Richard Whiteing (1840-1928)
August 09, 2014
**Richard Whiteing (1840-1928) **was an ‘… English author and journalist… leader-writer and correspondent on the Morning Star, and was subsequently on the staff of the Manchester Guardian, the New York World, and for many years the Daily News, resigning from the last-named paper in 1899… No. 5 John Street (1899), made him famous...’
Richard Whiteing was an intimate friend of James John Garth Wilkinson ’…* I am not going on with my little essay on the Egypt of Correspondences. It has been interrupted by a very remarkable book by Richard Whiteing, No. 5 John Street. I have written a Swedenborg view of it. It deserves it, for it is an inspiration, or reflexion for purposes of use, of the Hades within it & above us, It maybe published! And if so you shall see it. Mr. Whiteing is an intimate friend of our house… (S_wedenborg Archive K125 [10] Letter dated 28.3.1899 from Garth Wilkinson to Rev Peter Melville.)*…’_
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Whiteing ’… *Richard Whiteing was born in London the son of Mary Lander and William Whiteing, a civil servant employed as an Inland Revenue Officer. His mother died early and Richard claimed to have spent much of his upbringing with foster parents. __For seven years in his youth Whiteing was apprenticed to Benjamin Wyon as a medalist and seal-engraver; meanwhile he was also educating himself on the side. In 1866, after a failed attempt to start his own medalist business, he turned to journalism as a career. He made his debut with a series of papers in the Evening Star in 1866, printed separately in the next year as Mr Sprouts, His Opinions. He became leader-writer and correspondent on the Morning Star, and was subsequently on the staff of the Manchester Guardian, the New York World, and for many years the Daily News, resigning from the last-named paper in 1899. __His first novel The Democracy (3 vols, 1876) was published under the pseudonym of Whyte Thorne. His second novel The Island (1888) was about a utopian life on Pitcairn Island; it attracted little attention until, years afterwards, its successor, No. 5 John Street (1899), made him famous; the earlier novel was then republished. No. 5 John Street has the character from the first novel return to London, but has no money, and describes the low-life of London. Later works were The Yellow Van (1903), Ring in the New (1906), All Moonshine (1907). __Whiteing died 29 June 1928 in Hampstead and is buried in the Parish Church of St. John-at-Hampstead, Church Row, London near his wife Helen… Whiteing’s autobiography, My Harvest, written in 1915, led many to believe he was an only child, whose mother had died in the 1840s when he was quite young. However family historian, Kathleen Whiteing Fitzgerald, revealed that Whiteing actually had three siblings. There were two brothers, Robert & George, who had both lived well into adulthood and a sister Elizabeth who died as an infant. Fitzgerald noted that in the 1861 London census Whiteing, then 20 years old, was listed as living with both of his parents and his younger brother George. Both of Richard’s parents died in 1886. In 1869 Whiteing married Helen, the ward/niece of Townsend Harris, US Ambassador to Japan. To their marriage was born an only child in 1872, Richard Clifford Whiteing. Their son married Ellen Marie Louise “Nell” DuMaurier in 1908, the niece of illustrator and novelist George Du Maurier and cousin of actor Gerald Du Maurier. After Whiteing’s separation from Helen, he lived for many years with journalist and children’s author Alice Corkran. He was also friends with her sister Henriette, who wrote an intimate account of him in her Celebrities and I*…’