Samuel Bennett

Samuel Bennett (28 March 1815 – 2 June 1878) was a journalist, newspaper owner and historian in colonial Australia.[1]

Background

Bennett was born in Camborne, Cornwall, England.[2] He went to Australia in 1841, having been engaged by Messrs. Stevens & Stokes of The Sydney Morning Herald to superintend the typographical department of that paper. Having held this post for seventeen years, in 1859 Bennett purchased The Empire newspaper which had been started by Henry Parkes nine years previously. Messrs. Hanson & Bennett conducted The Empire for several years as a daily and weekly journal, Bennett becoming sole proprietor some time before it ceased publication.[1]

Bennett also started in 1867 The Evening News, and in 1870 The Australian Town and Country Journal, a weekly newspaper, both of which achieved phenomenal success, with circulations of 32,000 and 30,000 respectively in 1881.[2] Bennett was the author of The History of Australian Discovery and Colonisation, which is recognised as a standard work of reference.

Legacy

Bennett died at his residence, Mundarrah Towers, Little Coogee, Sydney, New South Wales, of tetanus on 2 June 1878.[1][3] Bennett had married Eliza née Sellers of Bristol; they had seven children together. Bennett was survived by three sons (all three — Alfred b.1851, Frank b.1853 and Christopher b.1857 — joined their father and continued his newspaper business, his will providing for his eldest surviving son to be the managing proprietor, they succeeded each other in birth order) and a daughter, Rose, also a proprietor, who married Sir John Henniker Heaton, 1st Baronet.[3]

References

  1. Mennell, Philip (1892). "Bennett, Samuel" . The Dictionary of Australasian Biography. London: Hutchinson & Co via Wikisource.
  2. Eathorne, John R. (10 November 1881). "The Energy and Enterprise of Cornishman in New South Wales and other Colonies". The Cornishman (174). p. 6.
  3. Bryce, Merilyn J. "Bennett, Samuel (1815–1878)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Melbourne University Press. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 26 March 2018 via National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
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