''The Bulletin'' was an Australian weekly magazine based in
Sydney
Sydney is the capital city of the States and territories of Australia, state of New South Wales and the List of cities in Australia by population, most populous city in Australia. Located on Australia's east coast, the metropolis surrounds Syd ...
and first published in 1880. It featured politics, business, poetry, fiction and humour, alongside cartoons and other illustrations.
''The Bulletin'' exerted significant influence on Australian culture and politics, emerging as "Australia's most popular magazine" by the late 1880s. Jingoistic, xenophobic, anti-imperialist and
republican, it promoted the idea of an Australian national identity distinct from its British colonial origins. Described as "the bushman's bible", ''The Bulletin'' helped cultivate a mythology surrounding the
Australian bush, with
bush poets such as
Henry Lawson and
Banjo Paterson contributing many of their best known works to the publication. After
federation
A federation (also called a federal state) is an entity characterized by a political union, union of partially federated state, self-governing provinces, states, or other regions under a #Federal governments, federal government (federalism) ...
in 1901, ''The Bulletin'' changed owners multiple times and gradually became more conservative in its views while remaining an "organ of Australianism". Although its popularity declined after
World War I
World War I or the First World War (28 July 1914 – 11 November 1918), also known as the Great War, was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War I, Allies (or Entente) and the Central Powers. Fighting to ...
, it continued to serve as a vital outlet for new Australian literature.
It was revived as a modern news magazine in the 1960s, and after merging with the Australian edition of ''
Newsweek
''Newsweek'' is an American weekly news magazine based in New York City. Founded as a weekly print magazine in 1933, it was widely distributed during the 20th century and has had many notable editors-in-chief. It is currently co-owned by Dev P ...
'' in 1984 was retitled ''The Bulletin with Newsweek''. Its final issue was published in January 2008, making ''The Bulletin'' Australia's longest running magazine.
Early history

''The Bulletin'' was founded by
J. F. Archibald and
John Haynes in
Sydney
Sydney is the capital city of the States and territories of Australia, state of New South Wales and the List of cities in Australia by population, most populous city in Australia. Located on Australia's east coast, the metropolis surrounds Syd ...
,
New South Wales
New South Wales (commonly abbreviated as NSW) is a States and territories of Australia, state on the Eastern states of Australia, east coast of :Australia. It borders Queensland to the north, Victoria (state), Victoria to the south, and South ...
, with the first issue being published on 31 January 1880. The original content of ''The Bulletin'' consisted of a mix of political comment,
sensationalised news, and Australian literature.
For a short period in 1880, their first artist
William Macleod was also a partner.
The publication was folio size and initially consisted of eight pages, increasing to 12 pages in July 1880, and had reached 48 pages by 1899. The first issue sold for four
pence, later reduced to three pence, and then, in 1883, was increased to six pence. It is the namesake of the Sydney lane
Bulletin Place, where the journal was published between 1880 and 1897, the year it moved to newer and larger offices in
George Street.
During its first few decades, ''The Bulletin'' played a significant role in fostering nationalist sentiments in Australia. Its politics were also anti-imperialist, protectionist, insular, racist, republican, anti-clerical and masculinist—but not socialist. It mercilessly ridiculed colonial governors, capitalists, perceived snobs and social climbers, the clergy,
wowsers (puritanical moralists), feminists and prohibitionists. It upheld trade unionism, Australian independence, advanced democracy and
White Australia. It ran cartoons mocking the British, Chinese, Japanese, Indians, Jews, and
Indigenous Australians
Indigenous Australians are people with familial heritage from, or recognised membership of, the various ethnic groups living within the territory of contemporary Australia prior to History of Australia (1788–1850), British colonisation. The ...
.
