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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
The Victorian Age, Part Two
>
The Growth of Journalism
>
The Standard
James Perry and
The Morning Chronicle
The Morning Advertiser
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume XIV. The Victorian Age, Part Two.
IV.
The Growth of Journalism
.
§ 11.
The Standard
.
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 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 leaderwriters numbered Alfred Austin, afterwards poet laureate. In conjunction with it,
The Evening Standard
was maintained, a paper with which was eventually amalgamated
The St. Jamess 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.
24
29
Note 24
. See,
post,
p. 215.
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CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
James Perry and
The Morning Chronicle
The Morning Advertiser
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