Tipperary Star

Logo of Tipperary Star

The Tipperary Star is a weekly local newspaper published in Thurles, a town in County Tipperary in central Ireland. The Star and its sister paper, The Nationalist, are the main media outlets serving the County Tipperary region. The Star is printed each Wednesday, and both the Nationalist and the Star populate the news site www.tipperarylive.ie, which primarily runs stories appearing in the papers’ print editions. 
 
The Tipperary Star was founded in 1909 by long-time news editor Edward Long, who led the paper until his death in 1925. Like many local newspapers during the early 20th century, the Star was sympathetic to the nationalist cause. 


The Star remained in the Long family after Edward’s death under the guidance of his daughter, Kitty Long. In 1963, in an unusually early example of conglomeration in the regional newspaper sector, the Star was acquired by another Tipperary paper, the Nationalist. It’s worth noting that this acquisition was extremely discreet. Neither paper appears to have overtly covered the story, and the only evidence of the shift in ownership lay in the identification of the Nationalist as the publisher of the Tipperary Star at the end of May 1963.


A key moment in the paper’s history was a 1988 exclusive on Father Patrick Ryan, a priest accused of being a member of the Irish Republican Army (IRA), written by Star reporter Ann O'Grady. The story quickly gained global attention and Star staff fielded calls from reporters from around the world.  


In 2019, the paper was sued for defamation by Former Fianna Fáil TD and Minister Michael Smith for editorial errors concerning a 2014 article on Mr Smith’s fundraising efforts for a local school. The case was settled out of court. 


In 1991, the Nationalist and Tipperary Star were sold for £IR 2.5m to the Keane Family-owned Kilkenny People Group. In 2000, the entire Kilkenny People Group, including the Tipperary Star, was acquired from the Keane family by Scottish Radio Holdings for € 35.6m. 


In June 2005, UK media firm, EMAP plc, announced its intention to complete its acquisition of SRH. As part of the deal, it agreed to immediately sell on SRH’s Score Press Limited subsidiary to another Scottish print group, Johnston Press. The sale of Score Press saw 45 titles from Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland (which accounted for five titles including The Tipperary Star) sold to Johnston Press.    


Both the Star and the Nationalist were purchased from Johnstown Press by Iconic Media in a 2014 acquisition. Iconic Media is owned by Media Concierge (Holdings) Limited, which is in turn owned by The Denmark Family, with UK businessman Malcolm Denmark as the controlling shareholder.

Key Facts

Audience ShareMissing Data
Ownership TypePrivate
Geographic CoverageLocal
Content TypePaid
Data Publicly Available
ownership data is easily available from other sources, e. g. public registries etc.

Ownership

Ownership Structure

The Star is published by Formpress Publishing Limited, which is owned by Iconic Newspapers Limited. The parent organisation of Iconic Newspapers Limited is Media Concierge (Holdings) Limited (previously Mediaforce (Holdings) Limited). The Denmark Family is the sole owner of the media group. Malcolm Denmark, who owns 75% of shares, is identified as the controlling shareholder in accounts filed with Companies House in the UK for Media Concierge (Holdings) Limited. The remaining company shares are owned by C.N. Denmark (15%), T.C. Denmark (9%), and V.M. Denmark (0.76%).

Voting RightsMalcolm (M.C.) Denmark is identified as the controlling shareholder in accounts filed with Companies House in the UK for Media Concierge (Holdings) Limited.
Individual Owner

Media Companies / Groups

Facts

Founding Year1909
Founder
  • Edward Long

    Edward Long (1874 - 1925) was a Kilkenny native whose early journalist experience was on the Wexford Free Press and the New Ross Standard. From the beginning, Long clearly saw a public service role for journalism. In 1907, whilst at the Standard, he travelled to the United States with a group of educationalists to observe the American system of education. The results of this trip were subsequently published in the Star and saw him associated with the Technical Instruction Committees of Wexford and Tipperary. Similarly, in 1925, he joined a visit by Irish farmers to Denmark to study agricultural practices there. He was also a prominent figure in the Irish Journalists Association, with arguably the highest profile amongst provincial journalists.  

