In 1785 John Walter's career as a Lloyd's underwriter in London
was at an end. An increase in insurance claims arising from a hurricane
in Jamaica had ruined his business. Close to bankruptcy, John
Walter decided to look for a new form of business. While an underwriter
at Lloyds he became aware of a new method of typesetting called logography.
The inventor, Henry Johnson, claimed that this new method of typesetting
was faster and more accurate because it allowed more than one letter
to be set at a time. John Walter purchased Johnson's patent and decided
to start a printing company.
John Walter came to the conclusion that
he had to find a good way of publicizing his logography system. Eventually
he came up with the idea of producing a daily advertising sheet. The
first edition of the Daily Universal Register was published
on 1st January, 1785. The newspaper was in competition with eight
other daily newspapers in London. Like
the other newspapers, the Daily Universal Register included
parliamentary reports, foreign news and advertisements. John Walter
made it clear in the first edition of the newspaper that he was primarily
concerned with advertising revenue: "The Register, in its politics,
will be of no party. Due attention should be paid to the interests
of trade, which are so greatly promoted by advertisements."
After a couple of years John Walter had
discovered that logography was not going to have the impact on the
printing industry that he had initially thought when he started the
Daily Universal Register. However, he was now convinced he
could make a profit from newspapers. Especially when he was able to
negotiate a secret deal where he was paid £300 a year to publish
stories favourable to the government.
In 1788 John Walter decided to change the
name and the style of his newspaper. Walter now started to produce
a newspaper that appealed to a larger audience. This included stories
of the latest scandals and gossip about famous people in London. Walter
called his new paper The Times. One of these stories about
the Prince of Wales resulted in Walter
being fined £50 and sentenced to two years in Newgate
Prison.
In January,
1803 John Walter's son, John Walter II,
became the new proprietor of The Times. John Walter II decided
he wanted to run a newspaper that was independent of government control.
He began employing young journalist who supported political reform
including Henry Crabbe Robinson, Charles Lamb,
William Hazlitt and Thomas
Barnes. The newspaper turned away from government minister's handouts
and instead developed its own news-getting organisation.
John Walter II also introduced new technology
into The Times. In 1817 he installed a steam-powered Koenig
printing machine. This increased the speed that newspapers could be
printed and by the end of the year, the newspaper was selling
over 7,000 copies a day. In the same year that the newspaper obtained
their steam-powered printing machine, Thomas
Barnes became the new editor of the newspaper.
Thomas Barnes a strong advocate on independent
reporting. In 1819 he published a several articles written by John
Edward Taylor and John Tyas on the Peterloo
Massacre. The Times criticised the way Lord Liverpool's
government was dealing with those arguing for political reform.
After the Peterloo Massacre The Times
began to argue for parliamentary reform. By 1830 The Times
was constantly urging the Whig government to take action. The views
of the newspaper and its editor, Thomas Barnes,
had a great influence on public opinion. The government tax on newspapers
meant that its price of 7d. made it too expensive for most people
to buy. However, copies were available in reading rooms. In 1831 the
Tory St. James's Chronicle claimed that "for every one
copy of The Times that is purchased for the usual purposes,
nine we venture to say are purchased to be lent to the wretched characters
who, being miserable, look to political changes for an amelioration
of their condition."
In Parliament the Tories complained about
The Times campaign. In a debate that took place in the House
of Commons on 7th March, 1832, Sir Robert
Peel argued that The Times was
the "principal and most powerful advocate of Reform" in
Britain. After the 1832 Reform Act was passed
The Times called it the "greatest
event of modern history."
The Times also campaigned for the rights of trade unionists.
In 1834 it became involved in what became known as the case of the
Tolpuddle Martyrs. The Times
condemned the decision to prosecute six farmworkers at Tolpuddle for
"administering illegal oaths". The Times also supported
the demands that the men should be reprieved after they were sentenced
to transportation for seven years.
In 1834 a group of Whigs purchased control
of the Morning Chronicle. Thomas
Barnes disagreed with the way the Morning
Chronicle gave "slavish support to the government".
Barnes had talks with the leaders of the Conservative
Party and after they had agreed that they would not attempt to
interfere with reforms introduced by the Whigs such as the 1832
Reform Act and the Tithe Act, he agreed
that the newspaper would became a supporter of Sir
Robert Peel and his new government.
Thomas Barnes remained editor of The
Times until his death on 7th May 1841. John
Walter II made the surprising decision to invite the twenty-three
year old John Delane to take over the job.
Unlike Barnes, Delane rarely wrote for the paper. Delane held liberal
views on most issues, but believed it was the role of a newspaper
to be independent of political parties. In 1852 he wrote that it is
the "duty of the journalist is the same as that of the historian
- to seek truth above all things". However, he added that The
Times "owes its first duty to the national interests"
and that the "ends of government were absolutely identical with
those of the press".
Delane had good contacts with senior members of both the Whigs
and Tories. This enabled him on 4th December,
1845, to be the first to announce that the government planned to repeal
the corn laws. This information came from
one of his closest friends, Lord Aberdeen.
When The Times reporter, William
Russell, began to send critical articles about the way the British
Army was running the Crimean War,
Delane and the Liberal MP, John
Roebuck, called for a government enquiry. Delane's campaign eventually
helped to bring down Aberdeen's government. Afterwards Tories
complained that Delane's political views were being influenced by
the hospitality of the new prime minister, Lord
Palmerston.
