Freepedia
is a series of free encyclopaedias. We currently specialize in history
but we intend to branch out into other areas. This section is about
the Daily Mail.
In
1887 the journalist Alfred Harmsworth
formed a new publishing business. Early publications included Answers
(1888) and Comic
Cuts
(1890) and in 1894 went into newspapers when he acquired the London
Evening News.
Alfred
Harmsworth now decided to start a new
paper based on the style of newspapers published in the USA. By the
time the first issue of the Daily
Mail appeared for the first time
on 4th May, 1896, over 65 dummy runs had taken place. For each of these
the complete papers were produced at a cost of £40,000. The eight
page newspaper cost only halfpenny. Slogans used to sell the newspaper
included 'A Penny Newspaper for One Halfpenny' and 'The Busy Man's Daily
Newspaper'.
The Daily
Mail
was the first newspaper in Britain that catered
for a new reading public that needed something simpler, shorter and
more readable than those that had previously been available. One new
innovation was the banner headline that went right across the page.
Considerable space was given to sport and human interest stories. It
was also the first newspaper to include a woman's section that dealt
with issues such as fashions and cookery.
Another innovation introduced by the Daily
Mail
was the publication of serials. Personally supervised
by Harmsworth, the average length was 100,000 words. The opening episode
was 5,000 words and had to have a dramatic impact on the readers. This
was followed by episodes of 1,500 to 2,000 words every day.
The newspaper was an immediate success and circulation quickly achieved
500,000. With the strong interest in the Boer
War in 1899 sales went to over a million.
Harmsworth encouraged people to buy the Daily
Mail
for nationalistic reasons making it clear to his readers that his newspaper
stood "for the power, the supremacy and the greatness of the British
Empire".
Harmsworth also used his newspapers to promote inventions such as the
telephone, electric light, photography, motorcycles and motor cars.
He was so passionate about cars that Harmsworth prohibited the editor
of the Daily
Mail
from reporting automobile accidents.
The popularity of the newspaper increased with the use of promotional
activities. This included the offer of prizes for the first-ever flights
across the Channel and Atlantic.
Although aimed at a mass audience, Alfred
Harmsworth employed the best journalists available. This included
people such as Henry Hamilton Fyfe and Philip
Gibbs.
Alfred
Harmsworth was a great supporter
of flying and in 1906 offered a prize of £1,000 for the first airman
to cross the English Channel from Calais to Dover and £10,000 prize
for the first completed flight from London
to Manchester. The idea seemed so preposterous
that Punch Magazine decided to poke
fun at Harmsworth by offering a prize of £10,000 for the first
flight to Mars. However, by June 1910, both of Harmsworth's prizes had
been won by French pilots.
Harmsworth was worried about the possible consequences of aircraft for
the defence of Britain. He realised that it would soon be possible for
foreign pilots to drop bombs on Britain. He wrote a letter warning Richard
Haldane, Secretary of War, about his concerns, but failed to persuade
the government that this danger existed.
Before the outbreak of the First World War Harmsworth
was accused of being a war-monger. As early as 1897 he had sent the
writer G. W. Steevens to Germany to produce
a sixteen-part series entitled Under the Iron Heel. The articles
praised the German Army and warned that
Britain was in danger of being defeated in a war against Germany. Three
years later Northcliffe wrote an editorial in the Daily
Mail predicting a war with Germany
In October 1909 Harmsworth (now Lord Northcliffe) employed Robert
Blatchford, the Socialist editor of
the Clarion, to visit Germany to write
a series of articles for the newspaper on the dangers that the Germans
posed to Britain. Blatchford agreed with Northcliffe on the problem
and in one article wrote: "I believe that Germany is deliberately
preparing to destroy the British Empire" and warned that Britain
needed to spend more money in defending itself against attack.
Soon after the outbreak of the First World War
the editor of The Star newspaper claimed
that: "Next to the Kaiser, Lord Northcliffe has done more than
any living man to bring about the war."
Lord Northcliffe was determined to make
the Daily Mail the official newspaper
of the British Army. Every day 10,000 copies
of the paper were delivered to the Western
Front by military motor cars. He also had the revolutionary idea
of using front-line soldiers as news sources. In August 1914 he announced
a scheme where he would pay soldiers for articles written about their
experiences.
