It was a staunch supporter of the
conservative
party, and among its
leader-writers numbered Alfred Austin, afterwards poet laureate.
leader-writers numbered Alfred Austin, afterwards poet laureate.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v14
Later, in the Russo-Turkish war of 1876, it still
supported the Turks; but, towards the end of the century, as
the attitude of important British politicians differed considerably,
in this respect, from that of their predecessors, it turned to the
1 As to the quarrel of The Times with Bright and Cobden in 1863, see Morley's
Life of Richard Cobden, chap. XXXII, and R. H. Fox Bourne's English Newspapers,
vol. 11, pp. 188, 189.
12-2
## p. 180 (#210) ############################################
180
[CH.
The Growth of Journalism
6
opposite side. These changes need not have resulted from a
desire to discover what the public wanted, and to satisfy the
want; The Times was neither always lagging behind the views
of those classes for which more particularly it was written, nor
always anxious to see which way it ought to jump.
That The Times possessed enormous influence under Barnes
and his successor (1841), John Thaddeus Delane, is indicated in
all the political memoirs of the period. In the first number of
The Saturday Review (3 November 1855), it was stated that one
of the chief functions of the vigorous newcomer was to undermine
this influence ‘by the exercise of common-sense and ordinary
perspicacity: 'No apology,' it wrote, “is necessary for assuming
that this country is ruled by The Times. We all know it, or if we
do not know it, we ought to know it. ' In 1834, lord Althorpe
had written to Brougham, then lord chancellor, 'What I wanted
to see you about is The Times; whether we are to make war on
it, or come to terms. By politicians, it was read, in its opposition
days, for the slashing articles, first, of Peter Fraser, and, next, of
captain Edward Sterling, father of John Sterling, the friend of
Carlyle. Sterling is said to have put into lively and vigorous
language ideas already floating in the minds of his readers. He
gained for The Times the title “The Thunderer', by writing, 'We
thundered out the other day an article on social and political
reform ''; and, of his writing, Wellington, in 1812, said 'Here is
someone not afraid to write like a man. ' Macaulay, as is recorded
by Thomas Moore in his diary, contributed verses to The Times in
1831. Leigh Hunt, radical though he was, wrote literary reviews
for it; Coleridge made advances to the second John Walter,
proposing the impossible—that he should be appointed editor,
with a perfectly free hand as to policy; George Borrow, while
wandering in Spain, collecting materials for his famous book,
acted as correspondent for The Times, and, writing with a freedom
from the dignity which hedged in staff-writers of the great
journal, became, it is said, a model for many who wrote for the
cheaper newspapers. According to Escott, the young lions'-
(Matthew Arnold's name for the writers on The Daily Telegraph)
-owed much to Borrow, and one of captain Hamber's staff on
The Standard ‘had so steeped himself in Borrow's pure and easy
phrasing that some of the disciple's Letters from Corsica were
mistaken by experts for the Master's own. But it is to Peter
Fraser, a veritable man-about-town in behalf of his paper, that
1 Escott's Masters of English Journalism, p. 175.
## p. 181 (#211) ############################################
IV]
John Thaddeus Delane
181
was attributed the influence won in the city of London by The
Times, in the first quarter of the century. The Times always
desired to feel the pulse not only of Westminster, but, also, of
the city; it scarcely recognised public opinion in the manu-
facturing centres; hence, in part, at least, its opposition to all
the great political evolutions of the century. Under Delane, The
Times attained a larger cosmopolitan standing. It is said that
Barnes furnished his coming successor with useful introductions,
including one to Charles Greville of The Memoirs. Delane was,
perhaps naturally, and certainly by training, more given to society
than Barnes ; he was not a writer in the same sense as his
predecessor ; at no time did he write much, and, in later years,
he confined himself almost solely to receiving information which
enabled him to direct or control other men. Disraeli had ap-
peared in The Times with his Runnymede Letters (1836) and had
won the friendship of Barnes? . He had some practical experience
of newspaper work in behalf of his party, and formed notable
conclusions upon the value of journalism? Delane's advent was
followed shortly by the defeat of the Melbourne administration,
and much credit for this was taken by, and given to, The Times.
Delane had a cross bench mind; though representing the con-
servative tendencies largely inherent in the professional and
well-to-do classes, he was yet ready to criticise freely, not merely
the government of the day, whatever its party complexion, but, also,
a great mass of constitutional and social anomalies, thus paving
the way for reforms. The famous letters by S. G. O. (lord Sidney
Godolphin Osborne, who, twenty-five years after the appearance of
his letters, read the service at Delane's funeral), were a rousing
call for better conditions for the agricultural labourer. In 1839,
The Times had opposed the duties on corn; but, apparently, John
Walter was personally hostile to Sir Robert Peel, and The Times
attacked both Peel and Sir James Graham. Especially was it
against Peel's suggestion of a sliding scale of duties; but, to
Bright and Cobden and the anti-Corn-law league, it was con-
sistently adverse, though it assisted them grudgingly when op-
position was seen to be useless.
A notable illustration of the way in which Delane picked up a
policy is connected with the Crimean war. During the Aberdeen
administration of 1852, the eastern question came to a head.
i See, ante, vol. XIII, chap. XI.
? It is certain that, at the time of his weekly newspaper, The Press (1853), he
looked up to The Times articles as a model.
## p. 182 (#212) ############################################
182
[CH.
The Growth of Journalism
Thomas Chenery was then Constantinople correspondent of The
Times, and reflected the opinions of Stratford Canning, the
British ambassador. In September 1853, Delane wrote to Chenery,
fiercely declaring it to be
impossible for you to continue to be our correspondent, if you persist in
taking a line so diametrically opposed to the interests of this country. . . .
You seem to imagine that England can desire nothing better than to
sacrifice all its greatest interests, and its most cherished objects, to support
barbarism against civilisation, the Moslem against the Christian, slavery
against liberty, to exchange peace for war-all to oblige the Turk. Pray
undeceive yourself.
)
Aberdeen drifted; Palmerston became the favourite of the classes
for which The Times wrote; and Delane adopted the policy
Chenery had been advocating.
During the war, The Times, by means of the letters written by
W. H. Russell, its correspondent with the army in the Crimea,
rendered signal service to the nation. There was then no press
censorship, and Russell described freely conditions which brought
needless suffering upon our troops. The facts gave rise to a loud
outcry, and Florence Nightingale, assisted by ‘S. G. O. ,' and others,
organised an adequate hospital system. The Times had now,
undoubtedly, a commanding position, and its reputation was
sustained in such a degree that when, in 1870, on the outbreak
of the Franco-Prussian war, the general staffs of the two powers
issued strict regulations for duly licensed war correspondents, all
others being threatened as spies, there were, in this country,
persons of repute for intelligence who wondered whether The
Times would consent' to such a limitation of its enterprise.
During the sixth, seventh and eighth decades of the nine-
teenth century, foreign statesmen looked much to The Times
as indicating the probable policy of this country. Greville
records that, in 1858, lord Derby asked him to see Delane, to
dissuade him 'from writing any more irritating articles about
France, for these articles 'provoked the French to madness,
and lord Derby was concerned as to the consequences.
Napoleon III, however, was quite ready to use The Times by
sending it important information without the knowledge of his
ministers.
During the American civil war (1866), The Times again
represented the majority of the professional and wealthy classes,
in favouring the secessionists. Needless to say, it was not a
i Greville's Memoirs (third part), vol. 1, p. 119.
## p. 183 (#213) ############################################
Iv]
The Walters
183
supporter of slavery, and it would not, in all cases, have advocated
the right of a portion of a kingdom or a federation to separate
from the remainder. Probably, the underlying sentiment was
that the southern states embodied a continuance of the traditions
surrounding ancestral homes and estate holding, while the north
was associated with manufacturing and trade.
Delane supervised very carefully the articles by leader writers
and correspondents, altering, or adding finishing touches; for
instance, to a narrative of the Heenan and Sayers prize fight, he
added, “Restore the prize ring? As well re-establish the heptarchy. '
The prize ring, in a modified form, has since been re-established.
His caution was great. When, in 1875, Blowitz, of world fame in
his day as Paris correspondent of The Times, sent word that
Bismarck contemplated a fresh war with France, to prevent the
latter from recovering her military strength, Delane held back
the news for a fortnight-risking the grave possibility of being
forestalled-while Chenery went to Paris, and obtained evidence
fully confirming the report. This caution has been, not un-
naturally, contrasted with the action of The Times in 1886, when
the paper published the famous facsimile 'Parnell' letter, the
forgery of which was afterwards confessed by Pigott.
John Walter the third had succeeded his father in 1847
when the paper contained normally about six times as much
matter as The Times of 1803; and a large part of its prosperity
was due to the forty-four years' management by the second John
Walter. His successor was twenty-nine years of age, and on the eve
of entering parliament as a liberal-conservative. Delane was firmly
seated in the saddle, and, though the Walter family steadily turned
to the conservative side, the paper continued more or less in-
dependent until the last years of Delane's editorship, when
Disraeli's foreign policy, and, for the most part, his internal policy,
had the support of the journal.
In the next period, The Times suffered from the competition of
the penny press; and, at the very end of the century, from that
of the halfpenny press also. Among its chief competitors were
The Daily Telegraph, with its exuberant vitality, and the more
steady-going, but more fashionable, Morning Post? .
Daniel Stuart bought The Morning Post in 1795, when its circu-
lation was only 350 copies daily; in seven years, this rose to between
4000 and 4500—more than twice that of any other daily paper.
1 Later changes in the proprietorship and control of The Times may not be noted
here.
## p. 184 (#214) ############################################
184 The Growth of Journalism [CH.
Stuart is sketched in Charles Lamb's Newspapers Thirty-five Years
Ago :
'He ever appeared to us' writes Lamb'one of the finest tempered of editors.