John Delane also gave vigorous support to
Florence Nightingale and her attempt
to reform military hospitals. With the support of Delane
and the The Times, Nightingale was able to raise £59,000
to improve the quality of nursing. In 1860 she used this money to
found the Nightingale School & Home for Nurses at St. Thomas's
Hospital.
In 1864 Delane upset John Bright when he
accused him of being in favour of "dividing the lands of the
rich among the poor". When Bright wrote a letter of complaint
to The Times, Delane refused to print.
Later, Bright published the correspondence between himself and Delane
as a pamphlet: "to show the surreptitious relations which a journal
professedly anonymous and independent maintains with the government".
John Delane retired as editor of The
Times in 1877 and was replaced by Thomas Chernery.
In 1898,
Lord Northcliffe had attempted to buy
The Times. The Walter family refused but when Northcliffe tried
again in 1908, his offer of £320,000 was accepted. Circulation
of the paper had fallen to 38,000 and was losing money. Northcliffe
re-equipped its outdated printing plant, reduced the newspaper's price
by a penny to twopence, and appointed a new editor, Geoffrey Dawson.
In March, 1914, Northcliffe reduced the price even further, and by
the outbreak of the First World War, the one
penny Times was selling 278,000 copies a day.During the early
stages of the war Northcliffe created a great deal of controversy
by advocating conscription and criticizing
David Lloyd George and Lord
Kitchener. This upset many readers and circulation of The Times
began to fall again. Harmsworth stopped attacking the government and
in 1918 was asked to take control of British war propaganda.
After a row with Northcliffe, Dawson resigned as editor of The
Times in 1919. He was replaced by Henry
Wickham Steed, the former foreign correspondent. When Lord
Northcliffe, died in 1922, the newspaper passed into the hands
of John Jacob Astor, the younger son of Lord Astor.
(1)
Thomas Barnes, The Times (9th December,
1830)
We are staunch friends to a broad and fundamental reform; and if enemies
to universal suffrage, or to the establishment of a low qualification
for the great mass of electors, it is because such a principle would
be, in effect, a narrowing of the representative system, by the virtual
exclusion of all influence derived from property. We are haters of
all monopolies, and among others of a monopoly of the elective franchise,
by such a reform of Parliament, by means of universal suffrage, the
mass, and with the mass the dregs, of the existing population.
(2)
Thomas Barnes, The Times (21st March,
1831)
The all-important question of full and satisfactory parliamentary
reform is, we have no doubt, now completely settled. The people, the
brave English people have won it decidedly as they have won battles
in the field or on the ocean; nor can they by any possibility be cheated
or robbed of the fruits of their victory. They petitioned, they addressed,
they resolved. We proposed these courses to them, we urged the prosecution
of them with vigour, and our advice prevailed to a degree that even
we, used as we are to move the noble feelings of our countrymen in
a just cause and on subjects of vast moment - could hardly have conceived,
and were almost surprised at our success.
(3)
Thomas Barnes, The Times (25th March,
1831)
We are too upright to be flatters of the wealthy, and what honest
man will dare charge us with having ever abandoned or betrayed the
poor? Who has pleaded more strenuously than we have done for the reform
which has put power in the hands of some many of the working class?
Who has pressed so vigorously against the landlords the wickedness
of the tax upon the poor man's bread? Who raised and directed the
public spirit in England against the vile massacre of the manufacturing
poor at Peterloo in 1819? Who would now open the poor man's eyes to
the snares and treacheries which his mock friends are practising against
him, who but this Times journal.
(4)
Thomas Barnes, The Times (22nd May,
1832)
Died, at the lodgings at St. James's on Friday, May 18th, 1832, at
a very advanced age, but still in possession of his faculties, the
Right Hon., Right Rev., and Right Worshipful TORY POWER, A squire!
Born so long ago as the reign of Charles I, he was given over at the
close of that of James II, but rallied under the later reigns of the
House of Hanover, and was kept alive by artificial means until William
IV; when, detected in the act of some disreputable practices, he expired
by his own hand.
(5)
President Abraham Lincoln to William
Howard Russell (1861)
The Times is one of the greatest powers in the world - in fact,
I don't know anything which has more power, except perhaps the Mississippi.
(6)
Henry Hamilton Fyfe worked for The Times
in the 1880s.
The control of The Times was claimed as a right by the Walter
family. John Walter the third was by this time already an old man.
He had a comically sheeplike face with a frill of white hair all round
shaven lips and chin. He used to walk about the passages solemnly,
noiselessly, portentously, looking straight ahead of him if he passed
any member of the staff. Except the Editor. He was recognized. Nobody
else, not even the assistant-editors.
(7)
Editorial in The Times (8th April, 1914)
The division of the Great Powers into two well-balanced groups with
intimate relations between the members of each, which do not forbid
any such member from being on the friendliest terms with one or more
members of the other, is a twofold check upon inordinate ambitions
or sudden outbursts of race hatred. All sovereigns and statesmen -
aye, and all nations - know that a war of group against group would
be a measureless calamity.
(8)
Editorial in The Times (30th July, 1914)
We can no more afford to see France crushed by Germany, or the balance
of power upset against France, than Germany can afford to see Austria-Hungary
crushed by Russia and that balance upset against Austrian and Hungarian
interests.
(9)
Henry Wickham Steed, letter to friend
(November, 1914)
Joffre thinks the war will be practically over within eight months
of the start which is, with all modesty, an estimate I have constantly
made from the beginning. I look for the big crisis towards Christmas,
and think that by the middle of the end of March we ought to begin
to see daylight ahead.

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