How We Saw It: 150 Years of The Daily Telegraph 1855 - 2005

How We Saw It: 150 Years of The Daily Telegraph 1855 - 2005

by Christopher Howse (Author)

Synopsis

When Captain Webb swam the Channel, the man from the Telegraph was beside him in a boat. The paper sent Stanley to Africa and George Smith to discover the Babylonian story of Noah on ancient tablets. The 22-year-old Churchill wrote from the North-West frontier at [pound]5 a column, and Kipling from the front in the First World War. As well as showcasing the talents of these many eminent correspondents How We Saw It gives a fascinating picture of the way people lived and what they wanted during the last century and a half. From the girl who became the Talking Clock and the night that Crystal Palace burnt, to salmonella infected eggs and Tracey Emin's controversial works on display at the Tate, this book gives the news as it was experienced at the time, without the luxury of hindsight. Lavishly illustrated throughout with photographs from the Daily Telegraph archives and featuring newsflashes, letters to the editor, contributions from writers such as Charles Dickens, Oscar Wilde, John Keegan and A.N. Wilson, and a foreword from Lord Deedes, the book adds up to a riveting slice of history before the freshness wore off.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 256
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Ebury Press
Published: 07 Oct 2004

ISBN 10: 0091894638
ISBN 13: 9780091894634
Book Overview: Published to tie in with the Daily Telegraph's 150th anniversary celebrations

Author Bio
Christopher Howse has for the past twenty years made history a hobby. Formerly comment editor and obituaries editor of the Daily Telegraph, and now assistant editor and a celebrated columnist, he is the author of a string of successful books including AD: 2000 Years of Christianity and Daily Telegraph Best Sermons Ever. He was educated at St John's College Oxford and now lives in London, between Westminster Cathedral and Westminster Abbey.