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Daily Chronicle

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34: 1792: 421:, the general in charge of statistics on the Western Front, was greatly concerned by the inaccuracy of this statement. He wrote to the new Chief of Staff asking whether it should not be exposed, but received no reply. After some days examining his conscience, he decided to write a letter to all the major newspapers. 516:
This was endorsed by the next owner despite his allegiance to the Conservative Party. He was William Harrison, an entrepreneur who had acquired a number of magazines and provincial newspapers. He had also gone into paper-making through Inveresk Paper Co and that now owned the former Lloyd newspapers.
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The new editor was Ernest Perris, formerly the news editor. Some suspected him of having been complicit in Lloyd George's negotiations. He was the source of the rumour passed on to Donald and Maurice, but this does not indicate whether he was the messenger or equally taken by surprise. He also became
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Only a small circle knew about his plan and the public was taken by surprise when it appeared in national daily guise on 28 May 1877. They clearly liked what they read and the new paper was a success from the start. It had inherited a circulation of about 40,000 in 1877 and this rose to 200,000 in a
248:’s reporting secured its popularity. It was the first Fleet Street paper to report industrial disputes systematically. This echoed the paper’s political stance, but it also met readers’ need to know about what was a new legal regime at the time – freedom to join a trade union and picket workplaces. 432:
However, a few days later, it recruited Maurice as its military correspondent. This move infuriated the prime minister. Lloyd George was now determined to buy the paper and set about raising the finance from friends of the party and by selling peerages. Beaverbrook was excluded, as were the Berry
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s impartial and objective coverage and found it the most acceptable of the non-Conservative papers. He misled himself into thinking that Donald was an uncritical supporter, drawing confirmation from Donald's willingness to advise him on the official propaganda effort in 1917 and then to accept an
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and its first election in 1889, and covered religion and the affairs of the church. In the 1880s, it created a special section for colonial news under the title "Greater Britain Day by Day". It also led the way in using specialist correspondents. Ample space was made available for books, literary
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After Lloyd George ceased to be prime minister in 1922, he remained active in politics for the rest of the 1920s. His fall from power marked the end of the Liberal Party as a majority government but that was not apparent at the time. He needed money to back candidates but this time his idea of
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During Lloyd's lifetime, the editor was a literary Irish journalist, Robert Boyle, who had helped Lloyd with the conversion of the paper. He maintained the local news coverage inherited from the Clerkenwell paper, but this was later dropped. He died in February 1890, two months before Lloyd.
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Four of them published the letter on 7 May. Maurice was forced to resign and Parliament debated the matter on 9 May. Lloyd George won the vote, partly by counterattacking Maurice's figures but largely because there was no obvious successor and the war was at too sensitive a point to risk a
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and other Lloyd publishing interests. He had bought off his fellow investors in 1922 and 1926, presumably at the 1918 valuation or thereabouts. He was sole owner in the sale contract. The question of whether the party should not benefit too caused some controversy at the time.
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Since selling to a Conservative proprietor would be anathema, Donald tried to form a rival consortium to buy the paper. This failed but the dealings between him and Lloyd George were irretrievably tainted by underhand behaviour on the prime minister's side of the negotiations.
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with some vehemence. This went down badly with readers, many of whom had family or friends risking and losing their lives for that cause. As sales were lost, he was asked to resign by Frank Lloyd, son of Edward Lloyd and managing director of the company that owned the paper.
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knew nothing of these negotiations. He and Maurice heard a rumour on 3 October 1918 and Frank Lloyd confirmed the following day that the sale had gone through. A new regime was due to come into effect at 6 p.m on 5 October. Both men were obliged to resign.
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Wartime inflation had lifted Frank Lloyd's price from £900,000 to £1.1m. In the end, Lloyd George paid £1.6m – probably for a quick sale. He was already planning the early general election that was announced immediately after the Armistice (he won).
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On 11 July 1927, Lloyd George sold the company to three investors who were rich but lacking experience of publishing, let alone newspapers. They paid him £2.9m. On 17 July 1928, a year and a week later, the three sold the company for £1.5m.
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Launched after the duties on advertising and published news had been abolished in 1853 and July 1855, this local paper specialised in small personal ads. At first, it carried about three times as much advertising as it did local news.
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Lloyd bought the paper in 1876, paying the owner £30,000 for the title and spending a further £150,000 on setting it up (about £19m in modern money). The Fleet Street office cost a further £40,000 a few years later.
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In 1918, events unexpectedly turned Lloyd George's way, albeit rather uncomfortably. He had assured Parliament on 9 April that the number of British troops facing the German onslaught in March had not been reduced.
