that little room of his.

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    Stephen Kimber

    STEPHEN KIMBER, a Professor of Journalism at the University of King's College in Halifax, is an award-winning writer, editor and broadcaster. He is the author of one novel -- Reparations -- and seven non-fiction books.

    Buy his books at Amazon.