''The Bulletin'' decried the mistreatment of Indigenous people and regretted that, apart from the perpetrators of the
Myall Creek massacre, offending colonists had escaped justice. Even so, ''The Bulletin'' assumed that their "black brothers" would soon die out regardless, viewing them as an inferior race unfit "for the ordeal of civilisation", and any efforts to ameliorate their condition as futile. In the early 20th century, editor
James Edmond changed ''The Bulletin''s nationalist banner from "Australia for Australians" to "Australia for the White Man". An 1887 editorial laid out its reasons for choosing such banners:
The "Bulletin School"

From its outset, ''The Bulletin'' aimed to serve as a platform for young and aspiring Australian writers to showcase their works to large audiences. In 1886, it opened to submissions from all readers, calling for "original political, social or humorous matter, unpublished anecdotes and paragraphs, poems and short stories". Archibald encouraged contributors to "Make it short! Make it snappy, make it crisp, boil it down to a paragraph!" This resulted in what became known as "Bulletinese", described by
P. R. Stephensen as "a clipped kind of slangy jargon
hat
A hat is a Headgear, head covering which is worn for various reasons, including protection against weather conditions, ceremonial reasons such as university graduation, religious reasons, safety, or as a fashion accessory. Hats which incorpor ...
laid on local colour, not with a brush, but with a trowel." ''The Bulletin'' subsequently became the focal point of an emerging literary nationalism known as the "Bulletin School", characterised by colloquial Australian language, energetic verse, dry humour and hard-edged realism. Popular with people who lived in the Australian bush, ''The Bulletin'' frequently reflected the life of the bush back to them, and by 1888, it was widely referred to as "the bushman's bible". "''The Bulletin'' brought the world to the bush, and made the bush part of the world", wrote
Ann Curthoys and
Julianne Schultz. It was unique for publishing the contributions of ordinary bush people side by side with those from professional writers, and among folklorists and linguists, it is said to be without comparison as a source of
Australianisms and bush lore.
Critics of the Bulletin School found much of its output to be amoral, pessimistic and parochial.
Vincent Buckley alleged that it was "a debilitating force in Australian culture" that "saw men as no different from, and with no more soul than, the
gibber-plains,
mulga, soil erosion, crows, dead sheep and withered outback mountains which regularly appeared in their poems." The journal ''
Australian Woman's Sphere'', published by suffragist
Vida Goldstein, wrote that there were two types of Bulletin School verse: "one a clothes-horse on which to hang bush terms, and the other an echo from the grave, with blighted love and regret in it". While commending the Bulletin School for being "
racy of the soil" and displaying "unconventional local genius",
Arthur Patchett Martin considered the defects of their verse to be "an absence of lucidity and an excess of expletives". English poet
Alfred, Lord Tennyson read some Bulletin School poetry but declined to finish it, saying, "Unlike
John the Baptist
John the Baptist ( – ) was a Jewish preacher active in the area of the Jordan River in the early first century AD. He is also known as Saint John the Forerunner in Eastern Orthodoxy and Oriental Orthodoxy, John the Immerser in some Baptist ...
, I cannot live on locusts and wild honey."
A number of leading members of the Bulletin School, often called
bush poets, have become giants of
Australian literature. Notable writers associated with ''The Bulletin'' during this period include:
*
Francis Adams
*
Julian Ashton
*
William Astley
*
Barbara Baynton
*
George Lewis Becke
*
Randolph Bedford
*
Barcroft Boake
*
E. J. Brady
*
Christopher Brennan
*
Victor Daley
*
Frank Dalby Davison
*
C. J. Dennis
*
Albert Dorrington
*
Edward Dyson
*
John Farrell
*
Ernest Favenc
*
Joseph Furphy
*
Mary Gilmore
*
C. A. Jeffries ("Jeff")
*
Henry Lawson
*
Pattie Lewis ("Mab")
*
Louise Mack
*
Dorothy Mackellar
*
Harry Morant ("The Breaker")
*
John Shaw Neilson
*
Will H. Ogilvie
*
Nettie Palmer
*
Vance Palmer
*
Andrew Barton Paterson ("Banjo")
*
Katherine Susannah Prichard
*
Roderic Quinn
*
Steele Rudd
*
Alfred Stephens
*
Douglas Stewart
*
Ethel Turner
*
Alexina Maude Wildman
*
David McKee Wright

Although cartooning featured in earlier Australian newspapers and journals, ''The Bulletin'' was the first to place heavy emphasis on it, and in the estimation of
Bernard Smith, helped make Australia "one of the most important centres of black-and-white art in the world". Many artists contributed illustrations to ''The Bulletin'', including:
*
Jimmy Bancks
*
Les Dixon
*
Ambrose Dyson
*
Will Dyson
*
Albert Henry Fullwood
*
Alexander George Gurney
*
Hal Gye
*
Livingston Hopkins
*
George Washington Lambert
*
Percy Leason
*
Lionel Lindsay
*
Norman Lindsay
*
Ruby Lindsay
*
David Low
*
Jack Lusby
*
William Macleod
*
Frank P. Mahony
*
Phil May
*
Benjamin Minns
*
Larry Pickering
*
Norm Rice
*
David Henry Souter
*
Alfred Vincent
*
Unk White
Cultural impact

According to ''
The Times
''The Times'' is a British Newspaper#Daily, daily Newspaper#National, national newspaper based in London. It began in 1785 under the title ''The Daily Universal Register'', adopting its modern name on 1 January 1788. ''The Times'' and its si ...