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In fact, the relationship between Donald and Lloyd George, always arm's-length in Donald's eyes, had been fatally soured by dealings in 1917 that were unknown to the public. Lloyd George had tried to buy the
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The first of these sales contained a curious clause that preserved Lloyd George's editorial control without responsibility for its liabilities. He was granted a 10-year option to buy back the shares if the
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He was thoughtful and principled, with a firm belief in objective reporting and editorial independence. Under his direction, the paper was broadly supportive of the radical wing of the Liberal Party under
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were not for them. The breadth of its news coverage was welcomed by many because it deliberately ranged far and wide – far beyond the Westminster affairs that dominated Fleet Street at the time.
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Edward Lloyd was keenly interested in advertising. It had the potential to generate substantial income and so allow the paper's cover price to be kept low. In time it contributed about 40% of
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s credibility, its sales did not suffer under the new management. The editorial staff were not unduly interfered with, it seems. Rather, the paper suffered at the hands of corporate finance.
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was appointed editor. Generally recognised as one of the leading journalists of the day, with influence in the corridors of power, he was able to build up a newspaper that he valued highly.
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year. It had risen to 400,000 by the outbreak of war in 1914 and doubled during the war. It was reputedly the best selling daily in the 1890s and, during the war, sold more copies than the
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Donald had got to know Lloyd George well, although he never hesitated to point out failings if justified. After he became prime minister at the end of 1916, Lloyd George valued the
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owed £3m in debt and commitments, had no cash and was suffering a marked loss of sales. It looked doomed. However, News and Westminster Ltd, a Cadbury company, offered to take the
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through his political allies. Frank Lloyd, as owner, named his price. Although a realistic valuation, £900,000 was too high for the initial backer, the Liberal peer
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for a decade, Massingham was editor for just five years. On foreign policy, he was a great believer in the power of diplomacy and expressed his opposition to the
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revenues. Demand was strong enough to charge a good price per line but, even so, advertising had to be limited to no more than half the paper. The lobby at 81
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An account of United Newspapers Ltd's later years can be found in the history of United Business Media, the company's remote successor in the present day:
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Associated took an option to buy the company if it did not return to profit. When it failed to do that by the summer of 1960, Associated took over the
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As the formula proved popular, it grew in size and frequency and often changed its name to match. In 1872, it finally changed from the
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Lloyd was a great believer in news – objective reporting of facts, unadorned by comment or speculation. The scope and quality of the
1061: 1041: 921: 434: 400: 282:’s appearance coincided with the expansion of the London suburbs and the commuting by train that went with it. It competed with the 403:, a Conservative press baron who had promised to support Lloyd George for five years, then became involved as a potential backer. 20: 1779: 1703: 1036: 981: 820: 302:
The next editor, Alfred Fletcher, had been assistant to Boyle and had a more pronounced left-wing approach. After he left the
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but had taken time off journalism to experience an unrelated occupation – promoting a hotel. From 1906, he also edited
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http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/search/results?newspapertitle=clerkenwell%20news&sortorder=dayearly
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Politically, Massingham was at the radical end of the Liberal Party. He had edited the radical evening paper,
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served as an informal labour exchange where advertisers and targets would search each other out in person.
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s plant, property and goodwill. The paper disappeared and, with it, the last vestiges of the
374:. It was never anti-war, but it was critical of political interference in military strategy. 1566: 1143: 1026: 225: 848: 1724: 1693: 1491: 1399: 1383: 1153: 1138: 956: 946: 901: 824: 757: 657: 513:
failed to follow progressive Liberal policies or promoted reactionary or communist views.
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Journalistic London: Being a Series of Sketches of Famous Pens and Papers of the Day
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http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/united-business-media-plc-history/
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caused it to lose readers. Again facing closure, the only offer of help came from
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Politically the paper was left of centre. It supported the radical wing of the
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Later he twice stood for Parliament for Canterbury but failed to get elected:
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prospered until 1956 when its opposition to the UK's involvement in the
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s former foreign editor, William Fisher, became editor, handing over to
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He had a valuable asset in the form of United Newspapers, owner of the
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http://www.sjfisher.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/Fisher_My-Famous-People.htm
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official position – "director of propaganda in neutral countries".
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for that market and for those who felt that elite papers like the
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that was published from 1872 to 1930 when it merged with the
649:, by Laurel Brake and Marysa Demoor (2008), p.128. See also 772:"Lloyd George's Acquisition of the Daily Chronicle in 1918" 738:
That Irishman: The Life and Times of John O’Connor Power
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That Irishman: The Life and Times of John O'Connor Power
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Harrison left the scene. An audit then showed that the
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out of a local newspaper that had started life as the
844:- an advertising bookmark of the newspaper from 1894 267:, had that existed in 1877. From 1892, it supported 1772: 1716: 1686: 1645: 1434: 1319: 1312: 1202: 1091: 894: 887: 116: 87: 77: 58: 50: 1819:Defunct newspapers published in the United Kingdom 366:, the Sunday newspaper owned by the Lloyd family. 334:, in 1890–91. He went on to become editor of the 818:http://www.edwardlloyd.org/united-newspapers.pdf 727:, by Henry William Massingham (1902), Chapter 5. 172:, set up as a halfpenny 4-page weekly in 1855. 864: 477:Whatever the loss of independence did to the 8: 26: 647:Dictionary of Nineteenth-Century Journalism 181:London Daily Chronicle and Clerkenwell News 170:Clerkenwell News and Domestic Intelligencer 1316: 891: 871: 857: 849: 803:, by Guy Schofield (Cranford Press, 1974). 32: 25: 1839:1872 establishments in the United Kingdom 356:Donald had worked as news editor for the 639: 487:Honours (Prevention of Abuses) Act 1925 573:s adversary since its launch in 1896. 263:but it might well have supported the 7: 485:selling honours was thwarted by the 1829:Publications disestablished in 1960 521:, Inveresk's share price fell 80%. 14: 651:http://www.edwardlloyd.org/dc.htm 1791: 1790: 1617:Southern Daily Mail (Portsmouth) 1517:Jewish Post and Gazette (London) 881:newspapers of the United Kingdom 21:Daily Chronicle (disambiguation) 1780:Burney Collection of Newspapers 429:reported the debate factually. 1824:Newspapers established in 1872 1668:Western Independent (Plymouth) 1: 698:Stanford, Jane (2011-05-01). 1834:Daily Mail and General Trust 1704:Trewman's Exeter Flying Post 1577:Manchester Evening Chronicle 1502:Huddersfield Daily Chronicle 1507:Eastern Morning News (Hull) 1477:Darlington Evening Dispatch 1442:Birmingham Evening Despatch 1265:The Illustrated London News 801:The Men that Carry the News 668:For the years 1856-71, see 342:, a Liberal, took it over. 316:Although he worked for the 16:British newspaper 1872-1930 1855: 1487:Edinburgh Evening Dispatch 776:Journal of British Studies 409: 256:extracts and the theatre. 18: 1788: 1740:Edinburgh Evening Courant 1552:Liverpool Evening Express 1492:Evening Citizen (Glasgow) 1467:Chelmsford Evening Herald 1285:Shurey's Pictorial Budget 532:on and merge it into the 425:governmental crisis. The 31: 1658:Sunday Pink (Manchester) 1587:Nottingham Daily Express 1149:The Sunday Correspondent 1109:Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper 987:Financier and Bullionist 610:Henry William Massingham 1663:Sunday Sentinel (Stoke) 1627:Surrey Daily Advertiser 1592:Nottingham Evening News 1582:Northern Whig (Belfast) 1421:The Westminster Gazette 1159:Sunday Evening Telegram 251:The paper followed the 1637:Yorkshire Evening News 1537:Leicester Evening Mail 1482:Doncaster Evening Post 1426:Whitehall Evening Post 770:McEwen, J. M. (1982). 725:The London Daily Press 681:Joseph Hatton (1882). 437:. The prime mover was 1653:Sunday News (Belfast) 1522:Jewish Times (London) 1497:Hereford Evening News 1452:Bristol Evening World 1374:The Pall Mall Gazette 1104:Independent on Sunday 1012:The Morning Chronicle 704:. 