Perry, of The Morning Chronicle was equally pleasant, with a dash, no slight
one either, of the courtier. S. was frank, plain, and English all over. '
Lamb asserts that the ‘sixpence a joke' which he received was
thought high remuneration. Daniel Stuart and his brother Peter
.
had already made their mark as printers and publishers. The
Morning Post was whig in politics ; the new proprietors turned it
over to the tory side. James (afterwards Sir James) Mackintosh
married the Stuarts' sister, and wrote much for them. Lamb
was introduced to Daniel Stuart by Coleridge, to whose work
De Quincey, writing of the newspaper press as a whole, pays a fine
tribute-
Worlds of fine thinking lie buried in that vast abyss, never to be disentombed
or restored to human admiration. Like the sea, it has swallowed treasures
without end, that no diving bell will bring up again; but nowhere, throughout
its shoreless magazines of wealth, does there lie such a bed of pearls, con-
founded with the rubbish and purgamenta of ages, as in the political papers
of Coleridge. No more admirable monument could be raised to the memory
of Coleridge than a republication of his essays in The Morning Post, but
still more of those afterwards published in The Courierl,
He contributed to The Morning Post the famous satirical poem, The
Devil's Thoughts. The connection was broken by his second tour
in Germany and Italy, and it is said that, while he was abroad,
Fox declared that his articles had led to the rupture of the truce
of Amiens? Most, if not all, of Coleridge's prose contributions
to The Morning Post were reproduced in his Essays on His Own
Times. In his absence, Southey wrote occasionally for The Morn-
ing Post, chiefly, if not wholly, verse; as also did Wordsworth, and
Lamb's Birmingham friend, Lloyd.
The Morning Post represented an energetic foreign policy,
and supported Palmerston in the Aberdeen ministry. Upon the
formation of the Palmerston ministry, in 1855, Greville wrote:
1 Most of them were republished. Coleridge's boast that, in one year, he raised
the sale of the Post from a very low figure to 7000 copies daily, has led to much
controversy; so, too, has the amount of work which he did. Stuart maintained that
the rise in circulation was due to his own energy and the good reporting of news.
Coleridge could scarcely have been other than erratic as a journalist; health, no less
than mental characteristics, unfitted him for the daily effort which newspaper work
entails. His claim as to the circulation of The Morning Post was examined carefully
by Charles Wentworth Dilke-& most competent authority—who was of opinion that
it could not be maintained. Coleridge was tried, among other things, at parlia-
mentary reporting, apparently with indifferent success.
• See Coleridge's Biographia Literaria, and Andrews, vol. II, p. 29.
## p. 185 (#215) ############################################
IV]
The Morning Post 185
'Palmerston will soon find the whole press against him, except his
own papers, The Morning Post and The Morning Chronicle,
neither of which has any circulation or influence. It is note-
worthy, as bearing upon the curious question of the actual effect
which newspaper writing may have upon national opinion, that,
despite this overweighting of the press against him, Palmerston
steadily advanced in popularity. The Morning Post came even-
tually into the hands of a Lancashire papermaker named Crompton,
and, about 1850, Peter Borthwick, who had migrated from Scotland
to London, obtained a position in the office as what his son, the
late lord Glenesk, called gérant. He had already a position in
politics and society, as M. P. for Evesham from 1835 to 1847, and was
known favourably as a vigorous and resolute conservative speaker.
His only son Algernon was sent to Paris as correspondent. He
could speak French like a native, as well as write in it, not only all necessary
prose, but some very passable verses, if some way after those written in the
same language by another Paris correspondent, Frank Mahony (“Father
Prout'), The Globe's representative on the Seine during later years of the
same period.
On the death of Peter Borthwick, in 1852, his son took his place,
and, it was said, 'afforded a fresh justification for the Caledonian
boast that the London press was a Scottish creation, and that
Flodden had avenged itself in Fleet Street. With the help of
'
Andrew Montagu-a Yorkshire millionaire related to his mother-
Algernon Borthwick purchased The Morning Post. He attacked
Palmerston for his ecclesiastical appointments—Palmerston's
bishops being evangelical and Borthwick a high churchman; but,
otherwise,
the polite world looked to the Post, not for news, but to see the whole mind
of Palmerston, which often meant only the whole mind of Borthwick. . . . The
briefs prepared by Palmerston to direct the manufacture of leaders often
proved full enough, and finished enough, for wholesale production in the
leader columns2.
A great friendship subsisted between Borthwick and count
Walewski, French ambassador in the fifties; and there was a
popular belief that Napoleon III subsidised the paper. Similar
statements as to subsidies to other papers have been made with
much greater probability: The Morning Post was not in pecuniary
1 It is said that when some of his later speeches were received with suggestions
that he had spoken at sufficient length, he told the house, 'If I am not allowed to
conclude at my own time, and in my own way, I am determined not to conclude at
all. ' Life of Peter Borthwick, by Lucas, S.
2 Escott, who states that he had his information from lord Glevesk.
## p. 186 (#216) ############################################
186
The Growth of Journalism
[CH.
difficulties. It was the last of the London papers in the century
(1882) to reduce its price to one penny. Always maintaining its
reputation as a record of the doings of the aristocratic and
wealthy, and as an advocate of a forward foreign policy, The
Morning Post, also, followed high ideals in its literary and
artistic articles. It is said to have been the first London daily
paper which, early in the century, printed regularly notices of
plays, operas and concerts, and this feature has always been well
maintained. Towards the end of the century, its articles on
military topics, too, began to attract much attention. It was
protectionist in the days of Peel, and in those of Chamberlain.
Of the morning papers in the first half of the century, The
Morning Chronicle was, in many respects, the most famous.
During several periods of its career, there were associated with
it some most brilliant writers, and, even in its later stages,
failure could not be attributed to lack of quality in the members
of its staff. Any attempt to record the history of the newspaper
press is confronted here, as in many other instances, with a
problem all but insoluble—that of determining the actual causes
of success or failure in journalistic effort. Often, the decisive
cause would seem to be quality, but with a strangely inverted
application. Sir Thomas Gresham, writing on the coinage, lays it
down as a principle that, if you have in a country good coins and
deteriorated coins of the same metal current side by side, the bad
will drive out the good, and Gresham's law may often be applied
to literature, to art and, especially, to journalism. The largest
circulations have often been attained by newspapers not ex-
hibiting the highest characteristics ; indeed, newspapers have
been known suddenly to reach enormous sales by publishing
articles describing the careers of notorious criminals. The
phrase “survival of the fittest' must, therefore, be used with a
difference. ' The Morning Chronicle had belonged to William
Woodfall, whose brother Sampson is famous for his publication of
The Letters of Junius. Perry, editing The Gazetteer, competed so
strongly with The Chronicle, that the latter came into the market,
and, with the aid of the duke of Norfolk and others, Perry became
its chief proprietor and editor. This was in 1789, when the whigs
were in want of an organ, and The Chronicle filled the gap.
Sheridan, Sir James Mackintosh, John Campbell (the future lord
chancellor), Thomas Campbell the poet, Thomas Moore, David
Ricardo, Henry (lord) Brougham, Albany Fonblanque and, as
we have seen, Charles Lamb, were among those enlisted by Perry
## p. 187 (#217) ############################################
IV]
The Chronicle
187
or by John Black, who, having been on the reporting staff of
The Chronicle, became its joint editor in 1817, obtaining complete
control in 1821, on Perry's death. Perry's writing had a lightness of
touch unknown to his successor; but Black had higher quali-
fications for discussing public questions ; Bentham called him the
greatest publicist the country had seen, and among his favourite
contributors were James and John Stuart Mill, the latter being
only seventeen years of age when he contributed three letters
condemning the punishment which Richard Carlisle, his wife and
her sister suffered for publishing unstamped papers.
Black
offended many of his whig friends by seeing good qualities in the
duke of Wellington. His style was not free, but, according to
John Stuart Mill, he was
the first journalist who carried criticism and the spirit of reform into the
details of English institutions. . . . Black was a frequent visitor to my father,
and Mr Grote used to say he always knew by the Monday morning's article
whether Black had been with my father on the Sunday.
Black, in The Chronicle, was at war with The Times; as was no
secret, one of his reporters, Charles Dickens, caricatured the
quarrel? Black regarded Dickens as the finest shorthand
writer he had ever known a judgment borne out by men
who were colleagues of Dickens in the parliamentary gallery.
Thackeray began his newspaper career as an art critic for the same
paper. In the fifties, when the Peelites controlled The Chronicle,
Palmerston inspired The Morning Post, and Greville, during the
negotiations closing the Crimean war, said:
Palmerston continues to put articles into The Morning Post, full of arro-
gance and jactance, and calculated to raise obstacles to the peace. This is
only what he did in '41, when he used to agree to certain things with his
colleagues, and then put violent articles in The Morning Chronicle totally
at variance with the views and resolutions of the Cabinet.
In 1862, The Morning Chronicle ended a notable career.
Daniel Stuart, in 1799, obtained possession of The Courier, an
evening paper. To The Courier, in Stuart's hands, Wordsworth
is said to have sent extracts from his then unpublished Cintra
convention pamphlet, and, also, articles on the Spanish and
Portuguese navies. Beginning with admiration for the French
revolution, The Courier followed the popular lead in this country,
a
1 Byron was a constant reader of The Chronicle; some of his jeux d'esprit were
published in it, as also were the verses—the last he wrote-on his thirty-sixth
birthday.
See Escott, Masters of Journalism, p. 161.
## p. 188 (#218) ############################################
188
[CH.
The Growth of Journalism
and became an opponent of the French cause, and especially
of Napoleon. In 1827, it supported Canning; William Mud-
ford, the editor, author of a series of tales in Blackwood's
Magazine, became a personal friend of this statesman. As
a result, it was denounced by the ultra-tory party, and lost
circulation, and, though, on the death of Canning, it reverted
to toryism, there was no recovery of position. John Galt? edited
it about 1830, and was followed by James Stuart, who, some years
previously, having been libelled by Sir Alexander Boswell, son
of James Boswell, had challenged him to a duel, and killed him.
Stuart conducted The Courier as a whig paper, and, apparently,
was the first editor of an evening paper to publish, once a week,
an enlarged sheet with one entire page devoted to book reviews.
In 1836, he was succeeded by Laman Blanchard. Shortly after-
wards, however, the paper was again sold to the tories, and, with a
new editor, lasted a few years longer.
The Morning Herald, first published in 1780, ran until 1869.
It was founded by a somewhat notorious clergyman, Henry Bate
Dudley, who had previously edited The Morning Post. It was
not very successful until after 1820, when it received a large
increase in circulation on account of its reporting of Bow street
police cases, Wight, its reporter, afterwards editor and partner,
exaggerating into caricatures his descriptions of the proceedings.
