Daily Times of Nigeria (DTN), the country's oldest newspaper, founded on June 1, 1926, reaches the remarkable milestone of 100 years today. To commence the centenary celebrations and honor this rare achievement, the DTN management will hold a press conference at the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) Secretariat in Utako, Abuja, under the theme: 'Daily Times is 100 years—celebrating 100 years of fearless journalism, championing the future 1926-2026.'
Centenary Events and Activities
The management, led by publisher Fidelis Anosike, will unveil a year-long calendar of activities. These include public lectures, exhibitions of archival front pages, and a digital archive project that will make 100 years of Daily Times editions available online for researchers and the general public.
Historical Journey
The newspaper was established by Richard Barrow and Ernest Ikoli as a four-page daily in colonial Lagos. It grew into the nation's newspaper of record. In the 1950s, Daily Times published nationalist voices and debates on self-rule. After independence in 1960, it reported every major turning point: the First and Second Republics, the 1966 coups, the Civil War, decades of military rule, and the return to democracy in 1999.
At its peak in the 1970s and 1980s, Daily Times had the largest circulation in West Africa. Its Kakawa Street building in Lagos became a landmark. For many families, it was the paper at the breakfast table, carrying election results, public notices, and stories that shaped public opinion.
Challenges and Resilience
The last 25 years have been turbulent. Ownership changes, economic downturns, and digital disruption forced the print edition to scale down. However, the brand survived. Today, Daily Times publishes in print and online, still holding to its founding mission of journalism 'for the people.'
Statement of Purpose
Organizers say the Abuja event is not just about nostalgia. It is a statement of purpose. 'The centenary is about honoring the past, but more importantly, shaping the future,' a senior editor said. 'We are 100 years old, but we are not a museum piece. We are championing the future of journalism in Nigeria, Africa, and the global community.'
The NUJ Secretariat was chosen to signal that the anniversary belongs to the entire profession. Expected guests include former Daily Times editors and reporters, media owners, journalism lecturers, students, and press freedom advocates.
Fearless Journalism
The phrase 'fearless journalism' anchors how the paper wants to be remembered. It clashed with colonial authorities in the 1950s. During military rule, its editors faced detention for stories that held power to account. In the Fourth Republic, it continued investigative reporting despite shrinking ad revenue and online competition.
'Practicing journalism for the people' is the second pillar. Editors say it means keeping readers at the center—reporting on government, but also on markets, clinics, schools, and daily life. 'You can change the owners, you can change the format, but if you stop being for the people, you stop being Daily Times,' a veteran reporter who spent 30 years at the paper said.
Future Plans
The centenary comes as Nigerian media face hard realities. Advertising has moved online, audiences are mobile-first, and disinformation spreads fast. Daily Times has had to rebuild its digital newsroom and retrain reporters for multimedia. At the press conference, management will outline how it will champion the future with a digital-first newsroom incorporating data journalism, video, and podcasts to reach younger readers; a public digital archive of its 100-year collection for research and education; media literacy projects with schools and the NUJ to help Nigerians spot fake news; and training fellowships for young reporters in investigative and solutions journalism.
'The world has changed since 1926,' the editor noted. 'But the job has not. People still need reliable information to make decisions. That is what we have done for 100 years, and that is what we will do for the next 100.'
Why 100 Years Matters
The Publisher/Editor in Chief of Daily Times, Fidelis Anosike, pointed out: 'Centenaries are rare in African media. Few newspapers reach 100 years, and fewer still are still publishing. For Nigeria, Daily Times at 100 is a living archive. It carried headlines on independence, on July 29 and January 15, 1966, on June 12, 1993, and on May 29, 1999. It also recorded quieter stories: a new bridge, a market fire, a university admission list.'
Tomorrow's event at the NUJ Secretariat will be brief, but the message is big. Daily Times is not just marking 100 years. It is asking what journalism is for. As the banner says: '1926-2026, practicing journalism for the people.' For a newspaper that has outlasted colonialism, war, and the internet, that mission may be why it is still here at 100.



