the outports,
whilst those for the Ministerial
journals were
allowed to proceed. This might have crushed a weaker man, but it
did not crush Walter. Of course he expostulated. He was
informed at the Home Secretary's office that he might be
permitted to receive his foreign papers as a favour. But as this
implied the
expectation of a favour from him in return, the
proposal was rejected; and, determined not to be baffled, he
employed special couriers, at great cost, for the purpose of
obtaining the earliest
transmission of foreign intelligence.
These important qualities--
enterprise,
energy, business tact, and
public spirit--sufficiently
account for his
remarkable success.
To these, however, must be added another of no small importance--
discernment and knowledge of
character. Though himself the head
and front of his
enterprise, it was necessary that he should
secure the services and co-operation of men of first-rate
ability; and in the
selection of such men his judgment was almost
unerring. By his discernment and munificence, he collected round
him some of the ablest writers of the age. These were frequently
revealed to him in the communications of correspondents--the
author of the letters signed "Vetus" being thus selected to write
in the leading columns of the Paper. But Walter himself was the
soul of The Times. It was he who gave the tone to its articles,
directed its influence, and superintended its entire conduct with
unremitting vigilance.
Even in conducting the
mechanicalarrangements of the paper--a
business of no small difficulty--he had often occasion to
exercise promptness and
boldness of decision in cases of
emergency. Printers in those days were a rather refractory class
of work men, and not unfrequently took
advantage of their
position to
impose hard terms on their employers, especially in
the daily press, where everything must be
promptly done within a
very
limited time. Thus on one occasion, in 1810, the pressmen
made a sudden demand upon the
proprietor for an increase of
wages, and insisted upon a uniform rate being paid to all hands,
whether good or bad. Walter was at first disposed to make
concessions to the men; but having been
privately informed that a
combination was already entered into by the compositors, as well
as by the pressmen, to leave his
employment suddenly, under
circumstances that would have stopped the
publication of the
paper, and inflicted on him the most serious
injury, he
determined to run all risks, rather than
submit to what now
appeared to him in the light of an extortion.
The strike took place on a Saturday morning, when suddenly, and
without notice, all the hands turned out. Mr. Walter had only a
few hours' notice of it, but he had already
resolved upon his
course. He collected apprentices from half a dozen different
quarters, and a few
inferiorworkmen, who were glad to
obtainemployment on any terms. He himself stript to his shirt-sleeves,
and went to work with the rest; and for the next six-and-thirty
hours he was
incessantly employed at case and at press. On the
Monday morning, the conspirators, who had assembled to triumph
over his ruin, to their inexpressible
amazement saw The Times
issue from the publishing office at the usual hour, affording a
memorable example of what one man's
resoluteenergy may
accomplish in a moment of difficulty.
The
journal continued to appear with regularity, though the
printers employed at the office lived in a state of daily peril.
The conspirators,
finding themselves baffled,
resolved upon
trying another game. They contrived to have two of the men
employed by Walter as compositors apprehended as deserters from
the Royal Navy. The men were taken before the magistrate; but
the
charge was only sustained by the
testimony of clumsy,
perjured witnesses, and fell to the ground. The turn-outs next
proceeded to
assault the new hands, when Mr. Walter
resolved to
throw around them the
protection of the law. By the advice of
counsel, he had twenty-one of the conspirators apprehended and
tried, and nineteen of them were found
guilty and condemned to
various periods of
imprisonment. From that moment combination
was at an end in Printing House Square.
Mr. Walter's greatest
achievement was his successful application
of steam power to newspaper printing. Although he had greatly
improved the
mechanicalarrangements after he took command of the
paper, the rate at which the copies could be printed off remained
almost
stationary. It took a very long time indeed to throw off,
by the hand-labour of pressmen, the three or four thousand copies
which then constituted the ordinary
circulation of The Times. On
the occasion of any event of great public interest being reported
in the paper, it was found almost impossible to meet the demand
for copies. Only about 300 copies could be printed in the hour,
with one man to ink the types and another to work the press,
while the labour was very
severe. Thus it took a long time to
get out the daily
impression, and very often the evening papers
were out before The Times had half supplied the demand.
Mr. Walter could not brook the tedium of this irksome and
laborious process. To increase the number of
impressions, he
resorted to various expedients. The type was set up in
duplicate, and even in triplicate; several Stanhope presses were
kept
constantly at work; and still the insatiable demands of the
newsmen on certain occasions could not be met. Thus the question
was early forced upon his
consideration, whether he could not
devise machinery for the purpose of expediting the production of
newspapers. Instead of 300
impressions an hour, he wanted from
1500 to 2000. Although such a speed as this seemed quite as
chimerical as propelling a ship through the water against wind
and tide at fifteen miles an hour, or
running a
locomotive on a
railway at fifty, yet Mr. Walter was impressed with the
conviction that a much more rapid printing of newspapers was
feasible than by the slow hand-labour process; and he endeavoured
to induce several
ingeniousmechanical contrivers to take up and
work out his idea.
The principle of producing
impressions by means of a
cylinder,
and of inking the types by means of a
roller, was not new. We
have seen, in the
precedingmemoir, that as early as 1790 William
Nicholson had
patented such a method, but his
scheme had never
been brought into practical operation. Mr. Walter endeavoured to
enlist Marc Isambard Brunel--one of the cleverest inventors of
the day--in his proposed method of rapid printing by machinery;
but after labouring over a
variety of plans for a considerable
time, Brunel finally gave up the printing machine,
unable to make
anything of it. Mr. Walter next tried Thomas Martyn, an
ingenious young compositor, who had a
scheme for a self-acting
machine for
working the printing press. He was supplied with the
necessary funds to
enable him to
prosecute his idea; but Mr.
Walter's father was opposed to the
scheme, and when the funds
became exhausted, this
scheme also fell to the ground.
As years passed on, and the
circulation of the paper increased,
the necessity for some more expeditious method of printing became
still more
urgent. Although Mr. Walter had declined to enter
into an
arrangement with Bensley in 1809, before Koenig had
completed his
invention of printing by
cylinders, it was
different five years later, when Koenig's printing machine was
actually at work. In the
precedingmemoir, the circumstances
connected with the
adoption of the
invention by Mr. Walter are
fully
related; as well as the
announcement made in The Times on
the 29th of November, 1814--the day on which the first newspaper
printed by steam was given to the world.
But Koenig's printing machine was but the
beginning of a great
new branch of industry. After he had left this country in
disgust, it remained for others to perfect the
invention;
although the
ingenious German was entitled to the greatest credit
for having made the first
satisfactorybeginning. Great
inventions are not brought forth at a heat. They are begun by
one man, improved by another, and perfected by a whole host of