Arthur Mee

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email

(1875–1943), journalist, editor of The Children's Encyclopedia and The Children's Newspaper. Sir Arthur Henry Mee was described by Sir John Hammerton in his biography as “a child of wonder moving through a world of endless surprise to his questing mind.” He succeeded in conveying this marveling excitement to young readers. The second son of a railway worker's ten children, he went to work with the Nottingham Evening Post when he was fourteen, getting his learning from books at the Nottingham Mechanics' Institute. Even in those early days he wrote with amazing speed and facility and had begun to form the massive collection of press cuttings to which he constantly added and which he was to use in his later educational works. He moved to work in London in 1896 and in 1905 was recruited by Lord Northcliffe, founder of the Amalgamated Press and one of the most powerful and frenetic of all press lords (he died insane in 1922), as literary editor of the Daily Mail. Always fertile in ideas, Mee, seeing the popular demand for easy educational works, suggested a children's encyclopedia to be published in periodical form. Northcliffe was dubious, but Mee, though much in awe of his chief, doggedly produced compelling samples of advertising copy, and the first fortnightly part appeared in March 1908. So great was its success that the Educational Book Company, a Northcliffe subsidiary, sold little else for twenty years. “Few men in England have such power as you,” Northcliffe told Mee in 1910. His name was now enough to sell any book—and the ingredients of the Children's Encyclopedia and his cuttings collection were to be shuffled and presented anew in many of his other educational publications. Among these was the Children's Newspaper, which Mee initiated in 1919 and edited until his death in 1943.

Top
Arthur Mee
Born 21 July 1875
Stapleford, Nottinghamshire
Died 27 May 1943
London
Occupation writer, journalist, educator
Nationality British

Arthur Henry Mee (21 July 1875 – 27 May 1943) was a British writer, journalist and educator. He is best known for The Harmsworth Self-Educator, The Children's Encyclopædia, The Children's Newspaper, and The King's England. He produced other works, usually with a patriotic tone, especially on the subjects of history or the countryside.

Contents

Biography

He was born on 21 July 1875 at Stapleford near Nottingham, England, the second of the ten children of Henry Mee (b. 1852), railway fireman, and his wife, Mary (née Fletcher). As a boy he earned money from reading the reports of Parliament to a local blind man. He left school at 14 to join a local newspaper, where he became an editor by age 20. He contributed many non-fiction articles to magazines and joined the staff of The Daily Mail in 1898. He was made literary editor five years later.

In 1903 he began working for publisher Alfred Harmsworth's Amalgamated Press. He was appointed general editor of The Harmsworth Self-Educator (1905–1907),[1] in collaboration with John Hammerton.

In 1908 he began work on The Children's Encyclopædia, which came out as a fortnightly magazine. The series was published and bound in eight volumes soon afterwards, and later expanded to ten volumes. After the success of The Children's Encyclopædia, he started the first newspaper published for children, the weekly The Children's Newspaper, which was published until 1965.

Mee also wrote London – Heart of the Empire and Wonder of the Word which became a very popular book. [2]

Although he made money from these works, he did not receive a fair share.[3] He had a large house built overlooking the hills near Eynsford in Kent. Its development from design to the final building was depicted in later editions of The Children's Encyclopædia.

Mee had one child, but, despite his work, declared that he had no particular affinity with children. His works for them suggest that his interest was in trying to encourage the raising of a generation of patriotic and moral citizens. He came from a Baptist upbringing, and supported the temperance movement.

He died in London and his books continued to be published after his death, most noticeably The King's England, a guide to the counties of England, which is being progressively republished. Mee's works were successful abroad. The Children's Encyclopædia was translated into Chinese and sold well in the United States under the title The Book of Knowledge.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Alfred Deakin Prime Ministerial Library webpage on Arthur Mee"
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ John Hammerton (1946) Child of Wonder: An Intimate Biography of Arthur Mee
  • Gillian Elias (1993) Arthur Mee - Journalist in Chief to British Youth
  • Maisie Robson (2003) Arthur Mee's Dream of England
  • Enchanted Land: Half-a-Million Miles in the King's England, Introductory Volume to the UK series known as The King's England - (A New Domesday Book of 10,000 Towns and Villages) [note 1]

Further reading

  • The World of the Edwardian Child, as seen in Arthur Mee's Children's Encyclopædia, 1908-1910 by Michael Tracy (2008)[2] This includes more information and a new assessment of Arthur Mee and his work, also that of other contributors to the Encyclopædia, and a summary of Hammerton's biography.

External links

Footnotes

  1. ^ Details of all the 41 titles obtained from a copy of The King's England series, originally published by Hodder and Stoughton, London, which were illustrated with 10,000 places and 6,000 photographs commencing about 1936

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

Copyrights: