Roy Thomson, 1st Baron Thomson of Fleet

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Roy Herbert Thomson, 1st Baron Thomson of Fleet, GBE (5 June 1894 – 4 August 1976) was a Canadian-born British newspaper proprietor who became one of the moguls of Fleet Street in London.[2]

The Lord Thomson of Fleet
Personal details
Born
Roy Herbert Thomson

(1894-06-05)5 June 1894
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Died4 August 1976(1976-08-04) (aged 82)
London, England
Resting placeToronto[1]
Spouse
Edna Annis Irvine
(m. 1916; died 1951)
Children3, including Kenneth
Known forEstablished radio station CFCH (1931), acquired Timmins Daily Press (1934), successful newspaper and other media entrepreneur.

He first came to prominence when he was selling radios in Ontario, and to give his customers more programmes to listen to, decided to launch his own radio station. He then moved into newspapers, becoming as wealthy and important in Canada as the press barons in the United Kingdom. He aspired to a peerage but was denied it unless he moved residence to the UK. He invited British newspaper owners to sell to him, the first doing so being The Scotsman and he soon formed a commercial television company which gained the first ITV franchise in Scotland, the Scottish Television, today known as STV, which is also nowadays the last ITV franchise not to be owned by ITV plc. From the substantial profits of commercial television, he bought many titles such as The Times and Kemsley Newspapers which published The Sunday Times;[3] both of these are nowadays owned by News UK, a division of News Corp.

Early life

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Thomson was born on 5 June 1894 as Roy Herbert Thomson in Toronto, then part of York County, Ontario, Canada. His father was Herbert Thomson, a telegraphist turned barber who worked at Toronto's Grosvenor Hotel (at the corner of Yonge and Alexander streets – now the site of the Courtyard Marriott), and English-born Alice Maud. The family lived at 32 Monteith Street, off Church Street in Toronto. Thomson's paternal grandparents were Hugh Thomson and Mary Nichol Sylvester. Hugh was one of ten children of George Thomson, son of Archibald Thomson (born May 1749).

Thomson's ancestors were small tenant farmers on the estates of the Dukes of Buccleuch at Bo'ness, in the parish of Westerkirk, Dumfriesshire, Scotland. Archibald Thomson emigrated from Westerkirk to Canada (then British North America) in 1773, and married Elizabeth McKay of Quebec. The family eventually settled in Upper Canada, but retained a sentimental attachment to their country of origin. Archibald's brother David Thomson was the first European settler of Scarborough, Ontario.

Career

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During World War I, Roy Thomson attended a business college, and owing to bad eyesight, avoided conscription [citation needed]. He went to Manitoba after the war to become a farmer, but was unsuccessful. Thomson returned to Toronto, where he held several jobs at different times, one of which was selling radio receivers. However, he found selling radios difficult because the only district left for him to work in was Northern Ontario. In order to give his potential customers something to listen to, he undertook to establish a radio station. By a stroke of luck, he was able to procure a radio frequency and transmitter for $201. CFCH officially went on the air in North Bay, Ontario, on 3 March 1931. He sold radio receivers for some time after that, but his focus gradually shifted to the radio station.

Thomson purchased the Timmins Daily Press in Timmins, Ontario, his first newspaper, with a down payment of $200 in 1934 (an equivalent of $3,816 in 2021). He began an expansion of radio stations and newspapers in various Ontario locations in partnership with fellow Canadian Jack Kent Cooke. In addition to his media acquisitions, by 1949 Thomson was the owner of a diverse group of companies, including several ladies' hairstyling businesses, a fitted kitchen manufacturer, and an ice-cream cone manufacturing operation. By the early 1950s, he owned 19 newspapers and was president of the Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association, and then began his first foray into the British newspaper business by starting up the Canadian Weekly Review to cater to expatriate Canadians living in Britain. He aspired to a peerage, similar to the press barons of the UK, and moved across the Atlantic, settling in Edinburgh.

In 1952, Thomson bought The Scotsman newspaper in Edinburgh from its impecunious owners. In 1957, Thomson launched a successful bid for the commercial television franchise for Central Scotland, named Scottish Television, basing it in the Theatre Royal, Glasgow.[4] It became highly profitable, with Thomson describing it as a "licence to print money". In 1959, Thomson purchased the Kemsley group of newspapers, the largest in Britain, which included The Sunday Times. Over the years, Thomson expanded his media empire to include more than 200 newspapers in Canada, the United States, and the United Kingdom. His Thomson Organization became a multinational corporation, with interests in publishing, printing, television, and travel. In 1966, Thomson bought The Times newspaper from members of the Astor family.[5]

In the 1970s, Thomson joined with J. Paul Getty in a consortium that successfully explored for oil in the North Sea.

A modest man, who had little time for pretentious displays of wealth, in Britain he got by virtually unnoticed, riding the London Underground to his office each day. Nonetheless, he made his son Kenneth promise to use the hereditary title that he had received in 1964, if only in the London offices of the firm.

 
Roy Thomson Hall in the downtown Entertainment District is named after Roy Thomson

Personal life

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On 29 July 1916, Thomson married Edna Annis Irvine (1895–1951) in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Edna A. Irvine was the daughter of John Irvine and Rebecca Caldwell.[6] Thomson had three children: Kenneth Roy Thomson (1923–2006), Irma Jacqueline Thomson (b. 20 October 1918 - d. 1966) and Phyllis Audrey Thomson (b. 6 July 1917 - d. 2007).[6]

On 22 February 1951, Thomson's wife Edna died in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.[6]

In 1952, Thomson moved to Edinburgh.

As of 1964[7] and 1965, Thomson owned a residence near Port Credit, on Mississauga Road.[8]

In 1976, Thomson died in London, England. A plaque was placed in the crypt of St Paul's Cathedral.

After Thomson's death in 1976, his son Kenneth became chair of Thomson Corporation and inherited the baronial title becoming the 2nd Baron Thomson of Fleet. With the Thomson operations now principally again in Canada, the younger Thomson did not use his title in Canada though he did so in Britain, and used two sets of stationery reflecting this dichotomy. In any case, as the peerage title he had was inherited, it did not debar him from retaining his Canadian citizenship, and he never took up his right to a seat in the pre-1999 House of Lords.

Legacy

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Roy Thomson Hall, one of Toronto's main concert halls, is named in his honour as the Thomson family donated $5.4 million to its construction. Thomson Student Centre at Memorial University of Newfoundland was named in his honour. It opened 25 May 1968, by the Right Honourable Lord Thomson of Fleet, chancellor of Memorial University of Newfoundland from 1961 to 1968.

Descendants

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Thomson's family continues to use the British hereditary title of Baron Thomson of Fleet. A select family tree is shown below:


Roy Thomson
1st Baron Thomson of Fleet
1894–1976
(Baron: 1964–1976)
Edna Annis Irvine
1895–1951
Nora Marilyn Lavis
1930–2017
Kenneth Thomson
2nd Baron Thomson of Fleet
1923–2006
(Baron: 1976–2006)
Irma Jacqueline Thomson
1918–1966[9]
(m. Glenn W. Brydson)[10]
Phyllis Audrey Thomson
1917–2007[11]
(m. Clarence E. Campbell)[12]
David Thomson
3rd Baron Thomson of Fleet
b. 1957
(Baron: 2006–present)
Taylor Lynne Thomson[13]
b. 1959
Peter Thomson
b. 1965

Honours

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In the 1964 New Year Honours, it was announced that Thomson would be elevated to the peerage as a Baron "for public services".[14] On 10 March 1964 he was made Baron Thomson of Fleet, of Northbridge in the City of Edinburgh.[15] In order to receive this title, it was necessary for Thomson to acquire British citizenship, as the Canadian government had made it common practice since 1919 to disallow the conference of titular honours from the sovereign on Canadians. However, the Canadian Citizenship Act between 1947 and 1977 stated that any Canadian who became a citizen of another country through means other than marriage would cease to be a Canadian citizen. Thus, Thomson lost his Canadian citizenship in the process.

He was appointed Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire (GBE) in the 1970 New Year Honours.[16]

In 1972, he received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement.[17]

Arms

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Coat of arms of Roy Thomson, 1st Baron Thomson of Fleet
 
 
Crest
A beaver sejant erect Proper blowing upon a hunting-horn Argent slung over his dexter shoulder by a riband of the dress tartan Proper to Thomson of that Ilk and his dependers.
Escutcheon
Argent a stag's head cabossed Proper on a chief azure between two mullets a hunting-horn of the first stringed Gules.
Supporters
Dexter a Mississauga Indian habited in the proper costume of his tribe holding in his dexter hand a bow all Proper; sinister a shepherd bearing in his sinister hand a shepherd's crook on his head a bonnet all Proper and wearing a kilt of the usual tartan Proper to Thomson of that Ilk and his dependers.
Motto
Never A Backward Step [18]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Lord Thomson dies built press empire - Lord Thomson of Fleet". The New York Times. 5 August 1976.
  2. ^ "Roy Herbert Thomson, 1st Baron Thomson | British publisher". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
  3. ^ Lord Thomson of Fleet (1975). After I Was Sixty. Don Mills, Ontario.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ ″The Theatre Royal, Entertaining a Nation″ by Graeme Smith, published in 2008
  5. ^ Goodman, Geoffrey (12 June 2006). "Lord Thomson of Fleet". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
  6. ^ a b c "Descendants of Adam THOMSON and Margaret CRANSTOUN". glendinning.name. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
  7. ^ Canadas rich troubled Thomson family at The Canadian Encyclopedia, accessed August 31, 2019
  8. ^ "The Weekly : June 10, 1965-March 31, 1966 - Public Collections".
  9. ^ Martin, Sandra (12 June 2006). "A man of small economies and grand generosities". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 5 January 2021.
  10. ^ "Irma Jacqueline Thomson". www.ancestry.ca.
  11. ^ "Phyllis Audrey Thomson". www.ancestry.ca.
  12. ^ "CAMPBELL, Phyllis Audrey (nee Thomson)". www.legacy.com.
  13. ^ "Taylor Lynne THOMSON". Companies House. Retrieved 28 September 2022.
  14. ^ "No. 43200". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 December 1963. p. 1.
  15. ^ "No. 43267". The London Gazette. 10 March 1964. p. 2189.
  16. ^ "No. 44999". The London Gazette (Supplement). 1 January 1970. p. 8.
  17. ^ "Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement". www.achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
  18. ^ Debrett's Peerage. 2000.

Further reading

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  • Braddon, Russell. Roy Thomson of Fleet Street (London: Collins, 1965)
  • Goldenberg, Susan. The Thomson Empire (Kampmann & Co, 1984)
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Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baron Thomson of Fleet
1964–1976
Succeeded by
Academic offices
Preceded by Chancellor of Memorial University of Newfoundland
1961–1968
Succeeded by