Stead, William Thomas(b. July 5, 1849,
Embleton, Northumberland, Eng.--d. April 15, 1912, at sea, North Atlantic), British
journalist, editor, and publisher who founded the noted periodical Review of Reviews
(1890).
Stead was educated at home by his father, a clergyman, until he was 12 years old and
then attended Silcoates School at Wakefield. He became an apprentice in a merchant's
countinghouse and in about 1870 began to contribute to the Liberal daily newspaper Northern
Echo at Darlington. The following year he was invited to become the Echo's
editor. He and the paper diligently supported Prime Minister W.E. Gladstone. In 1880 he
went to London as assistant editor of the Pall Mall Gazette under John Morley,
later Viscount Morley. When Morley went into Parliament, Stead succeeded him as editor and
made of the Pall Mall Gazette a sprightly and unconventional journal. He introduced
such modern journalistic techniques as the use of illustrations. He also developed the
interview form in newspaper writing. His press campaigns effected many changes, including
the improvement of British naval defenses.
In 1890 Stead decided to give up daily journalism in favour of the monthly journal he
founded, Review of Reviews. He was known for his crusades in the journal's pages on
behalf of such diverse causes as British-Russian friendship, ending child prostitution,
the reform of England's criminal codes, and the maintenance of international peace. As
editor and publisher of the Review of Reviews, he wrote on psychic phenomena,
spiritualism, the "civic church," and many other subjects. In 1904 Stead tried
to found a newspaper, The Daily Paper, but it failed, and he narrowly avoided
bankruptcy.
Stead was traveling as a passenger on the British transatlantic liner Titanic
when the ship struck an iceberg and sank, and he was one of the estimated 1,500 passengers who perished.