Misplaced Pages

The Tablet (Brooklyn)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
American newspaper
The Tablet
Owner(s)DeSales Media Group (subsidiary of the Diocese of Brooklyn)
PublisherBishop Robert Brennan
Founded1908
LanguageEnglish
HeadquartersBrooklyn, New York
Sister newspapersNuestra Voz
ISSN0039-8845
Websitethetablet.org

The Tablet is a Catholic newspaper published in the interest of the Diocese of Brooklyn. It has circulated in Brooklyn and Queens, New York, since 1908. Its website, thetablet.org, serves the greater Catholic populace.

The Tablet is a property of DeSales Media Group, the communications and technology arm of the Diocese of Brooklyn, which also includes New Evangelization Television (NET-TV) and Nuestra Voz. The Tablet works with these DeSales outlets to produce cross-platform news coverage and has also established an editorial partnership with Crux, an independent online Catholic news outlet.

The Tablet distributes more than 55,000 copies per week through the mail and parish distribution in Brooklyn and Queens. Print copies of The Tablet reach all 50 states and 4 countries, and online readership averages more than 150,000 monthly users in 7 countries.

Content

News

Although The Tablet focuses on local news about parishes, schools, neighborhoods, and sports, it also covers national and international news that is of interest to Catholic readers, including the Catholic Church's abuse crisis and the Pope's international trips.

Opinion

Each week, The Tablet publishes its editorial "As the Tablet Sees It." The paper also publishes "Sunday Scriptures" and "Up Front and Personal" columns, columns by guest writers, and nationally syndicated columns from George Weigel.

Reputation

In more than a century of existence, The Tablet has gained a reputation as one of the best Catholic newspapers in the United States, winning hundreds of awards for editorial and advertising work in print and online.

In June 2018, The Tablet was named Newspaper of the Year by the Catholic Press Association in its category of diocesan newspapers with circulations above 25,000. In 1972, it won the Catholic Press Association Journalism Award for General Excellence.

In May 2018, longtime Editor-in-Chief Ed Wilkinson was awarded the St. Francis de Sales Distinguished Communicator Award at the Diocese of Brooklyn's 27th annual World Communications Day, Catholic Media Conference.

History

In 1901, James Rooney of the Brooklyn Eagle made a proposal to Bishop Charles McDonnell for a diocesan paper, but the bishop wasn't ready. Seven years later, William P. Lawler, who published The Monitor for the Newark Archdiocese, made a similar proposal. By then, McDonnell was ready and suggested the paper's name, in honor of The London Tablet, the preeminent Catholic journal in the English-speaking world at the time.

The first issue of The Tablet appeared on April 4, 1908. Rev. James J. Coan was appointed editor and Joseph J. Timmes was appointed managing editor. In 1909, by the end of The Tablet's first year, its subscription base reached 13,000, and Bishop McDonnell purchased the paper. He saw The Tablet as an "influential means of spreading religious information and instruction and forming a link for the closer welding-together of the far-flung centers of Long Island."

In 1931, the paper's name was changed to Brooklyn Tablet, but it was changed back to The Tablet in 1939.

From 1933 to 1973, there was a separate Italian paper, Il Crociato.

In 1940, The Tablet Home Delivery Service begun.

In June 1972, The Tablet added a monthly Spanish supplement. A separate Spanish paper, El Nuevo Amanacer (The New Dawn), was published from 1981 to 1994. Manuel Gonzalez served as its first editor, followed by Sister Eve Gillcrist, O.P.

In December 1972, Ms. Tablet, an annual women's issue, made its first appearance. The paper featured women writers more prominently than it had previously, especially Sister Camille D'Arienzo, R.S.M.

From 1989 to 2007, Tablet Week in Review aired on The Prayer Channel.

In 2001, The Tablet launched its website, thetablet.org.

In October 2003, Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio's "Put Out Into the Deep" column first appeared. This was the first time in the paper's history that a diocesan bishop wrote a weekly column. Since then, Bishop DiMarzio has used his column as a way to speak directly to the people on local, national, and international issues.

On April 23, 2011, The Tablet published a Spanish-language insert, "La Reconciliación" (The Reconciliation), which went on to become The Tablet's Spanish-language sister publication, Nuestra Voz, which has become a monthly newspaper and daily digital news operation.

