The East London Advertiser is celebrating more than 140 years of publishing. It began life as the Tower Hamlets Independent and East End Local Advertiser in the days before the County of London was even set up. The first edition, on November 17, 1866, reported the typhus epidemic sweeping the parish of Bethnal Green and the fight by environmentalists of the day to save the new Victoria Park from the gas companies’ encroachment.
The editorial spoke of creating a paper solely devoted to the interests of the ratepayers, especially its justice and impartiality. The paper promised its early readers to campaign on issues of the day: Parliamentary reform, rates reform and preservation of open spaces for the people. The big stories down the decades included the 1888 Whitechapel Murders, when Jack the Ripper was on the loose targeting prostitutes in the streets of Whitechapel and Spitalfields. The same year saw the matchmakers’ strike at Bryant and May’s factory in Bow.
The Advertiser covered all the big events of the day, from the opening of Tower Bridge in 1994 to the death Queen Victoria in 1901. The paper celebrated their own centenary in November 1966, then continued reporting past the Millennium and into the 21st century, marking their 140th birthday in 2006.





