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H. W. Massingham : ウィキペディア英語版 | Henry William Massingham
Henry William Massingham (25 May 1860 - 27 August 1924) was an English journalist, editor of ''The Nation'' from 1907 to 1923.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Magazine Data Page 219 )〕 In his time it was considered the leading British Radical weekly.〔Richard A. Rempel (editor), ''The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell'' (2003), p. 3.〕 ==Life== He became editor of London paper ''The Star'' in 1890, though being replaced by Ernest Parke in 1891.〔()〕 In 1888 as deputy editor to T. P. O'Connor〔() 〕 he had given George Bernard Shaw his break in journalism, appointing him deputy drama critic to Belfort Bax.〔Michael Holroyd, ''Bernard Shaw'' (1997 one-volume edition), p. 121.〕 He edited the ''Daily Chronicle'' 1897-9, but in November 1899 was forced out because his editorial line on the Second Boer War was hostile to the government.〔Alfred F. Havighurst, ''Britain in Transition: The Twentieth Century'' (1985), p. 9.〕 His departure from ''The Nation'' was a matter of party politics: he had broken from the Liberals under David Lloyd George, in favour of the Labour Party. A change of ownership was putting control in the hands of John Maynard Keynes, a Liberal. Massingham during the short remainder of his life was a columnist, in the ''Christian Science Monitor'' and ''The Spectator''.
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