He soon found that running a newspaper was hard going, and
sold the Chronicle to Robert Lewis Gerrie. Wthin two years
Gerrie had died, and the newspaper was sold for £800
to its editor, Jonathan Hirst, and its manager, Wallace Rennie.
The £800 investment in 1857 was the foundation of the
present company, Hirst, Kidd and Rennie Ltd, and the following
years saw the Chronicle go from strength to strength. The
Chronicle was soon established as the town's leading weekly
newspaper, and in 1877 began publication twice a week.
Three years later, in 1880, the Oldham Evening Chronicle
was born, and weekly and evening newspapers were published
side by side for the next 100 years.
In 1982, the weekly edition of the Chronicle was transformed
into Chronicle Weekend, a free weekly newspaper. The Evening
Chronicle is now published five nights a week.
The company itself remained Hirst and Rennie Ltd until 1920
when the amalgamation with another printer brought Clarence
Kidd into the business, and the company became Hirst, Kidd
and Rennie Ltd.
The Chronicle moved to its present home at 172 Union Street,
Oldham, in 1923. The building was extensively rebuilt between
1970 and 1973, and in 1990 a new press hall was added to house
a Crabtree Crusader colour printing press, which was commissioned
in 1991.
The newspaper has had only eight editors since 1854, and
only six managing directors to guide it through good times
and bad. Though many members of the Rennie family remain as
shareholders, the Kidd family line has ended, and only Hirsts
play an active part in the business.
Mr Hubert Hirst is Executive Chairman; Philip Hirst is managing
director; Mr Christopher Hirst is printing manager, and Mr
Harry Hirst is the vice-chairman.
Other directors are Mr Bernard Stone, finance director;
Mr Jim Williams, editor; Mr Jim Taylor, Production and Technical
director.