So attractive was this feature that a selection from the reports was
issued, with illustrations by George Cruikshank. An enterprising
policy in regard to news raised the circulation, until, according to the
official stamp returns for 1828, The Morning Herald had then a
publication of 1000 copies daily above The Times. This position,
however, was not maintained. In 1843, or 1844, Edwin Baldwin, a
proprietor of The Evening Standard, purchased The Morning
Herald, improved its literary quality, and, as it happened that the
railway mania followed close upon his purchase of the paper, he was
able to spend heavily. During the mania, the advertisement revenue
of many newspapers was enormous. But the prosperity was not
lasting, and, in a few years, Baldwin became bankrupt. James
Johnson, an official in the court of bankruptcy, purchased The
Morning Herald and The Evening Standard, and established The
Standard as a penny morning paper. This was after the abolition of
the newspaper advertisement duties, and when The Daily Telegraph,
The Daily News and The Morning Star were being issued at a
a
See, ante, vol. XII, chap. XI.
## p. 189 (#219) ############################################
Iv] The Morning Advertiser 189
penny. Later, The Herald was discontinued; but, for many years,
The Standard has occupied a high position in London journalism.
It was a staunch supporter of the conservative party, and among its
leader-writers numbered Alfred Austin, afterwards poet laureate.
In conjunction with it, The Evening Standard was maintained, a
paper - with which was eventually amalgamated The St James's
Gazette, an evening review and newspaper founded by Frederick
Greenwood, one of the foremost journalists'of the second half of the
century, when a change in the ownership of The Pall Mall Gazette
led to his retirement from that paper 1.
The third morning paper which lasted through the century
(after The Morning Post and The Times) is The Morning
Advertiser, whose literary importance at no time equalled that
of its two colleagues. It was first published in 1794 by the
London society of licensed victuallers. Naturally, it was de-
voted to trade interests, rather than to the support of any one
political party. Its circulation, however, fostered by the society,
was, in the middle of the century, second only to that of The
Times. The Morning Advertiser was one of the leaders in
the attack upon the Prince Consort, which reflected widespread
fears of non-constitutional interference in the management
of public affairs? . Subsequently, the policy of the paper was
changed.
Charles Dickens was not successful as a leader-writer, though
he had been as a reporter. In 1845—6, there was a demand
for a liberal paper which should be wide in its sympathies,
looking towards the educational and industrial advancement
of the masses, and treating religious questions from the point
of view of those who ‘faintly trust the larger hope. ' Dissatis-
fied with the reception of an offer he made to write a series
of sketches for The Morning Chronicle, Dickens talked over with
his publishers the possibility of starting a rival newspaper, and, in
the following year, agreed to edit The Daily News. Judged from
the standpoint of the end of the century, Dickens's scheme of
editing was much too solid and heavy. The paper contained his
opening article, followed by three others, all dealing with corn-law
reform ; more than a page was occupied with a report of a meeting
See post, p. 195.
2 Cf. Greville's Memoirs (third part, chap. v), on the subject of newspaper
attacks on the prince. Somewhat later, Henry Dunckley, editor of the since defunct
Manchester Examiner and Times, attained celebrity by a series of articles, afterwards
(1878) republished under the title Crown & Cabinet, which he based largely, though
not solely, upon the prince's position.
## p. 190 (#220) ############################################
190
[CH.
The Growth of Journalism
2
at Ipswich, and a speech there by Richard Cobden. A review of
railway affairs and reports of railway company proceedings nearly
filled another page? After seventeen numbers had been issued,
Dickens, as he said, 'tired to death, and quite worn out? , ceased
to edit the paper. John Forster took up the work, carrying it on
to the end of the first year. It is said that, though all the pro-
prietors were agreed in demanding the repeal of the corn-laws,
there were great differences, not only among them, but, also, on
the editorial staff, upon other questions, especially those bearing
on foreign policy. Among its contributors, after 1852, was
Miss Harriet Martineau—one of the two women who, in the
century, attained especially high eminence as journalists, the
other being Mrs Emily Crawford, later the Paris correspondent of
The Daily News and of Henry Labouchere's Truth. The Daily
News took its share in the campaign against the stamp duty, the
tax on advertisements and the paper duty- the last being
abolished in 1861. It had to cope with a Peelite endeavour to
regain popularity for The Morning Chronicle, and was attacked
in 1856 by the adherents of the then advanced radicalism of
Cobden and Bright in The Morning Star and The Evening Star,
which were started on 17 March 1856. The Morning Star, like
The Daily Telegraph, which had now come into being, was sold
at one penny. But the advanced radical paper was never able to
attract the general public, and its attitude towards the Crimean
war, no doubt, spoiled any chance of success which it might have
had. On its staff, however, it numbered several distinguished men
of letters and other journalists of subsequent high repute. The
Daily News maintained an excellent reputation. After the open-
ing of the Franco-Prussian war, in 1870, it was joined by Archibald
Forbes. The ability of one man—though the subject of his articles,
in this case, was of overwhelming interest—to give popularity to
a newspaper was never exhibited more clearly ; during the war,
the circulation of The Daily News rose from 50,000 to 150,000
a days. Writing in The Nineteenth Century of August 1891,
Forbes indicated some of the dangers attending war correspondents
during the time of his service. Referring to the Crimean and
other campaigns before 1870, and recognising, generously, that
W. H. Russell ‘had made for himself a reputation to vie with
which no representative of a newer school has any claim,' he
1 See Fox Bourne, English Newspapers.
? See chapter on Dickens, vol. XIII, and cf. , as to Forster, ante, chap. II.
3 Fox Bourne.
## p. 191 (#221) ############################################
IV] The Daily Telegraph 191
pointed out that the advent of the telegraph had increased the
labour of the correspondent as it has, indeed, in all departments
of daily journalism-and that the older correspondents did not run
the same risks as the later of being shot.
Before far-reaching rifle firearms came into use, it was quite easy to see
a battle without getting within range of fire. With siege guns that carry
shells ten miles, with field artillery having a range of four miles, and with
rifles that kill without benefit of clergy at two miles, the war correspondent
may as well stay at home with his mother, unless he has hardened his heart
to take full share of the risks of the battlefield. In the petty Servian
campaign of 1876, there were twelve correspondents who kept the field,
and went under fire. Of those, three were killed, and four were wounded.
Certainly not more than thirty correspondents and artists all told, were in
the Soudan from the earliest troubles to the final failure of the Nile ex-
pedition, but on or under its cruel sand lie the corpses of at least six of my
comrades.
Noteworthy among later contributors to The Daily News was
Andrew Lang?
Of those who took a leading part in the production of The Daily
Telegraph, the first lord Burnham died while this chapter was
passing through the press. To his constant care and unrivalled
experience of affairs, the paper has owed much of its success. It
was launched in 1855, and, in the course of a few months, passed
into the hands of the Levi-Lawson family, who issued it as the first
penny newspaper published in London. It was edited by Thornton
Hunt, a son of Leigh Hunt, and early obtained celebrity for its
enterprise and somewhat flamboyant style.
Matthew Arnold
scoffed at it; and a grandson of the first proprietor says that,
when at Oxford, his tutor admonished him to 'try not to write
like Sala. To borrow a simile from the art of painting, the
. '
writers who gained reputation for The Daily Telegraph were,
of choice, colourists. During many years, among the leading
members of its staff was Sir Edwin Arnold, one of the brilliant
Oxonians of the newspaper press, who is reported (by J. M. Le
Sage) to have said that
whether the chief-whom we loved-asked him (Arnold) to write the first
leading article, the description of some great historical event, or an ordinary
news paragraph, he would do it to the utmost of his ability; that the test of
loyalty was not to do some big thing, but some small thing-and to do it
well.
The loyalty and affection here indicated, shared, as they were, by
the whole staff, played a great part in making The Daily Telegraph
so successful that, for some time before the advent of the halfpenny
1 See, ante, chaps. II and III, and vol. XIII, chap. VI.
## p. 192 (#222) ############################################
192
The Growth of Journalism [CH.
6
newspapers, it was able to boast that it possessed the largest cir-
culation in the world. ' The influence of the style of The Daily
Telegraph upon the newspaper press of this country has been
great; being, indeed, the basis of popular journalism. Not that
the latter repeats the styles of Sala, of Edwin Arnold, of Edward
Dicey, of Bennet Burleigh and of other men who long were
looked upon as representing The Daily Telegraph; for, with
features showing their influence has been combined a greater
directness of statement; but the picturesqueness at which they
aimed has had enduring effect. The loyalty of the staff
accounted for the success of the paper in obtaining early
information. Its enterprise has been shown in other directions.
In 1873, George Smith was commissioned by it to make and
describe archaeological exploration on the site of Nineveh, and
among his discoveries were a number of fragments of the cunei-
form narrative of the Deluge. Two years later, The Daily
Telegraph joined The New York Herald in sending Henry M.
Stanley into central Africa, where he surveyed lakes Victoria and
Tanganyika, and traced the source of the Congo; later, for the
same papers and The Scotsman, he was sent to rescue Emin pasha
from Equatoria ; but Emin refused to be rescued, and escaped
from the rescue party. In 1884–5, it was associated with
Sir Harry Johnston's exploration of Kilima-njaro, and, in 1899—
1900, with Lionel Decle's journey from the Cape to Cairo. Its
foreign staff have interviewed monarchs and statesmen; Bismarck,
some time before the Franco-German war, confided to Beattie-
Kingston that the military authorities had pressed him to quarrel
with France-a course to which he was then opposed.
Its musical and dramatic criticisms by E. L. Blanchard, Joseph
Bennett and Clement Scott were always read by the chief members
of the professions affected.
Another morning newspaper established successfully during
the century is The Daily Chronicle. Its founder, Edward Lloyd,
was already the prosperous owner of Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper.
In 1842, intending to compete with The Ilustrated London News,
he published Lloyd's Illustrated London Newspaper, unstamped.
The authorities intervened, and, in 1843, he rearranged his publi-
cation without illustrations, calling it Lloyd's Weekly London News-
paper. In this form, it competed with other Sunday publications,
such as The News of the World, Reynolds's Weekly Newspaper,
The Weekly Times, The Weekly Dispatch. Of these papers, The
Dispatch was long the most prominent. Its owner had been in
## p. 193 (#223) ############################################
>
IV] The Halfpenny Morning Press 193
the front of the fight against the stamp duty; but Lloyd's Weekly
soon became well established, especially under the short editorship
of Douglas Jerrold from 1852 to 1857, and, thereafter, under that
of his son Blanchard, who had among his coadjutors Hepworth
Dixon, better known as editor of The Athenaeum, from 1853 to
1868.