During the early stages of the conflict Northcliffe created a great
deal of controversy by advocating conscription
and criticizing Lord Kitchener. In an
article he wrote in the Daily Mail on
21st May, 1915, Northcliffe wrote a blistering attack on the Secretary
of State for War: "Lord Kitchener has starved the army in France
of high-explosive shells. The admitted fact is that Lord Kitchener ordered
the wrong kind of shell - the same kind of shell which he used largely
against the Boers in 1900. He persisted in sending shrapnel - a useless
weapon in trench warfare. He was warned repeatedly that the kind of
shell required was a violently explosive bomb which would dynamite its
way through the German trenches and entanglements and enable our brave
men to advance in safety. This kind of shell our poor soldiers have
had has caused the death of thousands of them."
Lord Kitchener was a national hero and
Harmsworth's attack on him upset a great number of readers. Overnight,
the circulation of the Daily Mail dropped
from 1,386,000 to 238,000. A placard was hung across the newspaper nameplate
with the words "The Allies of the Huns". Over 1,500 members
of the Stock Exchange had a meeting where they passed a motion against
the "venomous attacks of the Hamsworth Press" and afterwards
ceremoniously burnt copies of the offending newspaper.
Although the leader of the government, Herbert
Asquith, accused Northcliffe and his newspapers of disloyalty, he
privately accepted that shell production was a real problem and he appointed
David Lloyd George as the new Munitions Minister.
Lord Northcliffe also used the newspaper
to attack the government for the failed operation at Gallipoli.
He wrote about the "forty thousand killed, missing or drowned;
three hundred millions of treasury thrown away" and argued that
even if the campaign had been successful "to win this war, the
German line itself must be broken" on the Western
Front.
Lord Northcliffe continued his attacks
on Lord Kitchener and when he heard he
had been killed he remarked: "The British Empire has just had the
greatest stroke of luck in its history." After the death of Kitchener
he concentrated on having Herbert Asquith
removed. Not only did he criticise Asquith as a man of inaction but
claimed that Germany was afraid that David Lloyd
George would become prime minister.
When Asquith resigned in December, 1916, the new prime minister, David
Lloyd George decided that it was be safer to have Northcliffe in
his government. However, Northcliffe refused an offer of a place in
Lloyd George's cabinet as he knew it would undermine his ability to
criticise the government.
Although David Lloyd George offered Lord
Northcliffe a cabinet position he disliked the man intensely. In
a confidential letter to his Parliamentary Private Secretary he wrote
at the time he claimed that: "Northcliffe is one of the biggest
intriguers and most unscrupulous people in the country."
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The Daily Mail (30th June, 1918)
Daily
Mail: Wikipedia
Daily
Mail:
Spartacus Educational
Forum
Debates
War
Propaganda Bureau
Daily
Mail
(1)
At
the beginning of the First World War, Basil Clarke
attempted to write about the Western Front
without the permission of the French and British military authorities.
Even to live in the war
zone without papers and credentials was hard enough, but to move about
and see things, and pick up news and then to get one's written dispatches
conveyed home - against all regulations - was a labour greater and more
complex than anything I have ever undertaken in journalistic work. I
longed sometimes to be arrested and sent home and done with it all.
I evaded the authorities in France and Flanders in 1914-1915 for five
months - going to the Front on average two or three times a week. I
had apartments or hotel rooms in three districts, and when things became
hot in one place I moved to another of my bases.
(2)
The
Daily Mail
(19th April, 1915)
The Germans have this advantage
over us, that their public is kept interested in the war. By brilliant
war correspondents and constantly changing kinematograph films and photographs,
every man, women and child knows what the war means and how the nation
is fighting. In this country anyone who goes about among the populace
finds that few of the masses understand what the war is about. They
are told very little of the horrors of war as waged by Germany. They
do not understand what defeat would mean to us.
(3)
The Daily Mail (21st May, 1915)
Lord Kitchener has starved the army in France
of high-explosive shells. The admitted fact is that Lord Kitchener ordered
the wrong kind of shell - the same kind of shell which he used largely
against the Boers in 1900. He persisted in sending shrapnel - a useless
weapon in trench warfare. He was warned repeatedly that the kind of
shell required was a violently explosive bomb which would dynamite its
way through the German trenches and entanglements and enable our brave
men to advance in safety. This kind of shell our poor soldiers have
had has caused the death of thousands of them.
(4)
Lord Northcliffe, The Daily Mail
(23rd August, 1915)
The daily losses in the war, on ordinary
days, where there is no attempt to advance, are about 2,000, according
to official casualty lists. We are growing callous about the size of
the daily lists of killed, wounded and missing. Very few people read
even the headings of them, comparatively few grasp the fact that after
vast losses we are just where we were six months ago on our little line
in the Franco-Belgian Frontier. Thousands of homes are mourning today
for men who have been needlessly sacrificed.