Mark Lemon
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Mark Lemon | |
---|---|
Born | London, England | 30 November 1809
Died | 23 May 1870 Crawley, West Sussex, England | (aged 60)
Resting place | St Margaret's Church, Ifield |
Known for | Founding Punch magazine |
Mark Lemon (30 November 1809, in London – 23 May 1870, in Crawley) was the founding editor of both Punch and The Field. He was also a writer of plays and verses.
Biography
Lemon was born in London on 30 November 1809.[1] He was the son of Martin Lemon, a hop merchant, and Alice Collis. His parents married on 26 December 1808 at St Mary, Marylebone, London. Between 1817 and 1823, after the death of his father, Lemon lived at Church Farmhouse in Hendon, where a blue plaque commemorates him.[2] At 15, Lemon was sent to live in Boston, Lincolnshire, with his mother's brother Thomas Collis.
Mark had a natural talent for journalism and the stage, and at 26 retired from less congenial business to devote himself to the writing of plays. More than sixty of his melodramas, operettas and comedies were produced in London, whilst at the same time he was contributing to a wide variety of magazines and newspapers.[1]
He married Helen (Nelly) Romer, on 28 September 1839 in Kensington, London and had eight children – sons Mark, Frank and Henry, and daughters Alice, Betty, Helen, Mary and Kate. Frank died shortly after he was born. Betty married Sir Robert Romer and their son was Mark Lemon Romer.
In 1841 Lemon and Henry Mayhew conceived the idea of a humorous weekly paper to be called Punch, and when the first number was issued, in July 1841, were joint editors and with the printer and engraver equal owners. The paper was for some time unsuccessful, Lemon keeping it alive out of the profits of his plays. On the sale of Punch, Lemon became sole editor for the new proprietors. It remained under his control until his death, achieving remarkable popularity and influence.[1]
Two other long-running magazines in which Lemon played a significant part were the Illustrated London News, the first publication to make use of pictures as well as text in reporting, which was founded by his friend Herbert Ingram, and The Field, of which he was founder editor (1853–57).[1]
Lemon was an actor of ability, a pleasing lecturer and a successful impersonator of Shakespearian characters. He played in the 1851 production of Not So Bad As We Seem, a play written by Edward Bulwer featuring many notable Victorians, including Charles Dickens. He also wrote novelettes and lyrics,[3] over a hundred songs, a few three-volume novels, several Christmas fairy tales and a volume of jests.[1] He was a stalwart of the London gentlemen's Savage Club.
Lemon died in his adopted home town Crawley, West Sussex on 23 May 1870 and was buried in St Margaret's Church, Ifield. A blue plaque commemorates him outside The George Hotel, Crawley.
References
- ^ a b c d e Chisholm 1911, p. 413.
- ^ "Commemorative Plaque for Mark Lemon at Church Farmhouse Museum" (PDF). Blue Plaque Places. Retrieved 1 December 2017.
- ^ Jarndyce [1] XIX Century Fiction, Part II, L–Z, 2021, Item 12: Prose & Verse, 1852.
Works
- The Boys of London - The Steam Boat Call Boy (1844) Published in The Illuminated Magazine pp. 340–342
- Attribution
- public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lemon, Mark". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 413. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
External links
- Works by or about Mark Lemon at Wikisource
- Works by Mark Lemon at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Mark Lemon at the Internet Archive
- Works by Mark Lemon at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- The Field magazine
- 1809 births
- 1870 deaths
- British magazine founders
- People from Crawley
- Writers from London
- English dramatists and playwrights
- English magazine editors
- Punch (magazine) people
- 19th-century British journalists
- British male journalists
- English male dramatists and playwrights
- 19th-century English dramatists and playwrights
- 19th-century English male writers
- English male non-fiction writers