In 1877, Edward Lloyd purchased a daily paper which had
been started as The Clerkenwell News, but had expanded its
name to The London Daily Chronicle and Clerkenwell News.
He reduced the title to The Daily Chronicle, and adopted an
independent radical policy. The venture prospered, and has
latterly become one of the leading halfpenny morning papers.
The closing years of the century saw that advent of the half-
penny morning press to which reference has been made. There
had been such papers in the provinces for thirty years, The
Northern Echo being established in Darlington in 1869, The
North Star in the same town in 1880 and, about the same time,
The Newcastle Express, in the closing years of a long life, was
published at the same price. But, though The Northern Echo
achieved somewhat wide reputation in 1880, when it was edited
by W. T. Stead, the issue of a halfpenny morning paper in London
was a highly speculative undertaking. The Daily Mail, however,
was launched in 1896, and proved most popular. Much of its
earlier attractiveness was due to the writing of G. W. Steevens,
who, after a brilliant career at Oxford, plunged into daily
journalism, speedily became famous and died of fever in Lady-
smith, where he was one of the besieged in the Boer war. The
Daily Express made its appearance in 1900.
In the earlier part of the century, there were, in London,
seven evening papers; at the end, only six, and the general
development of evening journalism had not been commensurate
with that of morning papers, having, for the most part, been
limited to London and its suburbs, while morning journals were
carried to all parts of the country. The change was owing
chiefly to the growth of country evening papers, these being able
by telegraph and organisation to print later information, notably
concerning all forms of sport?
1 The supply of news to a morning paper is usually complete by 2 a. m. and, thus,
there is little actual need for late editions, but the news for an evening paper, the
incidents of the day, comes in a continuous stream, its end being fixed only by the
publication of the latest edition for which a sale can be had. The morning paper
prints the news of twenty-four hours; the evening paper, as a rule, that of only
eight.
E. L. XIV.
CH. IV.
13
## p. 194 (#224) ############################################
194
[CH.
The Growth of Journalism
6
Before The Courier was purchased by Daniel Stuart, it was
joined, in the last number of The Anti-Jacobin, with The Star as
forming a 'seditious evening post'; and, in 1792, at the instance
of Pitt, The Sun was started to advocate the ministerial home and
foreign policy. But it did not achieve a high position, and, in
1823, The Edinburgh Review said of it. The Sun appears daily
but never shines. The Globe, which, in the second half of the
century, became tory, was, in its origin, radical, competing with
The Star, the organ of the booksellers. Contemporary with The
Globe was The Traveller, intended to support the interests of
commercial travellers. A few years after its first publication,
The Traveller became the property of Robert Torrens, an eager
disciple of Jeremy Bentham, and a writer on political economy.
Torrens and his friends purchased The Globe in 1823, and during
many years the paper appeared with the double title. In all
respects well conducted, it was recognised as one of the chief
liberal organs, and the Melbourne administration of 1835 often
used it for the first publication of ministerial news. It preserved
its literary character, and, many years later, its sketchy serial and
historical articles were widely known as 'Globe turnovers,' their
length always slightly exceeding a column. Francis Mahony,
'Father Prout,' was one of its regular contributors. In 1869,
with new proprietors, it became moderately conservative, and,
with varying fortune, so continued until after the end of the
century. The Pall Mall Gazette obtained larger renown for its
philosophic statesmanship. It was founded in 1865 by Frederick
Greenwood, its proprietor being the wellknown publisher George
Smith. The name was taken from Thackeray's sketch of captain
Shandon in the Marshalsea, drawing up the prospectus of
The Pall Mall Gazette—written by gentlemen for gentlemen. '
Greenwood turned the satire into reality. Under Thackeray, he
had sub-edited The Cornhill Magazine, and his scheme contem-
plated the production of a paper which, with the publication of
news, should combine some of the characteristics of the already
flourishing Saturday Review and Spectator. Connected with the
paper were men of mark in literature, such as (to mention men of
very diverse qualifications) Anthony Trollope, Henry Maine, Fitz-
james Stephen and E. C. Grenville Murray. On several occasions,
Bismarck tried to form friendly relations with it. Greenwood,
undoubtedly, was one of the great editors of the century, revising
the work of his contributors, suggesting topics and their treat-
ment and, with a masterly hand, adding finishing touches. His
## p. 195 (#225) ############################################
IV]
W. T. Stead
195
sources of information gave him early news of the intention of the
French government, in 1875, to obtain control over the Suez canal,
by purchasing from the khedive of Egypt a large number of the
shares held by him in that undertaking; and the fact was brought
to the notice of Disraeli, the prime minister, who forestalled the
French. When, in 1881, the liberal party obtained a large majority
in the house of commons, Henry Yates Thompson, a son-in-law of
George Smith, had become proprietor of The Pall Mall Gazette,
and, as he was a supporter of Gladstone, Frederick Greenwood
and his colleagues were superseded by John (now viscount)
Morley, who was installed as editor, with W. T. Stead, of The
Northern Echo, as his chief of staff. Greenwood thereupon
started the St James's Gazette, but could not acquire for it
the vogue of his earlier paper. The career of W. T. Stead, who
in 1883 followed Morley as editor, was remarkable. Brought
up in a north country manse, and under the influence of
fervent religious emotions, he believed that every step in his
course was dictated directly from heaven. He assured the present
writer that the Almighty set up finger-posts for him, whose inten-
tion was unmistakable, and that, on several occasions, when he
had seen these directions, he had obeyed the command, apparently
risking everything that most men hold precious. His efforts
startling in their form, for the more stringent protection of girls,
and the pride with which he suffered the consequences of his
action, illustrate this attitude. He was, however, possessed of
,
much humour, and was a most graphic correspondent. At the end
of five years, another change of editor took place; and, later
still, in 1892, The Pall Mall Gazette passed into a new proprietor-
ship. At the same time, The Westminster Gazette was launched,
which was conducted on much the same lines as those of the
liberal Pall Mall Gazette had been, and, during several years, was
the only London penny paper supporting the liberal party. One
especial feature of The Westminster Gazette has been its brilliant
political caricatures. Stead was drowned in the disaster to the
• Titanic. '
For many years, London had one halfpenny evening paper,
The Echo (established 1868). Similar halfpenny papers were
already in being at Manchester and Bolton in Lancashire. Later,
The Evening News and The Star appeared.
Many as were the morning and evening papers published in
London during the century, they were far outnumbered by weekly
papers. Besides high-class and popular political weeklies, the
13--2
## p. 196 (#226) ############################################
196 The Growth of Journalism [CH.
pictorial papers, from The Illustrated London News, The Illustrated
Times (now extinct) and The Graphic, to those depending largely
on the portraits of brides and bridegrooms, sportsmen and sports-
women, actors, actresses and ladies of the ballet, the satirical
and humorous papers from Punch' and Fun (now extinct)
downwards, the century witnessed the establishment of scores of
weekly newspapers, dealing with almost every description of special-
ised interest—religious, atheistic, scientific, mechanical, financial,
military, naval, architectural, dramatic and artistic, a marvellous
record of the mental activity of the nation. All these make their
particular appeal, and even to indicate the character of each would
be impossible in these pages. Some of them, indeed, however
well their articles may be written, make no pretence of belonging
to the domain of literature.
Why one newspaper succeeds and another fails, even the
most experienced journalist will (as already hinted) hesitate to
decide. The Constitutional, issued in 1836, had for its editor
Laman Blanchard, with Thornton Hunt, afterwards editor of
The Daily Telegraph, as his assistant. Thackeray's Paris Sketch
Book is reminiscent of the fact that he was Paris correspondent
for the paper, in which his step-father and he had unfortunately
invested money; and among its constant contributors were
Bulwer Lytton, Douglas Jerrold and Sir William Molesworth.
It existed only seven months. Another was The Hour, issued in
1873 with captain Hamber as its editor. Hamber, who had been
at Oriel college when lord Robert Cecil, afterwards third marquis
of Salisbury, was also at Oxford, served in the Crimean war,
and then turned to journalism. During several years, he edited
The Standard with signal ability, but, eventually, quarrelled with
its proprietor, who desired less independence of official conser-
vative party control. Thereupon, The Hour was started as an
ultra-protestant conservative paper, independent of the re-
cognised party leaders. It never found a sufficient public, and,
in 1876, Disraeli 'heard with a pang that The Hour was no
more. '
A much more important publication was The Press, originated,
in 1853, as a weekly representative of progressive conservatism,
its first moving spirit being Disraeli, who, for some time, was a
frequent contributor? It editor was Samuel Lucas (not the
Samuel Lucas of The Morning Star) and the writers included
Bulwer Lytton, George Smythe, Shirley Brooks, Tom Taylor,
· See, post, chap. VI.
? Cf. , ante, vol. XIII, chap. XI.
## p. 197 (#227) ############################################
IV]
The Examiner
197
lord Stanley, Sir J. E. Tennant, H. L. Mansel (afterwards dean
of St Paul's) and Edward Vaughan Kenealy.
Among later
contributors were Richard Holt Hutton and Sir J. R. Seeley. It
never obtained a circulation of more than 3500, and though,
at its best period, it seems to have been financially stable, it ceased
to exist in 1866.
Journalism has always allowed equality of literary opportunity
to men and to women, to men who have made their mark at the
universities and to those whose chief or only schooling has been
such as they could pick up in the intervals of other occupations.
Swift's judgment of Mrs Manley was that her writing, at times, was
better than his own! Defoe had an audience greater than that of
Addison or Steele. In the early part of the nineteenth century, one
of the self-educated had popularity and influence equal to those
of any of his contemporaries. This was William Cobbett, born
in 1762, of whom, and of whose Political Register, something
has been said in a previous volume of this history.
