Henry Sampson (newspaper proprietor)

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Henry Sampson (1841, Lincoln – 16 May 1891, London) was an English newspaper proprietor and editor.

Sampson was the son of a journalist. At the age of twelve, he entered a printing office in London, and became successively a compositor and proof-reader. From youth he was devoted to sport, and excelled as a boxer, runner, and sculler until he was twenty-three, when he was disabled by an accident to his left foot.

In 1866, he was engaged by Samuel Beeton to contribute sporting leaders to the Glow-Worm and the Weekly Dispatch. Afterwards he joined the staff of the Illustrated Sporting News and Theatrical Review, and early in 1869, was appointed editor of that journal. On its collapse on 19 March 1870, he became the first editor of the Latest News (No. 1, 29 Aug. 1869), a penny Sunday paper of sixteen pages, which ceased after No. 57 on 25 Sept. 1870. In 1870, he was engaged as a leader-writer on the Morning Advertiser, and started contributing to Fun. During the illness of Thomas Hood the younger, he acted as sub-editor of Fun, and after Hood's death in 1874 conducted the paper until February 1878. In 1875, 1876, 1877, and 1878, he edited Fun Comic Annual, and wrote stories for its pages.

Early in 1872, he started sending to the Weekly Dispatch, under the signature of ‘Pendragon,’ letters of general criticism on sport. Developing the scheme, he, on 19 Aug. 1877, as part proprietor and editor, under the same pseudonym of Pendragon, started a weekly sporting paper, The Referee. Its success soon enabled him to give up his other engagements and confine himself exclusively to his own paper for the remainder of his life.

He died at 6 Hall Road, St. John's Wood, London, on 16 May 1891.

Works[]

  • Dictionary of Modern Slang, 2nd ed. 1860.
  • A History of Advertising from the Earliest Times, 1874.
  • Modern Boxing, by Pendragon, 1878.

References[]

Attribution
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Sampson, Henry (1841-1891)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.

External links[]

Media offices
Preceded by
New position
Editor of The Referee
1877–1891
Succeeded by
Richard Butler
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