George Stiff
George Stiff (1807–1873) was an English engraver and newspaper proprietor.
Stiff worked as foreman of the engravers in the Illustrated London News before becoming a newspaper proprietor himself in the 1840s. A paper called The Illustrated Weekly Times failed after a few weeks, but The London Journal (started 1845) was a huge success as a penny fiction weekly. By 1847 Stiff was able to begin the Weekly Times: this "would eventually become one of the four high-circulation threepenny Sunday papers which dominated the mid-century middle-market for news, with Reynolds's [Weekly] Newspaper (1850-1923), Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper (1842-1918), and the News of the World (1843-1910)."[1]
Notes
- Andrew King, The London Journal, Ashgate, 2004, pp. 67-8
gollark: ++apioform
gollark: Go consume a
gollark: Hmm, it's 1.8 million ish.
gollark: This year contained COVID-19, see.
gollark: Anyway, more than a million (I think?) people died to COVID-19 this year, which is actually quite bad.
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