In 1808 appeared the first of a distinctive school of weekly
periodicals, combining surveys of politics, literature, the drama
and the pictorial arts, in articles intended more nearly to resemble
a careful and a deliberate essay than the current comments of the
daily newspaper. This was The Examiner, launched by John
Hunt, and his more famous brother James Henry Leigh Hunt,
of whose influence on English criticism and poetry an estimate
will be found in an earlier volume of the present works. In
1805, John Hunt issued The News and Leigh, then in his twenty-
first year, was its theatrical critic.
supported the Turks; but, towards the end of the century, as
the attitude of important British politicians differed considerably,
in this respect, from that of their predecessors, it turned to the
1 As to the quarrel of The Times with Bright and Cobden in 1863, see Morley's
Life of Richard Cobden, chap. XXXII, and R. H. Fox Bourne's English Newspapers,
vol. 11, pp. 188, 189.
12-2
## p. 180 (#210) ############################################
180
[CH.
The Growth of Journalism
6
opposite side. These changes need not have resulted from a
desire to discover what the public wanted, and to satisfy the
want; The Times was neither always lagging behind the views
of those classes for which more particularly it was written, nor
always anxious to see which way it ought to jump.
That The Times possessed enormous influence under Barnes
and his successor (1841), John Thaddeus Delane, is indicated in
all the political memoirs of the period. In the first number of
The Saturday Review (3 November 1855), it was stated that one
of the chief functions of the vigorous newcomer was to undermine
this influence ‘by the exercise of common-sense and ordinary
perspicacity: 'No apology,' it wrote, “is necessary for assuming
that this country is ruled by The Times. We all know it, or if we
do not know it, we ought to know it. ' In 1834, lord Althorpe
had written to Brougham, then lord chancellor, 'What I wanted
to see you about is The Times; whether we are to make war on
it, or come to terms. By politicians, it was read, in its opposition
days, for the slashing articles, first, of Peter Fraser, and, next, of
captain Edward Sterling, father of John Sterling, the friend of
Carlyle. Sterling is said to have put into lively and vigorous
language ideas already floating in the minds of his readers. He
gained for The Times the title “The Thunderer', by writing, 'We
thundered out the other day an article on social and political
reform ''; and, of his writing, Wellington, in 1812, said 'Here is
someone not afraid to write like a man. ' Macaulay, as is recorded
by Thomas Moore in his diary, contributed verses to The Times in
1831. Leigh Hunt, radical though he was, wrote literary reviews
for it; Coleridge made advances to the second John Walter,
proposing the impossible—that he should be appointed editor,
with a perfectly free hand as to policy; George Borrow, while
wandering in Spain, collecting materials for his famous book,
acted as correspondent for The Times, and, writing with a freedom
from the dignity which hedged in staff-writers of the great
journal, became, it is said, a model for many who wrote for the
cheaper newspapers. According to Escott, the young lions'-
(Matthew Arnold's name for the writers on The Daily Telegraph)
-owed much to Borrow, and one of captain Hamber's staff on
The Standard ‘had so steeped himself in Borrow's pure and easy
phrasing that some of the disciple's Letters from Corsica were
mistaken by experts for the Master's own. But it is to Peter
Fraser, a veritable man-about-town in behalf of his paper, that
1 Escott's Masters of English Journalism, p. 175.
## p. 181 (#211) ############################################
IV]
John Thaddeus Delane
181
was attributed the influence won in the city of London by The
Times, in the first quarter of the century. The Times always
desired to feel the pulse not only of Westminster, but, also, of
the city; it scarcely recognised public opinion in the manu-
facturing centres; hence, in part, at least, its opposition to all
the great political evolutions of the century. Under Delane, The
Times attained a larger cosmopolitan standing. It is said that
Barnes furnished his coming successor with useful introductions,
including one to Charles Greville of The Memoirs. Delane was,
perhaps naturally, and certainly by training, more given to society
than Barnes ; he was not a writer in the same sense as his
predecessor ; at no time did he write much, and, in later years,
he confined himself almost solely to receiving information which
enabled him to direct or control other men. Disraeli had ap-
peared in The Times with his Runnymede Letters (1836) and had
won the friendship of Barnes? . He had some practical experience
of newspaper work in behalf of his party, and formed notable
conclusions upon the value of journalism? Delane's advent was
followed shortly by the defeat of the Melbourne administration,
and much credit for this was taken by, and given to, The Times.
Delane had a cross bench mind; though representing the con-
servative tendencies largely inherent in the professional and
well-to-do classes, he was yet ready to criticise freely, not merely
the government of the day, whatever its party complexion, but, also,
a great mass of constitutional and social anomalies, thus paving
the way for reforms. The famous letters by S. G. O. (lord Sidney
Godolphin Osborne, who, twenty-five years after the appearance of
his letters, read the service at Delane's funeral), were a rousing
call for better conditions for the agricultural labourer. In 1839,
The Times had opposed the duties on corn; but, apparently, John
Walter was personally hostile to Sir Robert Peel, and The Times
attacked both Peel and Sir James Graham. Especially was it
against Peel's suggestion of a sliding scale of duties; but, to
Bright and Cobden and the anti-Corn-law league, it was con-
sistently adverse, though it assisted them grudgingly when op-
position was seen to be useless.
A notable illustration of the way in which Delane picked up a
policy is connected with the Crimean war. During the Aberdeen
administration of 1852, the eastern question came to a head.
i See, ante, vol. XIII, chap. XI.
? It is certain that, at the time of his weekly newspaper, The Press (1853), he
looked up to The Times articles as a model.
## p. 182 (#212) ############################################
182
[CH.
The Growth of Journalism
Thomas Chenery was then Constantinople correspondent of The
Times, and reflected the opinions of Stratford Canning, the
British ambassador. In September 1853, Delane wrote to Chenery,
fiercely declaring it to be
impossible for you to continue to be our correspondent, if you persist in
taking a line so diametrically opposed to the interests of this country. . . .
You seem to imagine that England can desire nothing better than to
sacrifice all its greatest interests, and its most cherished objects, to support
barbarism against civilisation, the Moslem against the Christian, slavery
against liberty, to exchange peace for war-all to oblige the Turk. Pray
undeceive yourself.
)
Aberdeen drifted; Palmerston became the favourite of the classes
for which The Times wrote; and Delane adopted the policy
Chenery had been advocating.
During the war, The Times, by means of the letters written by
W. H. Russell, its correspondent with the army in the Crimea,
rendered signal service to the nation. There was then no press
censorship, and Russell described freely conditions which brought
needless suffering upon our troops. The facts gave rise to a loud
outcry, and Florence Nightingale, assisted by ‘S. G. O. ,' and others,
organised an adequate hospital system. The Times had now,
undoubtedly, a commanding position, and its reputation was
sustained in such a degree that when, in 1870, on the outbreak
of the Franco-Prussian war, the general staffs of the two powers
issued strict regulations for duly licensed war correspondents, all
others being threatened as spies, there were, in this country,
persons of repute for intelligence who wondered whether The
Times would consent' to such a limitation of its enterprise.
During the sixth, seventh and eighth decades of the nine-
teenth century, foreign statesmen looked much to The Times
as indicating the probable policy of this country. Greville
records that, in 1858, lord Derby asked him to see Delane, to
dissuade him 'from writing any more irritating articles about
France, for these articles 'provoked the French to madness,
and lord Derby was concerned as to the consequences.
Napoleon III, however, was quite ready to use The Times by
sending it important information without the knowledge of his
ministers.
During the American civil war (1866), The Times again
represented the majority of the professional and wealthy classes,
in favouring the secessionists. Needless to say, it was not a
i Greville's Memoirs (third part), vol. 1, p. 119.
## p. 183 (#213) ############################################
Iv]
The Walters
183
supporter of slavery, and it would not, in all cases, have advocated
the right of a portion of a kingdom or a federation to separate
from the remainder. Probably, the underlying sentiment was
that the southern states embodied a continuance of the traditions
surrounding ancestral homes and estate holding, while the north
was associated with manufacturing and trade.
Delane supervised very carefully the articles by leader writers
and correspondents, altering, or adding finishing touches; for
instance, to a narrative of the Heenan and Sayers prize fight, he
added, “Restore the prize ring? As well re-establish the heptarchy. '
The prize ring, in a modified form, has since been re-established.
His caution was great. When, in 1875, Blowitz, of world fame in
his day as Paris correspondent of The Times, sent word that
Bismarck contemplated a fresh war with France, to prevent the
latter from recovering her military strength, Delane held back
the news for a fortnight-risking the grave possibility of being
forestalled-while Chenery went to Paris, and obtained evidence
fully confirming the report. This caution has been, not un-
naturally, contrasted with the action of The Times in 1886, when
the paper published the famous facsimile 'Parnell' letter, the
forgery of which was afterwards confessed by Pigott.
John Walter the third had succeeded his father in 1847
when the paper contained normally about six times as much
matter as The Times of 1803; and a large part of its prosperity
was due to the forty-four years' management by the second John
Walter. His successor was twenty-nine years of age, and on the eve
of entering parliament as a liberal-conservative. Delane was firmly
seated in the saddle, and, though the Walter family steadily turned
to the conservative side, the paper continued more or less in-
dependent until the last years of Delane's editorship, when
Disraeli's foreign policy, and, for the most part, his internal policy,
had the support of the journal.
In the next period, The Times suffered from the competition of
the penny press; and, at the very end of the century, from that
of the halfpenny press also. Among its chief competitors were
The Daily Telegraph, with its exuberant vitality, and the more
steady-going, but more fashionable, Morning Post? .
Daniel Stuart bought The Morning Post in 1795, when its circu-
lation was only 350 copies daily; in seven years, this rose to between
4000 and 4500—more than twice that of any other daily paper.
1 Later changes in the proprietorship and control of The Times may not be noted
here.
## p. 184 (#214) ############################################
184 The Growth of Journalism [CH.
Stuart is sketched in Charles Lamb's Newspapers Thirty-five Years
Ago :
'He ever appeared to us' writes Lamb'one of the finest tempered of editors.