'' of London, "It was ''The Bulletin'' that educated Australia up to Federation". In South Africa,
Cecil Rhodes
Cecil John Rhodes ( ; 5 July 185326 March 1902) was an English-South African mining magnate and politician in southern Africa who served as Prime Minister of the Cape Colony from 1890 to 1896. He and his British South Africa Company founded th ...
regarded ''The Bulletin'' with "holy horror" and as a threat to his imperialist ambitions. In a piece on Rhodes,
W. T. Stead wrote that "''The Bulletin'' he thus honoured by his dread is indeed one of the most notable journals of the world": "It is brilliant, lawless, audacious, scoffing, cynical, fearless, insolent, cocksure". English author
D. H. Lawrence felt that ''The Bulletin'' was "the only periodical in the world that really amused him", and often referred to it for inspiration when writing his 1923 novel ''
Kangaroo''. Like Lawrence, the novel's English narrator considers it "the momentaneous life of the continent", and appreciates its straightforwardness and the "kick" in its writing: "It beat no solemn drums. It had no deadly earnestness. It was just stoical and spitefully humorous." In ''The Australian Language'' (1946), Sidney Baker wrote: "Perhaps never again will so much of the true nature of a country be caught up in the pages of a single journal".
Bulletin School writers Henry Lawson, Mary Gilmore, and Banjo Paterson are among the four historical figures who have been commemorated on the
Australian ten-dollar note.
''A Woman's Letter''
The ''Bulletin'' was seen to be lacking a "gossip column" such as that conducted by "Mrs Gullett" in ''
The Daily Telegraph
''The Daily Telegraph'', known online and elsewhere as ''The Telegraph'', is a British daily broadsheet conservative newspaper published in London by Telegraph Media Group and distributed in the United Kingdom and internationally. It was found ...
''.
W. H. Traill, part-owner of the ''Bulletin'', was aware of the literary talents of his sister-in-law Pattie Lewis, who had been, as "Mab", writing children's stories for the ''
Sydney Mail''. He offered the 17-year-old a column to be called ''A Woman's Letter'', which involved reporting on the comings and goings of notable Sydney socialites.
In time the column became quite popular, and reportedly the first item looked for in the magazine by both men and women.
When Lewis married, it was she who recommended her successor, Ina Wildman, the audacious "Sappho Smith".
Seven women wrote the "Woman's Letter" for ''The Bulletin'':
*1881–1888
Pattie Lewis (died 1955) as "Mab"; married James Fotheringhame in 1886
*1888–1896:
Ina Wildman (died 1896) as "Sappho Smith"
*1896–1898:
Florence Blair (died 1937), daughter of
David Blair, she married Archibald Boteler Baverstock in 1898.
*1898–1901:
Louise Mack (1870–1935) married John Percy Creed in 1896 and Allen I. Leyland in 1927.
*1901–1911:
Agnes Conor O'Brien (died 1934) as "Akenehi" or "Lynette". She married artist and newspaperman
William Macleod in 1911
*1911–1919:
Margaret Cox-Taylor (died July 1939) as "Vandorian"
*1919–1934:
Nora Kelly as "Nora McAuliffe"
Later era
''The Bulletin'' continued to support the creation of a distinctive Australian literature into the 20th century, most notably under the editorship of
Samuel Prior (1915–1933), who created the first novel competition.
The literary character of ''The Bulletin'' continued until 1961, when it was bought by
Australian Consolidated Press (ACP), merged with the ''Observer'' (another ACP publication), and shifted to a news magazine format.
Donald Horne was appointed as chief editor and quickly removed "Australia for the White Man" from the banner. The magazine was costing ACP more than it made, but they accepted that price "for the prestige of publishing Australia's oldest magazine".
