W. G. Fish
Male, Deceased Person
1874 – 1947
Who was W. G. Fish?
Walter George Fish, known as W. G. Fish, was a British newspaper editor.
Born in Accrington, Fish studied at Westminster City School before entering journalism. He joined the Daily Mail in 1904, and was promoted to news editor in 1906, quickly gaining attention by providing the first reports of Dr Crippen's arrest in Canada. During World War I, he worked for the Board of Trade, organising publicity for coal mining. He was promoted to become editor of the Mail in 1919. In 1922, he planned to sue the newspaper's owner, Lord Northcliffe, for libel, but was dissuaded and ultimately served until 1930. He spend his retirement as a director of the Mail, and during World War II he advised the Ministry of Information and the Press and Censorship Bureau.
In the late 1930s Fish and his second wife Margery bought East Lambrook Manor in Somerset, where they established a now-famous garden.
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- Born
- Jun 3, 1874
Accrington - Education
- Westminster City School
- Employment
- News Editor, Daily Mail
(1904 - )
- News Editor, Daily Mail
- Died
- 1947
Submitted
on July 23, 2013
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