Perry, of The Morning Chronicle was equally pleasant, with a dash, no slight
one either, of the courtier. S. was frank, plain, and English all over. '
Lamb asserts that the ‘sixpence a joke' which he received was
thought high remuneration. Daniel Stuart and his brother Peter
.
had already made their mark as printers and publishers. The
Morning Post was whig in politics ; the new proprietors turned it
over to the tory side. James (afterwards Sir James) Mackintosh
married the Stuarts' sister, and wrote much for them. Lamb
was introduced to Daniel Stuart by Coleridge, to whose work
De Quincey, writing of the newspaper press as a whole, pays a fine
tribute-
Worlds of fine thinking lie buried in that vast abyss, never to be disentombed
or restored to human admiration. Like the sea, it has swallowed treasures
without end, that no diving bell will bring up again; but nowhere, throughout
its shoreless magazines of wealth, does there lie such a bed of pearls, con-
founded with the rubbish and purgamenta of ages, as in the political papers
of Coleridge. No more admirable monument could be raised to the memory
of Coleridge than a republication of his essays in The Morning Post, but
still more of those afterwards published in The Courierl,
He contributed to The Morning Post the famous satirical poem, The
Devil's Thoughts. The connection was broken by his second tour
in Germany and Italy, and it is said that, while he was abroad,
Fox declared that his articles had led to the rupture of the truce
of Amiens? Most, if not all, of Coleridge's prose contributions
to The Morning Post were reproduced in his Essays on His Own
Times. In his absence, Southey wrote occasionally for The Morn-
ing Post, chiefly, if not wholly, verse; as also did Wordsworth, and
Lamb's Birmingham friend, Lloyd.
The Morning Post represented an energetic foreign policy,
and supported Palmerston in the Aberdeen ministry. Upon the
formation of the Palmerston ministry, in 1855, Greville wrote:
1 Most of them were republished. Coleridge's boast that, in one year, he raised
the sale of the Post from a very low figure to 7000 copies daily, has led to much
controversy; so, too, has the amount of work which he did. Stuart maintained that
the rise in circulation was due to his own energy and the good reporting of news.
Coleridge could scarcely have been other than erratic as a journalist; health, no less
than mental characteristics, unfitted him for the daily effort which newspaper work
entails. His claim as to the circulation of The Morning Post was examined carefully
by Charles Wentworth Dilke-& most competent authority—who was of opinion that
it could not be maintained. Coleridge was tried, among other things, at parlia-
mentary reporting, apparently with indifferent success.
• See Coleridge's Biographia Literaria, and Andrews, vol. II, p. 29.
## p. 185 (#215) ############################################
IV]
The Morning Post 185
'Palmerston will soon find the whole press against him, except his
own papers, The Morning Post and The Morning Chronicle,
neither of which has any circulation or influence. It is note-
worthy, as bearing upon the curious question of the actual effect
which newspaper writing may have upon national opinion, that,
despite this overweighting of the press against him, Palmerston
steadily advanced in popularity. The Morning Post came even-
tually into the hands of a Lancashire papermaker named Crompton,
and, about 1850, Peter Borthwick, who had migrated from Scotland
to London, obtained a position in the office as what his son, the
late lord Glenesk, called gérant. He had already a position in
politics and society, as M. P. for Evesham from 1835 to 1847, and was
known favourably as a vigorous and resolute conservative speaker.
His only son Algernon was sent to Paris as correspondent. He
could speak French like a native, as well as write in it, not only all necessary
prose, but some very passable verses, if some way after those written in the
same language by another Paris correspondent, Frank Mahony (“Father
Prout'), The Globe's representative on the Seine during later years of the
same period.
On the death of Peter Borthwick, in 1852, his son took his place,
and, it was said, 'afforded a fresh justification for the Caledonian
boast that the London press was a Scottish creation, and that
Flodden had avenged itself in Fleet Street. With the help of
'
Andrew Montagu-a Yorkshire millionaire related to his mother-
Algernon Borthwick purchased The Morning Post. He attacked
Palmerston for his ecclesiastical appointments—Palmerston's
bishops being evangelical and Borthwick a high churchman; but,
otherwise,
the polite world looked to the Post, not for news, but to see the whole mind
of Palmerston, which often meant only the whole mind of Borthwick. . . . The
briefs prepared by Palmerston to direct the manufacture of leaders often
proved full enough, and finished enough, for wholesale production in the
leader columns2.
A great friendship subsisted between Borthwick and count
Walewski, French ambassador in the fifties; and there was a
popular belief that Napoleon III subsidised the paper. Similar
statements as to subsidies to other papers have been made with
much greater probability: The Morning Post was not in pecuniary
1 It is said that when some of his later speeches were received with suggestions
that he had spoken at sufficient length, he told the house, 'If I am not allowed to
conclude at my own time, and in my own way, I am determined not to conclude at
all. ' Life of Peter Borthwick, by Lucas, S.
2 Escott, who states that he had his information from lord Glevesk.
## p. 186 (#216) ############################################
186
The Growth of Journalism
[CH.
difficulties. It was the last of the London papers in the century
(1882) to reduce its price to one penny. Always maintaining its
reputation as a record of the doings of the aristocratic and
wealthy, and as an advocate of a forward foreign policy, The
Morning Post, also, followed high ideals in its literary and
artistic articles. It is said to have been the first London daily
paper which, early in the century, printed regularly notices of
plays, operas and concerts, and this feature has always been well
maintained. Towards the end of the century, its articles on
military topics, too, began to attract much attention. It was
protectionist in the days of Peel, and in those of Chamberlain.
Of the morning papers in the first half of the century, The
Morning Chronicle was, in many respects, the most famous.
During several periods of its career, there were associated with
it some most brilliant writers, and, even in its later stages,
failure could not be attributed to lack of quality in the members
of its staff. Any attempt to record the history of the newspaper
press is confronted here, as in many other instances, with a
problem all but insoluble—that of determining the actual causes
of success or failure in journalistic effort. Often, the decisive
cause would seem to be quality, but with a strangely inverted
application. Sir Thomas Gresham, writing on the coinage, lays it
down as a principle that, if you have in a country good coins and
deteriorated coins of the same metal current side by side, the bad
will drive out the good, and Gresham's law may often be applied
to literature, to art and, especially, to journalism. The largest
circulations have often been attained by newspapers not ex-
hibiting the highest characteristics ; indeed, newspapers have
been known suddenly to reach enormous sales by publishing
articles describing the careers of notorious criminals. The
phrase “survival of the fittest' must, therefore, be used with a
difference. ' The Morning Chronicle had belonged to William
Woodfall, whose brother Sampson is famous for his publication of
The Letters of Junius. Perry, editing The Gazetteer, competed so
strongly with The Chronicle, that the latter came into the market,
and, with the aid of the duke of Norfolk and others, Perry became
its chief proprietor and editor. This was in 1789, when the whigs
were in want of an organ, and The Chronicle filled the gap.
Sheridan, Sir James Mackintosh, John Campbell (the future lord
chancellor), Thomas Campbell the poet, Thomas Moore, David
Ricardo, Henry (lord) Brougham, Albany Fonblanque and, as
we have seen, Charles Lamb, were among those enlisted by Perry
## p. 187 (#217) ############################################
IV]
The Chronicle
187
or by John Black, who, having been on the reporting staff of
The Chronicle, became its joint editor in 1817, obtaining complete
control in 1821, on Perry's death. Perry's writing had a lightness of
touch unknown to his successor; but Black had higher quali-
fications for discussing public questions ; Bentham called him the
greatest publicist the country had seen, and among his favourite
contributors were James and John Stuart Mill, the latter being
only seventeen years of age when he contributed three letters
condemning the punishment which Richard Carlisle, his wife and
her sister suffered for publishing unstamped papers.
Black
offended many of his whig friends by seeing good qualities in the
duke of Wellington. His style was not free, but, according to
John Stuart Mill, he was
the first journalist who carried criticism and the spirit of reform into the
details of English institutions. . . . Black was a frequent visitor to my father,
and Mr Grote used to say he always knew by the Monday morning's article
whether Black had been with my father on the Sunday.
Black, in The Chronicle, was at war with The Times; as was no
secret, one of his reporters, Charles Dickens, caricatured the
quarrel? Black regarded Dickens as the finest shorthand
writer he had ever known a judgment borne out by men
who were colleagues of Dickens in the parliamentary gallery.
Thackeray began his newspaper career as an art critic for the same
paper. In the fifties, when the Peelites controlled The Chronicle,
Palmerston inspired The Morning Post, and Greville, during the
negotiations closing the Crimean war, said:
Palmerston continues to put articles into The Morning Post, full of arro-
gance and jactance, and calculated to raise obstacles to the peace. This is
only what he did in '41, when he used to agree to certain things with his
colleagues, and then put violent articles in The Morning Chronicle totally
at variance with the views and resolutions of the Cabinet.
In 1862, The Morning Chronicle ended a notable career.
Daniel Stuart, in 1799, obtained possession of The Courier, an
evening paper. To The Courier, in Stuart's hands, Wordsworth
is said to have sent extracts from his then unpublished Cintra
convention pamphlet, and, also, articles on the Spanish and
Portuguese navies. Beginning with admiration for the French
revolution, The Courier followed the popular lead in this country,
a
1 Byron was a constant reader of The Chronicle; some of his jeux d'esprit were
published in it, as also were the verses—the last he wrote-on his thirty-sixth
birthday.
See Escott, Masters of Journalism, p. 161.
## p. 188 (#218) ############################################
188
[CH.
The Growth of Journalism
and became an opponent of the French cause, and especially
of Napoleon. In 1827, it supported Canning; William Mud-
ford, the editor, author of a series of tales in Blackwood's
Magazine, became a personal friend of this statesman. As
a result, it was denounced by the ultra-tory party, and lost
circulation, and, though, on the death of Canning, it reverted
to toryism, there was no recovery of position. John Galt? edited
it about 1830, and was followed by James Stuart, who, some years
previously, having been libelled by Sir Alexander Boswell, son
of James Boswell, had challenged him to a duel, and killed him.
Stuart conducted The Courier as a whig paper, and, apparently,
was the first editor of an evening paper to publish, once a week,
an enlarged sheet with one entire page devoted to book reviews.
In 1836, he was succeeded by Laman Blanchard. Shortly after-
wards, however, the paper was again sold to the tories, and, with a
new editor, lasted a few years longer.
The Morning Herald, first published in 1780, ran until 1869.
It was founded by a somewhat notorious clergyman, Henry Bate
Dudley, who had previously edited The Morning Post. It was
not very successful until after 1820, when it received a large
increase in circulation on account of its reporting of Bow street
police cases, Wight, its reporter, afterwards editor and partner,
exaggerating into caricatures his descriptions of the proceedings.
So attractive was this feature that a selection from the reports was
issued, with illustrations by George Cruikshank. An enterprising
policy in regard to news raised the circulation, until, according to the
official stamp returns for 1828, The Morning Herald had then a
publication of 1000 copies daily above The Times. This position,
however, was not maintained. In 1843, or 1844, Edwin Baldwin, a
proprietor of The Evening Standard, purchased The Morning
Herald, improved its literary quality, and, as it happened that the
railway mania followed close upon his purchase of the paper, he was
able to spend heavily. During the mania, the advertisement revenue
of many newspapers was enormous. But the prosperity was not
lasting, and, in a few years, Baldwin became bankrupt. James
Johnson, an official in the court of bankruptcy, purchased The
Morning Herald and The Evening Standard, and established The
Standard as a penny morning paper. This was after the abolition of
the newspaper advertisement duties, and when The Daily Telegraph,
The Daily News and The Morning Star were being issued at a
a
See, ante, vol. XII, chap. XI.
## p. 189 (#219) ############################################
Iv] The Morning Advertiser 189
penny. Later, The Herald was discontinued; but, for many years,
The Standard has occupied a high position in London journalism.
It was a staunch supporter of the conservative party, and among its
leader-writers numbered Alfred Austin, afterwards poet laureate.
In conjunction with it, The Evening Standard was maintained, a
paper - with which was eventually amalgamated The St James's
Gazette, an evening review and newspaper founded by Frederick
Greenwood, one of the foremost journalists'of the second half of the
century, when a change in the ownership of The Pall Mall Gazette
led to his retirement from that paper 1.
The third morning paper which lasted through the century
(after The Morning Post and The Times) is The Morning
Advertiser, whose literary importance at no time equalled that
of its two colleagues. It was first published in 1794 by the
London society of licensed victuallers. Naturally, it was de-
voted to trade interests, rather than to the support of any one
political party. Its circulation, however, fostered by the society,
was, in the middle of the century, second only to that of The
Times. The Morning Advertiser was one of the leaders in
the attack upon the Prince Consort, which reflected widespread
fears of non-constitutional interference in the management
of public affairs? . Subsequently, the policy of the paper was
changed.
Charles Dickens was not successful as a leader-writer, though
he had been as a reporter. In 1845—6, there was a demand
for a liberal paper which should be wide in its sympathies,
looking towards the educational and industrial advancement
of the masses, and treating religious questions from the point
of view of those who ‘faintly trust the larger hope. ' Dissatis-
fied with the reception of an offer he made to write a series
of sketches for The Morning Chronicle, Dickens talked over with
his publishers the possibility of starting a rival newspaper, and, in
the following year, agreed to edit The Daily News. Judged from
the standpoint of the end of the century, Dickens's scheme of
editing was much too solid and heavy. The paper contained his
opening article, followed by three others, all dealing with corn-law
reform ; more than a page was occupied with a report of a meeting
See post, p. 195.
2 Cf. Greville's Memoirs (third part, chap. v), on the subject of newspaper
attacks on the prince. Somewhat later, Henry Dunckley, editor of the since defunct
Manchester Examiner and Times, attained celebrity by a series of articles, afterwards
(1878) republished under the title Crown & Cabinet, which he based largely, though
not solely, upon the prince's position.
## p. 190 (#220) ############################################
190
[CH.
The Growth of Journalism
2
at Ipswich, and a speech there by Richard Cobden. A review of
railway affairs and reports of railway company proceedings nearly
filled another page? After seventeen numbers had been issued,
Dickens, as he said, 'tired to death, and quite worn out? , ceased
to edit the paper. John Forster took up the work, carrying it on
to the end of the first year. It is said that, though all the pro-
prietors were agreed in demanding the repeal of the corn-laws,
there were great differences, not only among them, but, also, on
the editorial staff, upon other questions, especially those bearing
on foreign policy. Among its contributors, after 1852, was
Miss Harriet Martineau—one of the two women who, in the
century, attained especially high eminence as journalists, the
other being Mrs Emily Crawford, later the Paris correspondent of
The Daily News and of Henry Labouchere's Truth. The Daily
News took its share in the campaign against the stamp duty, the
tax on advertisements and the paper duty- the last being
abolished in 1861. It had to cope with a Peelite endeavour to
regain popularity for The Morning Chronicle, and was attacked
in 1856 by the adherents of the then advanced radicalism of
Cobden and Bright in The Morning Star and The Evening Star,
which were started on 17 March 1856. The Morning Star, like
The Daily Telegraph, which had now come into being, was sold
at one penny. But the advanced radical paper was never able to
attract the general public, and its attitude towards the Crimean
war, no doubt, spoiled any chance of success which it might have
had. On its staff, however, it numbered several distinguished men
of letters and other journalists of subsequent high repute. The
Daily News maintained an excellent reputation. After the open-
ing of the Franco-Prussian war, in 1870, it was joined by Archibald
Forbes. The ability of one man—though the subject of his articles,
in this case, was of overwhelming interest—to give popularity to
a newspaper was never exhibited more clearly ; during the war,
the circulation of The Daily News rose from 50,000 to 150,000
a days. Writing in The Nineteenth Century of August 1891,
Forbes indicated some of the dangers attending war correspondents
during the time of his service. Referring to the Crimean and
other campaigns before 1870, and recognising, generously, that
W. H. Russell ‘had made for himself a reputation to vie with
which no representative of a newer school has any claim,' he
1 See Fox Bourne, English Newspapers.
? See chapter on Dickens, vol. XIII, and cf. , as to Forster, ante, chap. II.
3 Fox Bourne.
## p. 191 (#221) ############################################
IV] The Daily Telegraph 191
pointed out that the advent of the telegraph had increased the
labour of the correspondent as it has, indeed, in all departments
of daily journalism-and that the older correspondents did not run
the same risks as the later of being shot.
Before far-reaching rifle firearms came into use, it was quite easy to see
a battle without getting within range of fire. With siege guns that carry
shells ten miles, with field artillery having a range of four miles, and with
rifles that kill without benefit of clergy at two miles, the war correspondent
may as well stay at home with his mother, unless he has hardened his heart
to take full share of the risks of the battlefield. In the petty Servian
campaign of 1876, there were twelve correspondents who kept the field,
and went under fire. Of those, three were killed, and four were wounded.
Certainly not more than thirty correspondents and artists all told, were in
the Soudan from the earliest troubles to the final failure of the Nile ex-
pedition, but on or under its cruel sand lie the corpses of at least six of my
comrades.
Noteworthy among later contributors to The Daily News was
Andrew Lang?
Of those who took a leading part in the production of The Daily
Telegraph, the first lord Burnham died while this chapter was
passing through the press. To his constant care and unrivalled
experience of affairs, the paper has owed much of its success. It
was launched in 1855, and, in the course of a few months, passed
into the hands of the Levi-Lawson family, who issued it as the first
penny newspaper published in London. It was edited by Thornton
Hunt, a son of Leigh Hunt, and early obtained celebrity for its
enterprise and somewhat flamboyant style.
Matthew Arnold
scoffed at it; and a grandson of the first proprietor says that,
when at Oxford, his tutor admonished him to 'try not to write
like Sala. To borrow a simile from the art of painting, the
. '
writers who gained reputation for The Daily Telegraph were,
of choice, colourists. During many years, among the leading
members of its staff was Sir Edwin Arnold, one of the brilliant
Oxonians of the newspaper press, who is reported (by J. M. Le
Sage) to have said that
whether the chief-whom we loved-asked him (Arnold) to write the first
leading article, the description of some great historical event, or an ordinary
news paragraph, he would do it to the utmost of his ability; that the test of
loyalty was not to do some big thing, but some small thing-and to do it
well.
The loyalty and affection here indicated, shared, as they were, by
the whole staff, played a great part in making The Daily Telegraph
so successful that, for some time before the advent of the halfpenny
1 See, ante, chaps. II and III, and vol. XIII, chap. VI.
## p. 192 (#222) ############################################
192
The Growth of Journalism [CH.
6
newspapers, it was able to boast that it possessed the largest cir-
culation in the world. ' The influence of the style of The Daily
Telegraph upon the newspaper press of this country has been
great; being, indeed, the basis of popular journalism. Not that
the latter repeats the styles of Sala, of Edwin Arnold, of Edward
Dicey, of Bennet Burleigh and of other men who long were
looked upon as representing The Daily Telegraph; for, with
features showing their influence has been combined a greater
directness of statement; but the picturesqueness at which they
aimed has had enduring effect. The loyalty of the staff
accounted for the success of the paper in obtaining early
information. Its enterprise has been shown in other directions.
In 1873, George Smith was commissioned by it to make and
describe archaeological exploration on the site of Nineveh, and
among his discoveries were a number of fragments of the cunei-
form narrative of the Deluge. Two years later, The Daily
Telegraph joined The New York Herald in sending Henry M.
Stanley into central Africa, where he surveyed lakes Victoria and
Tanganyika, and traced the source of the Congo; later, for the
same papers and The Scotsman, he was sent to rescue Emin pasha
from Equatoria ; but Emin refused to be rescued, and escaped
from the rescue party. In 1884–5, it was associated with
Sir Harry Johnston's exploration of Kilima-njaro, and, in 1899—
1900, with Lionel Decle's journey from the Cape to Cairo. Its
foreign staff have interviewed monarchs and statesmen; Bismarck,
some time before the Franco-German war, confided to Beattie-
Kingston that the military authorities had pressed him to quarrel
with France-a course to which he was then opposed.
Its musical and dramatic criticisms by E. L. Blanchard, Joseph
Bennett and Clement Scott were always read by the chief members
of the professions affected.
Another morning newspaper established successfully during
the century is The Daily Chronicle. Its founder, Edward Lloyd,
was already the prosperous owner of Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper.
In 1842, intending to compete with The Ilustrated London News,
he published Lloyd's Illustrated London Newspaper, unstamped.
The authorities intervened, and, in 1843, he rearranged his publi-
cation without illustrations, calling it Lloyd's Weekly London News-
paper. In this form, it competed with other Sunday publications,
such as The News of the World, Reynolds's Weekly Newspaper,
The Weekly Times, The Weekly Dispatch. Of these papers, The
Dispatch was long the most prominent. Its owner had been in
## p. 193 (#223) ############################################
>
IV] The Halfpenny Morning Press 193
the front of the fight against the stamp duty; but Lloyd's Weekly
soon became well established, especially under the short editorship
of Douglas Jerrold from 1852 to 1857, and, thereafter, under that
of his son Blanchard, who had among his coadjutors Hepworth
Dixon, better known as editor of The Athenaeum, from 1853 to
1868.
