Sunday Referee
Founder(s) | Richard Steele[1] |
---|---|
Founded | 1877[2] |
Ceased publication | 1939 (absorbed by the Sunday Chronicle)[3] |
The Sunday Referee was a Sunday
History
George Robert Sims, who was a popular journalist for The Referee was approached by East End headmistress Elizabeth Burgwin. Together they created the Referee Children's Free Breakfast and Dinner Fund. Sims to wrote appeals in The Referee for funds.[5] The fund they created became the largest charity supplying free school meals in London by 1900.[5]
In 1925/26 the paper gave front-page coverage for many weeks to apparent revelations by the writer Frank Power (real name Arthur Vectis Freeman) about the sinking of
The edition of May 24, 1936, had 24 broadsheet pages and cost twopence. The publisher was the Sunday Referee Publishing Company of 17 Tudor Street, London EC4. No edition number was carried. The front page masthead carried the paper's title in Gothic script above the slogan "The national newspaper for all thinking men and women". Seven pages showed the paper's interest in sport but there was also a range of general news, features and show business gossip typical of the Sunday press. One page, for instance, speculated with illustrations on which "beauties" would be the faces of the forthcoming BBC television service.[8]
In the 1930s, considerable money was invested in an attempt to compete with the leading Sunday newspapers, and circulation reached 400,000, but in 1939 it was merged with the Sunday Chronicle.[9]
Editors
- 1877: Henry Sampson[10]
- 1891: Richard Butler[10]
- 1922: Robert Donald[10]
- 1924: A. Laber[10]
- 1932: Mark Goulden[10]
- 1936: R. J. Minney[10]
References
- ^ Sir Richard Steele (1897). Selections from the Works of Sir Richard Steele. Ginn. pp. 14–.
- ISBN 978-1-349-62733-2.
- ^ Nicholas Kaldor; Rodney Silverman (1948). A Statistical Analysis of Advertising Expenditure and of the Revenue of the Press. CUP Archive. pp. 60–. GGKEY:R7P7G338959.
- ISBN 978-0-19-870264-1.
- ^ .
- ^ McKie, David "McKie's Gazetteer", Atlantic Books, 2008, pp 289-294
- ^ George Tremlett, Dylan Thomas
- ^ The edition of May 24, 1936
- ^ Harold Herd, The March of Journalism, p.266
- ^ a b c d e f David Butler and Jennie Freeman, British Political Facts, 1900-1960