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665: 662: 659: 655: 652: 648: 643: 640: 633: 629: 628:Ernest Perris 625: 623: 622:Robert Donald 619: 617: 613: 611: 607: 605: 601: 599: 595: 592: 591: 587: 585: 583: 579: 574: 572: 569:had been the 568: 567: 562: 558: 554: 549: 547: 543: 542: 537: 536: 531: 527: 522: 520: 514: 512: 508: 502: 498: 495: 490: 488: 482: 480: 475: 473: 472: 462: 460: 457: 452: 448: 446: 445: 440: 436: 430: 428: 422: 420: 413: 408: 404: 402: 398: 394: 388: 385: 377: 375: 373: 367: 365: 364: 359: 354: 352: 351:Robert Donald 348: 345:In 1899, the 343: 341: 337: 333: 332: 326: 323: 319: 314: 312: 307: 305: 300: 293: 291: 289: 285: 281: 276: 274: 270: 266: 262: 261:Liberal Party 257: 254: 249: 247: 242: 240: 239: 238:Daily Graphic 234: 233: 228: 227: 222: 221: 216: 215: 208: 201: 199: 197: 193: 188: 186: 182: 177: 173: 171: 167: 163: 155: 153: 151: 150: 145: 144: 139: 135: 131: 130: 119: 115: 112: 111: 106: 105: 92: 86: 83: 82:Liberal Party 80: 76: 73: 61: 57: 53: 49: 45: 41: 35: 30: 22: 1806: 1795: 1760: 1753: 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J. Fisher 581: 577: 575: 570: 564: 552: 550: 545: 539: 533: 529: 525: 523: 515: 510: 506: 503: 499: 493: 491: 483: 478: 476: 469: 466: 455: 453: 449: 442: 433:brothers of 431: 426: 423: 415: 405: 392: 389: 383: 381: 368: 361: 357: 355: 346: 344: 335: 329: 327: 317: 315: 308: 303: 301: 297: 294:Middle years 287: 283: 279: 277: 265:Labour Party 258: 250: 245: 243: 236: 230: 226:Morning Post 224: 218: 212: 209: 205: 196:Fleet Street 191: 189: 184: 180: 178: 174: 169: 166:Edward Lloyd 161: 159: 147: 141: 128: 127: 125: 117:Headquarters 108: 102: 39: 1748:The New Day 1411:(1893–1906) 1403:(1888–1960) 1395:(1792–1876) 1387:(1788–1831) 1369:London Lite 1260:The Graphic 1235:Early Times 1099:Empire News 972:Daily Sport 816:. See also 557:Suez crisis 463:Later years 202:Early years 1813:Categories 1527:Kent Today 1472:Daily Post 1322:newspapers 1290:The Sphere 1270:The Leader 962:Daily News 634:References 571:Chronicle' 566:Daily Mail 535:Daily News 519:1929 crash 479:Chronicle' 468:editor of 384:Chronicle' 347:Chronicle' 241:combined. 156:Foundation 143:Daily News 104:Daily News 1678:The Atlas 1349:The Globe 1042:New Daily 1002:Indicator 788:0021-9371 546:Chronicle 530:Chronicle 526:Chronicle 507:Chronicle 494:Chronicle 474:in 1924. 456:Chronicle 427:Chronicle 393:Chronicle 358:Chronicle 353:in 1904. 318:Chronicle 309:In 1894, 304:Chronicle 284:Telegraph 280:Chronicle 246:Chronicle 220:Telegraph 192:Chronicle 183:to plain 138:newspaper 134:left-wing 1797:Category 1687:Weeklies 1416:True Sun 1400:The Star 1384:The Star 1329:The Echo 1313:Regional 1203:Weeklies 1052:The Post 997:The Hour 888:National 879:Defunct 821:Archived 754:Archived 654:Archived 331:The Star 322:Boer War 136:British 1773:Related 1765:(daily) 1646:Sundays 1435:Dailies 1408:The Sun 1392:The Sun 1240:The Era 1220:The Age 1092:Sundays 977:The Day 895:Dailies 740:(2011). 588:Editors 517:In the 378:Buy-out 95: ( 64: ( 59:Founded 1210:Action 1078:(2006) 1070:(1865) 786:  708:  626:1918: 620:1904: 614:1899: 608:1895: 602:1890: 596:1877: 563:whose 336:Nation 132:was a 120:London 72:London 1717:Other 1083:Today 288:Times 214:Times 840:The 784:ISSN 706:ISBN 551:The 278:The 235:and 160:The 126:The 97:1930 93:1930 66:1872 62:1872 51:Type 509:or 70:in 1815:: 780:22 778:. 774:. 584:. 548:. 489:. 399:. 271:. 229:, 223:, 217:, 152:. 872:e 865:t 858:v 790:. 760:. 714:. 99:) 68:) 23:.

Index

Daily Chronicle (disambiguation)

Treaty of Versailles
London
Liberal Party
Daily News
News Chronicle
left-wing
newspaper
Daily News
News Chronicle
Edward Lloyd
Fleet Street
Times
Telegraph
Morning Post
Evening Standard
Daily Graphic
London County Council
Liberal Party
Labour Party
Irish home rule
John O'Connor Power
Henry Massingham
Boer War
The Star
John Maynard Keynes
Robert Donald
Lloyd's Weekly News
David Lloyd George

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