In 1877, Edward Lloyd purchased a daily paper which had
been started as The Clerkenwell News, but had expanded its
name to The London Daily Chronicle and Clerkenwell News.
He reduced the title to The Daily Chronicle, and adopted an
independent radical policy. The venture prospered, and has
latterly become one of the leading halfpenny morning papers.
The closing years of the century saw that advent of the half-
penny morning press to which reference has been made. There
had been such papers in the provinces for thirty years, The
Northern Echo being established in Darlington in 1869, The
North Star in the same town in 1880 and, about the same time,
The Newcastle Express, in the closing years of a long life, was
published at the same price. But, though The Northern Echo
achieved somewhat wide reputation in 1880, when it was edited
by W. T. Stead, the issue of a halfpenny morning paper in London
was a highly speculative undertaking. The Daily Mail, however,
was launched in 1896, and proved most popular. Much of its
earlier attractiveness was due to the writing of G. W. Steevens,
who, after a brilliant career at Oxford, plunged into daily
journalism, speedily became famous and died of fever in Lady-
smith, where he was one of the besieged in the Boer war. The
Daily Express made its appearance in 1900.
In the earlier part of the century, there were, in London,
seven evening papers; at the end, only six, and the general
development of evening journalism had not been commensurate
with that of morning papers, having, for the most part, been
limited to London and its suburbs, while morning journals were
carried to all parts of the country. The change was owing
chiefly to the growth of country evening papers, these being able
by telegraph and organisation to print later information, notably
concerning all forms of sport?
1 The supply of news to a morning paper is usually complete by 2 a. m. and, thus,
there is little actual need for late editions, but the news for an evening paper, the
incidents of the day, comes in a continuous stream, its end being fixed only by the
publication of the latest edition for which a sale can be had. The morning paper
prints the news of twenty-four hours; the evening paper, as a rule, that of only
eight.
E. L. XIV.
CH. IV.
13
## p. 194 (#224) ############################################
194
[CH.
The Growth of Journalism
6
Before The Courier was purchased by Daniel Stuart, it was
joined, in the last number of The Anti-Jacobin, with The Star as
forming a 'seditious evening post'; and, in 1792, at the instance
of Pitt, The Sun was started to advocate the ministerial home and
foreign policy. But it did not achieve a high position, and, in
1823, The Edinburgh Review said of it. The Sun appears daily
but never shines. The Globe, which, in the second half of the
century, became tory, was, in its origin, radical, competing with
The Star, the organ of the booksellers. Contemporary with The
Globe was The Traveller, intended to support the interests of
commercial travellers. A few years after its first publication,
The Traveller became the property of Robert Torrens, an eager
disciple of Jeremy Bentham, and a writer on political economy.
Torrens and his friends purchased The Globe in 1823, and during
many years the paper appeared with the double title. In all
respects well conducted, it was recognised as one of the chief
liberal organs, and the Melbourne administration of 1835 often
used it for the first publication of ministerial news. It preserved
its literary character, and, many years later, its sketchy serial and
historical articles were widely known as 'Globe turnovers,' their
length always slightly exceeding a column. Francis Mahony,
'Father Prout,' was one of its regular contributors. In 1869,
with new proprietors, it became moderately conservative, and,
with varying fortune, so continued until after the end of the
century. The Pall Mall Gazette obtained larger renown for its
philosophic statesmanship. It was founded in 1865 by Frederick
Greenwood, its proprietor being the wellknown publisher George
Smith. The name was taken from Thackeray's sketch of captain
Shandon in the Marshalsea, drawing up the prospectus of
The Pall Mall Gazette—written by gentlemen for gentlemen. '
Greenwood turned the satire into reality. Under Thackeray, he
had sub-edited The Cornhill Magazine, and his scheme contem-
plated the production of a paper which, with the publication of
news, should combine some of the characteristics of the already
flourishing Saturday Review and Spectator. Connected with the
paper were men of mark in literature, such as (to mention men of
very diverse qualifications) Anthony Trollope, Henry Maine, Fitz-
james Stephen and E. C. Grenville Murray. On several occasions,
Bismarck tried to form friendly relations with it. Greenwood,
undoubtedly, was one of the great editors of the century, revising
the work of his contributors, suggesting topics and their treat-
ment and, with a masterly hand, adding finishing touches. His
## p. 195 (#225) ############################################
IV]
W. T. Stead
195
sources of information gave him early news of the intention of the
French government, in 1875, to obtain control over the Suez canal,
by purchasing from the khedive of Egypt a large number of the
shares held by him in that undertaking; and the fact was brought
to the notice of Disraeli, the prime minister, who forestalled the
French. When, in 1881, the liberal party obtained a large majority
in the house of commons, Henry Yates Thompson, a son-in-law of
George Smith, had become proprietor of The Pall Mall Gazette,
and, as he was a supporter of Gladstone, Frederick Greenwood
and his colleagues were superseded by John (now viscount)
Morley, who was installed as editor, with W. T. Stead, of The
Northern Echo, as his chief of staff. Greenwood thereupon
started the St James's Gazette, but could not acquire for it
the vogue of his earlier paper. The career of W. T. Stead, who
in 1883 followed Morley as editor, was remarkable. Brought
up in a north country manse, and under the influence of
fervent religious emotions, he believed that every step in his
course was dictated directly from heaven. He assured the present
writer that the Almighty set up finger-posts for him, whose inten-
tion was unmistakable, and that, on several occasions, when he
had seen these directions, he had obeyed the command, apparently
risking everything that most men hold precious. His efforts
startling in their form, for the more stringent protection of girls,
and the pride with which he suffered the consequences of his
action, illustrate this attitude. He was, however, possessed of
,
much humour, and was a most graphic correspondent. At the end
of five years, another change of editor took place; and, later
still, in 1892, The Pall Mall Gazette passed into a new proprietor-
ship. At the same time, The Westminster Gazette was launched,
which was conducted on much the same lines as those of the
liberal Pall Mall Gazette had been, and, during several years, was
the only London penny paper supporting the liberal party. One
especial feature of The Westminster Gazette has been its brilliant
political caricatures. Stead was drowned in the disaster to the
• Titanic. '
For many years, London had one halfpenny evening paper,
The Echo (established 1868). Similar halfpenny papers were
already in being at Manchester and Bolton in Lancashire. Later,
The Evening News and The Star appeared.
Many as were the morning and evening papers published in
London during the century, they were far outnumbered by weekly
papers. Besides high-class and popular political weeklies, the
13--2
## p. 196 (#226) ############################################
196 The Growth of Journalism [CH.
pictorial papers, from The Illustrated London News, The Illustrated
Times (now extinct) and The Graphic, to those depending largely
on the portraits of brides and bridegrooms, sportsmen and sports-
women, actors, actresses and ladies of the ballet, the satirical
and humorous papers from Punch' and Fun (now extinct)
downwards, the century witnessed the establishment of scores of
weekly newspapers, dealing with almost every description of special-
ised interest—religious, atheistic, scientific, mechanical, financial,
military, naval, architectural, dramatic and artistic, a marvellous
record of the mental activity of the nation. All these make their
particular appeal, and even to indicate the character of each would
be impossible in these pages. Some of them, indeed, however
well their articles may be written, make no pretence of belonging
to the domain of literature.
Why one newspaper succeeds and another fails, even the
most experienced journalist will (as already hinted) hesitate to
decide. The Constitutional, issued in 1836, had for its editor
Laman Blanchard, with Thornton Hunt, afterwards editor of
The Daily Telegraph, as his assistant. Thackeray's Paris Sketch
Book is reminiscent of the fact that he was Paris correspondent
for the paper, in which his step-father and he had unfortunately
invested money; and among its constant contributors were
Bulwer Lytton, Douglas Jerrold and Sir William Molesworth.
It existed only seven months. Another was The Hour, issued in
1873 with captain Hamber as its editor. Hamber, who had been
at Oriel college when lord Robert Cecil, afterwards third marquis
of Salisbury, was also at Oxford, served in the Crimean war,
and then turned to journalism. During several years, he edited
The Standard with signal ability, but, eventually, quarrelled with
its proprietor, who desired less independence of official conser-
vative party control. Thereupon, The Hour was started as an
ultra-protestant conservative paper, independent of the re-
cognised party leaders. It never found a sufficient public, and,
in 1876, Disraeli 'heard with a pang that The Hour was no
more. '
A much more important publication was The Press, originated,
in 1853, as a weekly representative of progressive conservatism,
its first moving spirit being Disraeli, who, for some time, was a
frequent contributor? It editor was Samuel Lucas (not the
Samuel Lucas of The Morning Star) and the writers included
Bulwer Lytton, George Smythe, Shirley Brooks, Tom Taylor,
· See, post, chap. VI.
? Cf. , ante, vol. XIII, chap. XI.
## p. 197 (#227) ############################################
IV]
The Examiner
197
lord Stanley, Sir J. E. Tennant, H. L. Mansel (afterwards dean
of St Paul's) and Edward Vaughan Kenealy.
Among later
contributors were Richard Holt Hutton and Sir J. R. Seeley. It
never obtained a circulation of more than 3500, and though,
at its best period, it seems to have been financially stable, it ceased
to exist in 1866.
Journalism has always allowed equality of literary opportunity
to men and to women, to men who have made their mark at the
universities and to those whose chief or only schooling has been
such as they could pick up in the intervals of other occupations.
Swift's judgment of Mrs Manley was that her writing, at times, was
better than his own! Defoe had an audience greater than that of
Addison or Steele. In the early part of the nineteenth century, one
of the self-educated had popularity and influence equal to those
of any of his contemporaries. This was William Cobbett, born
in 1762, of whom, and of whose Political Register, something
has been said in a previous volume of this history.
In 1808 appeared the first of a distinctive school of weekly
periodicals, combining surveys of politics, literature, the drama
and the pictorial arts, in articles intended more nearly to resemble
a careful and a deliberate essay than the current comments of the
daily newspaper. This was The Examiner, launched by John
Hunt, and his more famous brother James Henry Leigh Hunt,
of whose influence on English criticism and poetry an estimate
will be found in an earlier volume of the present works. In
1805, John Hunt issued The News and Leigh, then in his twenty-
first year, was its theatrical critic.