    Long came to Thurles in 1909 to set up the Star and the associated printing works. In his  editorial in the first edition on September 4 1909 he wrote: “The importance of a good newspaper cannot be over-estimated. In the first place it is a powerful weapon for the advancement of the people, secondly the launching of such an enterprise like the creation of any considerable local industry adds materially to the sum of employment.” 

    He was also overtly nationalist in his political leanings. In that same debut editorial, anticipating the introduction of Home Rule, he wrote: “Irishmen must themselves be up and doing if they mean to profit by the opportunity which will assuredly be theirs to shoulder the new and heavy responsibilities which National Self-Government will thrust upon them, and what is more to prevent the possibility of ever again losing their independence once ‘tis regained…We desire to say that even if Ireland obtained her political rights tomorrow, she would still lack full Nationhood while bereft of many of her dearest possessions from language downwards and hence in season and out of season we will strive within our limited sphere for the re-Gaelicisation of own country.” 

    Long was also noted for his interest in new technology, becoming an early subscriber to the Electric Light Company in Thurles and using its services to power his printing presses.

CEO
  • Malcolm Denmark

    Malcolm Denmark is an advertising executive who established Mediaforce UK in 1985, an advertising agency which represented media owners to advertising agencies. At the time, Mediaforce focused mainly on regional outlets across the UK. However, the business now includes the production and distribution of inserts in local and national titles. It has also expanded into print and online outlet ownership through an aggressive acquisition policy focusing on regional and local media publishers in the UK and Ireland. 
     
    Since the establishment of Mediaforce, Malcolm Denmark’s business interests have expanded in this sector. He has established Media Concierge (Holdings) Ltd., which includes several subsidiaries, including Mediaforce. Denmark has also ventured into business activities that encompass a full range of advertising services such as representation, marketing, publishing, and distribution for Iconic Media in Ireland (Mediaforce Ireland/Formpress), which is the news publishing section of his business. In addition to media businesses, Malcolm Denmark also holds significant property interests and is the owner of multiple race horses.
     
    Malcolm Denmark owns 75.2% of Media Concierge, alongside his son Callum Nicolas Denmark’s 15%, his daughter Tara Clare Denmark’s 9% and Valerie Mary Denmark (born 1957) 0.76%.

Editor-In-Chief
  • Darren Hassett

    Darren Hassett, a County Tipperary Native, has served as Tipperary’s Regional Editor for Iconic Media (incl. The Nationalist and Tipperary Star) since 2021. He previously worked as a reporter for the Irish Daily Mail, the Kildare Nationalist, the Ireland International News Agency, and the Kilkenny People. 
    Although Hassett’s political leanings are not publicly known, he wrote a popular 2024 column for Tipperarylive.ie condemning far-right involvement in anti-immigration protests in the Tipperary village of Dundrum.

ContactFriar Street
Garryvicleheen
Thurles
Co. Tipperary
Ireland
enda.treacy@tipperarystar.ie
0504-29115
www.tipperarylive.ie
RevenueMissing Data
Operating ProfitMissing Data
Advertising (in % of total funding)Missing Data
Market ShareMissing Data
Headlines
Meta Data

Historical Information about The Tipperary Star  was obtained from the paper’s website, as well as from the RTE Archives and a PhD thesis by Dr Christopher Dougan on the Irish provincial press. 

Ownership and financial information was gathered from the FAME Database (Moody’s) regarding Formpress Publishing Limited, Iconic Newspapers Limited, and Media Concierge (Holdings) Limited. 

An average 2023 exchange rate of EUR 1 = GBP 0.8629 and EUR 1 = USD 1.181 was used (European Central Bank).

Information regarding Editor, Darren Hassett, was taken from his LinkedIn profile and tipperarylive.ie editorials. 

Accurate estimation of outlet market share was not possible because reporting on income levels in Ireland is typically done at the group level rather than the individual title level. Additionally, overall revenue details for the market as a whole are not available. 

Accurate estimation of audience share is not possible. Although Kantar collects publicly available figures on readership for national titles, parallel figures are not available for regional and local newspapers.  Individual outlets may publish data on readership or users; however, measurement parameters and sources vary between organisations, thereby limiting opportunities for comparison.

Sources
Documents (PDF)
  • Compiled Financial Data Formpress Publishing Limited
    Link File
  • Financial Statement Formpress Publishing Limited (2023)
    Link File