References

  1. Blog, McNamara's (2009-04-04). "Happy 101st Birthday, Brooklyn Tablet!". McNamara's Blog. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  2. "Faith In Brooklyn for September 28: DeSales Media announces editor's promotion | Brooklyn Daily Eagle". www.brooklyneagle.com. 28 September 2018. Retrieved 2018-11-02.
  3. "DeSales Media Group heralds new age of communication in Brooklyn Diocese". National Catholic Reporter. 2017-05-16. Retrieved 2018-11-02.
  4. "DeSales Media Group, Media Kit 2018" (PDF). DeSales Media Group.
  5. King, Keiko Morris and Kate. "Pope Francis Mural Emerges in Manhattan". WSJ. Retrieved 2018-11-02.
  6. "2018 Catholic Book Award, Gabriel Award, Press Award, and Student Award Winners - Catholic Press Association". www.catholicpress.org. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  7. "Brooklyn newspaper editor honored for telling story of 'a Church that is alive'". Crux. 2018-05-10. Retrieved 2018-11-02.
  8. "DIOCESE OF BROOKLYN'S WORLD COMMUNICATIONS DAY HONORING LONGTIME EDITOR OF THE TABLET, ED WILKINSON - Diocese of Brooklyn". Diocese of Brooklyn. 2018-05-03. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  9. McNamara, Patrick (2008). The Tablet: The First Hundred Years. Brooklyn: The Tablet Publishing Company.

Nino

External links

Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn
Bishops
Ordinaries
John Loughlin
Charles Edward McDonnell
Thomas Edmund Molloy
Bryan Joseph McEntegart
Francis Mugavero
Thomas Vose Daily
Nicholas Anthony DiMarzio
Robert J. Brennan
Auxiliary bishops
Gerald Barbarito
Anthony Bevilacqua
John Joseph Boardman
Frank Joseph Caggiano
Ignatius Anthony Catanello
Raymond Francis Chappetto
Octavio Cisneros
Joseph Peter Michael Denning
Raymond Augustine Kearney
Charles Richard Mulrooney
George Mundelein
Edmund Joseph Reilly
Paul Robert Sanchez
Guy Sansaricq
John J. Snyder
Joseph Michael Sullivan
René Arnold Valero
Bishops who served as priests in the diocese
Vincent DePaul Breen
Edward Bernard Scharfenberger
Churches
List
List of churches in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn
Cathedral
Cathedral Basilica of St. James, Brooklyn
Co-cathedral
Co-Cathedral of St. Joseph, Brooklyn
Basilicas
Basilica of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Brooklyn
Basilica of Regina Pacis, Brooklyn
Parishes
Church of St. Francis of Assisi and St. Blaise, Brooklyn
Church of the Holy Innocents, Brooklyn
Holy Cross Church, Queens
Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal, Queens
Our Lady of Mount Carmel
Our Lady of Victory Church, Brooklyn
Queen of All Saints Church, Brooklyn
St. Adalbert, Queens
St. Barbara's Church, Brooklyn
Saint Benedict Joseph Labre Church, Queens
Saint Cecilia's Catholic Church, Brooklyn
St. Michael's Church, Brooklyn
St. Sebastian Church, Queens
St. Stanislaus Kostka Church, Queens
Transfiguration, Queens
St. Matthias Church, Queens
Former parishes
Church of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, Brooklyn
St. Blaise's Church, Brooklyn
St. Monica's Church, Queens
Education
Seminary
Cathedral Preparatory School and Seminary, Queens
High schools, Brooklyn (diocesan and independent)
Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School
Cristo Rey Brooklyn High School
Fontbonne Hall Academy
Nazareth Regional High School
St. Edmund Preparatory High School
Saint Saviour High School of Brooklyn
Xaverian High School
High schools, Queens (diocesan and independent)
Archbishop Molloy High School
Cathedral Preparatory School and Seminary
Christ the King Regional High School
Holy Cross High School
Monsignor McClancy Memorial High School
St. Francis Preparatory School
St. John's Preparatory School
The Mary Louis Academy
High schools, former
Bishop Ford Central Catholic High School, Brooklyn
Bishop Kearney High School
Catherine McAuley High School
Dominican Commercial High School
St. Agnes High School
St. Joseph High School, Brooklyn
Stella Maris High School
Miscellany
Other
DeMarco v. Holy Cross High School
Holy Cross Cemetery, Brooklyn
New Evangelization Television
St. Charles Cemetery
St. Vincent's Catholic Medical Center
The Tablet
Categories: