দ্য স্টেটসম্যান - Kolkata
4.1/5
★
based on 8 reviews
Contact দ্য স্টেটসম্যান
Address : | 4, Chowringhee Square, Esplanade, Chandni Chawk, Bow Barracks, Kolkata, West Bengal 700001, India |
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Phone : | 📞 +977 | ||||||||||||||
Postal code : | 700001 | ||||||||||||||
Website : | http://www.thestatesman.com/ | ||||||||||||||
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shubhro mitra on Google
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Fantastic place.. fully nostalgic. Love the Newspaper also. Located in the heart of Kolkata
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Snehal Doshi on Google
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ This is the newspaper of our school days.Oldest daily and quality journalism in an era when print media ruled the roost. Has fallen upon bad days. The reluctance to change with the times and the management policies have contributed to this decline. The clout and circulation of this paper has receded. The building is also not well maintained. One feels sad of it's present state.
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Gautam Banerjee on Google
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ An iconic heritage building and a very popular landmark of Kolkata. It houses the offices of The Statesman, once a popular English Newspaper. Generation of Kolkattans swear by its correct grammatical English and more importantly independent view. But the opinion maker of yester years have fallen in bad times. I pray that it rises once again like the Phoenix from the ashes.
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AMIYA BYABORTTA on Google
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ The Statesman is one of India's oldest English Newspapers. It was founded in Kolkata in 1875
and is directly descended from The Friend of India
(founded 1822) was merged with The Statesman
in 1934. Once it was proud of Calcutta.
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SUBHASISH CHAKRABARTI on Google
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ "The Statesman" is Calcutta's oldest English-language newspaper and these stately premises were designed by architects Sudlow, Ballardie & Thompson. Built on a wedge-shaped site, the building was formally opened by Sir John Anderson, the then Governor of Bengal on 18 January 1933.....
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Indranil paul. on Google
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ An One and Half Century old Elite and Prestigious Newspaper publishing house of Calcutta (Kolkata) also published from Bombay (Mumbai) and Delhi(New Delhi).Pride of Kolkata as well as of INDIA.
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Doon Datta on Google
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 'The Statesman' was one of the British owned newspapers in India, functioning after Indian independence. It still carried its tradition of independent and fearless news reporting. Perhaps it was the only paper known for its chaste English and as a trusted source of information on world events. In short, a newspaper that carried its glory from British India to free India.
Over the years, the paper maintained a remarkable consistency in policy. It was this very characteristic of 'The Statesman' which made the paper different from the other dailies. A keen observer may have noticed the changes in the policies of many other prominent national newspapers over the years with the change of ownership or perhaps with the change of Government.
India's most widely read newspaper of the nineteenth century, known for its powerful editorials and news presentation was 'The Statesman', which directly descended from another famous paper, the 'Friend of India'. The 'Friend of India' was in great financial difficulties and to its rescue came Robert Knight, a man of exceptional brilliance and business acumen, who was also an outstanding journalist. Having left the 'Times of India', he started the Indian 'Statesman' in Calcutta in 1875.
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Soma on Google
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ It carries the legacy of British era. An old heritage building. It's at Dharmatala more just opposite Victoria house
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