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Times, The

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The Times Summary

daily newspaper published in London, one of Britain's oldest and most influential newspapers. It is generally accounted, with The Guardian and The Daily Telegraph, one of Britain's “big three” and has long been recognized as one of the world's greatest newspapers.

Founded by John Walter on Jan. 1, 1785, as The Daily Universal Register, the newspaper began as a 2 12-penny broadsheet whose main function was to publicize a system of typography in which Walter was then interested. It became The Times on Jan. 1, 1788, publishing commercial news and notices, along with some scandal. The founder's son, John Walter II, took over the newspaper in 1803. He expanded it from 4 pages to 12 large pages, and, by the time control of the paper passed to his son, John Walter III, in 1848, the foundations of The Times's reputation as Britain's preeminent national journal and daily historical record had been laid.

Under its first great liberal editor, Thomas Barnes (editor from 1817 to 1841), The Times developed into a strong independent newspaper popularly described as the “Thunderer.” By the mid-1800s it had become a widely respected influence on British public opinion, and its circulation had grown from 5,000 in 1815 to 40,000 in 1850. A companion weekly with its own editorial staff, The Sunday Times (q.v.), was established in 1822. The Times maintained rigorous standards of reporting and writing and strove for meticulous accuracy. It came to be ruled by tradition, although its editorial views were independent, articulate, and strong. It was also seen as the very epitome of the British establishment, yet repeatedly it introduced innovative changes. John T. Delane became editor in 1841, and in his 36-year tenure his brilliant journalistic imprint was left on every aspect of the paper. In the midst of expanding The Times's national coverage, he hired the world's first war correspondent, William Howard Russell, to cover the Crimean War (1853–56)—the British government first learned of Russian peace proposals in The Times.

Late in the 19th century, overspending and the inadvertent publication of a forgery against the Irish hero Charles Stewart Parnell brought The Times's finances, reputation, and circulation to a serious low. As part of a recovery effort, The Times entered into an agreement with the publishers of Encyclopædia Britannica for advertising and selling the 9th and 10th editions. It was not until 1908—when the sensationalist press lord Alfred Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Northcliffe, purchased the paper—that The Times was financially secure, but its editorial reputation continued to deteriorate until Lord Northcliffe's death in 1922. In the 1950s, when Sir William Haley, then the director general of the BBC, became the editor (1952–67), The Times became once again a great newspaper. Makeup and editorial changes were introduced to make the paper more lively and interesting. News was put permanently on its front page in 1966 in place of advertisements. Modern typesetting and printing equipment were acquired, which led to a disabling strike that resulted in suspension of publication for a year in 1978–79. But the newspaper and its reputation survived, and The Times and its companion paper, The Sunday Times, continued to thrive. In 1981 both papers were acquired by Rupert Murdoch, the Australian newspaper publisher.

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    Times, The from Encyclopedia Brittanica. ©2009 Encyclopedia Brittanica. All rights reserved.

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