[ ]Kerry Packer
Kerry Francis Bullmore Packer (17 December 1937 – 26 December 2005) was an Australian media tycoon, and was considered one of Australia's most powerful media proprietors of the twentieth century. The Packer family company owned a controlling ...
, in particular, had a personal liking for the magazine and was determined to keep it alive.
In 1974, as a result of its publication of a leaked Australian Security Intelligence Organisation
The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO ) is the Intelligence agency, domestic intelligence and national security agency of the Australian Government, responsible for protection from espionage, sabotage, acts of foreign inte ...
paper discussing Deputy Prime Minister Jim Cairns, the Whitlam government called the Royal Commission on Intelligence and Security.
In the 1980s and 1990s, ''The Bulletin''s "ageing subscribers were not being replaced and its newsstand visibility had dwindled". Trevor Kennedy convinced publisher Richard Walsh to return to the magazine. Walsh promoted Lyndall Crisp to be its first female editor, but James Packer then advocated that former ''60 Minutes
''60 Minutes'' is an American television news magazine broadcast on the CBS television network. Debuting in 1968, the program was created by Don Hewitt and Bill Leonard, who distinguished it from other news programs by using a unique style o ...
'' executive producer Gerald Stone be made editor-in-chief. Later, in December 2002, Kerry Packer anointed Garry Linnell as editor-in-chief. The magazine by this stage was dropping in circulation and running at a loss. On one occasion, Kerry Packer called Linnell to his office, and, when Linnell asked what Packer wanted for ''The Bulletin'', Packer said: "Son, just make 'em talk about it." When former Prime Minister Paul Keating sent Linnell a letter criticising the magazine and calling it "rivettingly mediocre", Linnell published the letter in the magazine, promoted that "Paul Keating Writes for Us", and awarded Keating with "Letter of the Week", with the prize for that being a year's subscription to the magazine. In 2005, Linnell offered a $1.25-million reward to anyone who found an extinct Tasmanian tiger.
Kerry Packer died in 2005, and in 2007 James Packer sold controlling interest in the Packer media assets ( PBL Media) to the private equity firm CVC Asia Pacific. On 24 January 2008, ACP Magazines announced that it was shutting ''The Bulletin''. Circulation had declined from its 1990s' levels of over 100,000 down to 57,000,[ which has been attributed in part to readers preferring the internet as their source for news and current affairs.]
The Bulletin was awarded several Walkley Awards for its excellence in journalism; Asia Correspondent Eric Ellis in 2003, political correspondents John Lyons in 1999 and John Edwards in 1987, and headline writers Hal Greenland (2005/2007) and Donna Maegraith in 1999.
Editors
''The Bulletin'' had many editors over its time in print, and these are listed below:
* J. F. Archibald
* John Haynes
* William Henry Traill
* James Edmond
* Samuel Prior[Peter Kirkpatrick]
"Prior, Samuel Henry (1869–1933)"
''Australian Dictionary of Biography'', National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, published first in hardcopy 1988, Retrieved 21 April 2015.
* John E. Webb
* David Adams
* Donald Horne
* Peter Hastings
* Peter Coleman
William Peter Coleman (15 December 1928 – 31 March 2019) was an Australian writer and politician. A widely published journalist for over 60 years, he was editor of '' The Bulletin'' (1964–1967) and of '' Quadrant'' for 20 years, and publi ...
* Trevor Kennedy
* James Hall
* Lyndall Crisp
* Gerald Stone
* Max Walsh
* David Dale
* Paul Bailey
* Garry Linnell
* Kathy Bail
* John Lehmann
Columnists and bloggers
Regular columnists and bloggers on the magazine's website included:
* Patrick Cook
* Paul Daley
* Julie-Anne Davies
* Roy Eccleston
* Ellen Fanning
* Katherine Fleming
* Chris Hammer
* Laurie Oakes
* Leo Schofield
* Adam Shand
* Terrey Shaw
* Rebecca Urban
See also
* Bill Fitz Henry
* The Bookfellow
* The Bulletin Debate
References
Further reading
*
*
*
*
*
*
External links
* Creative Commons license">CC-By-SA">Creative_Commons_license.html" ;"title="/nowiki>Creative Commons license">CC-By-SA/nowiki>
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bulletin
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2008 disestablishments in Australia
ACP magazine titles
Antisemitism in Australia
Defunct political magazines published in Australia
Magazines disestablished in 2008
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Weekly magazines published in Australia