On this day … 8 June 1912

The Preston Guardian carried a letter from Anthony Hewitson recalling his time working for that paper. The letter was written shortly before his death and he was looking back on a life in newspapers. That working life began in 1850 when he arrived in Lancaster from his native Ingleton to begin a seven-year apprenticeship as a printer on the Lancaster Gazette.

He was the product of yet another Lancashire family that could trace its good fortune to the profits of the slave trade. His grandparents, with whom he lived in Ingleton, had inherited enough money for the grandfather to give up work. The inheritance came from the estate of a woman who had received something in the region of half a million pounds in todayโ€™s money as compensation for the freeing of 174 slaves on her sugar plantation in the West Indies.

While training as a printer he taught himself shorthand and was soon writing for his own paper and for the Manchester Guardian. And so, when he completed his printing apprenticeship he began work as a journalist, arriving at the Preston Guardian in 1858.

Over the next ten years he worked at different times for three of the four newspapers in Preston, as well as freelancing for several national titles, until in 1868 he bought the Preston Chronicle for ยฃ580.

He was both owner and editor of the paper for more than twenty years, selling it in 1890 but continuing in the newspaper industry. He launched a Conservative publication in Lancaster in 1893, and in 1896 bought the Wakefield Herald, putting in his son Ethelbert to run it for him.

In his semi-retirement he spent his winters in Preston, he was living in Queenโ€™s Road in Fulwood when he wrote his recollections for the Guardian, and the summers in Morecambe.

As well as writing for his own and many other papers, he published several books on the history of the town that together provide the best source for interested in the history of Preston. And the great bonus for local historians is that most of them, including the Preston Chronicle are now available on line.

Also on line is the first volume of the diary he kept which provides a unique insight into the daily working life of a Victorian provincial journalist. That volume, which is the source for this post, has been edited by Andrew Hobbs: https://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0262. A second volume should be out shortly.

Cover of vol 2 of The Diaries of Anthony Hewitson

To learn more why not come along to the talk Andrew is giving in UCLanโ€™s Mitchell & Kenyon Cinema, in the Foster Building on 3 July from 7.00pm to 8.30pm. It is just one of Preston Historical Societyโ€™s diamond jubilee events. To book and find out more visit http://www.prestonhistoricalsociety.org.uk/future-events.


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