On this significant day, a theory on why the…

On this significant day, a theory on why the… - Scottish Review article by Chris Holme
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On this significant day,
a theory on why the Scots
still lack well-being


John Cameron
Farewell, Shetland

It looks as if snow
is only for kids
from private schools


Barney MacFarlane
It’s worse with Corden in it

Let me introduce you
to the internet version

of the pub bore


Quintin Jardine
Catalonia and language

Burns’ masterpiece Tam O Shanter has been described by BBC Scotland as ‘the tale of a man who stays too long at a pub’. Readers are invited to summarise other world masterpieces in the same way. Nominations to:
islay@scottishreview.net

Friends

SR’s remarkable growth as an independent magazine is based largely on word of mouth. Here are examples of our journalism:

* SR played a leading role in the successful campaign to save St Margaret of Scotland Hospice

* SR campaigned for greater transparency in Scottish public life and won a landmark judgement from the Scottish information commissioner which has led to a transformation in the information available about executive salaries and pensions in public bodies

*  Having discovered elderly people still living in a near-derelict block of flats in Glasgow, sometimes without a water supply, SR campaigned to have them decently re-housed. With the help of Scotland’s housing minister, Alex Neil, we succeeded

* SR continues to campaign – so far without success – to broaden the range of appointments to national organisations beyond a self-perpetuating elite

Islay McLeod
Islay’s Scotland

Forthouse

Under the Forth road bridge
Photograph by Islay McLeod

Lifeandletters

The most famous headline

in Scottish journalism

turns out to be a myth

Chris Holme

It’s the most persistent myth in British newspapers and has stuck like a limpet to the Press and Journal for a century: ‘North-east man lost at sea. 1,500 perish in Titanic disaster’. Stand by for a lot more coverage of the centenary of the sinking in April – the P and J has already carried a piece on it for its recent relaunch.
     It was 16 April before the UK morning papers really had the chance to cover the disaster in detail. The Aberdeen Journal (it only became the Press and Journal in 1922, incorporating the Aberdeen Free Press) carried a sober and informative account, leading with ‘Mid-Atlantic Disaster – Titanic sunk by Iceberg – 1,683 Lives Lost, 675 Saved – Increasing Race to Rescue’. Not a hint of ‘North-east man’ then. Nor might it have been expected from its editor William (later Sir William) Maxwell.
     He had been recruited in 1910 from London and his goal was to make the Journal pre-eminent as the national Scottish newspaper, ahead of the Scotsman and Glasgow Herald. Maxwell greatly increased coverage of national stories, rescuing it from being the ‘mere local newspaper’ it was before his arrival. He may well have drawn this vision from one of the Titanic victims, W T Stead, the great pioneer of UK campaigning journalism, who had led a similar transformation at the Northern Echo in Darlington.
     Maxwell would certainly have known of Stead – they had both worked on the Pall Mall Gazette and the London Evening Standard albeit in different eras.
So could the headline have been on a bill or hoarding? I doubt it – ‘North Country’ was the preferred term at that time and was used in coverage of the torpedoing of the Lusitania three years later.
     ‘North-east’ man is a relative newcomer – although his ubiquity is the reason the myth sticks. Every day he’s killed in an accident, survives several more, appears in court, or is involved in a stushie somewhere else. Some guy.
Other myths continue to be challenged by media. First officer William Murdoch’s character assassination in the 1996 film triggered a campaign by Dorothy Grace Elder and the Galloway News which resulted in a donation from 20th Century Fox for an annual prize in Murdoch’s honour at Dalbeattie High School.
     And Maxwell’s vision for the Journal has also been realised 100 years later – as all circulations have sunk, it now comfortably outsells its morning rivals in Edinburgh and Glasgow. The growth of digital history means you can now look at original sources online. The British Library is digitising millions of newspaper pages with a technical partner, brightsolid, a Dundee-based company owned by D C Thomson, publishers of the P and J.
     They’ve only got as far as 1900 for the Aberdeen Journal, but you can get an earlier sinking feeling by looking at the Courier’s coverage of the Tay Bridge disaster.

Chris HolmeChris Holme is the founder of historycompany.co.uk