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Ernest Benn
Ernest Benn (photographed in 1947).
Ernest Benn (photographed in 1947).
BornErnest John Pickstone Benn
(1875-06-25)25 June 1875
Oxted, Surrey, England
Died17 January 1954(1954-01-17) (aged 78)
Oxted, Surrey, England
OccupationPublisher, writer and political publicist.
NationalityBritish

Sir Ernest John Pickstone Benn, 2nd Baronet, CBE (25 June 1875 – 17 January 1954) was a British publisher, writer and political publicist. His father, John Benn, was a Liberal politician, who had been made a baronet in 1914. He was brother of the Liberal and later Labour politician William Wedgwood Benn and an uncle of the Labour politician Tony Benn.

Biography

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Early years

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Ernest John Pickstone Benn was born on 28 June 1875 at Oxted in county Surrey, the eldest son of John William Benn and Elizabeth (née Pickstone). His father was a furniture designer.[1]

Ernest was educated at the Central Foundation Boys' School, a voluntary-aided comprehensive secondary school in Cowper Street in the London Borough of Islington.[2] From about April 1889 Ernest and his younger brother lived for eighteen months with a family in Paris, in a exchange arrangement between the two families, involving two French girls from the Parisian family.[3]

After returning from Paris, aged sixteen, Ernest attempted to pass the London matriculation examination at the Cowper Street school, but he failed in three of the required five subjects. At Christmas 1891 he started work in his father's office as the junior office boy, supervised by the senior office boy. After a year Benn was put into the design studio as an apprentice, his father entertaining the hope that his son "might develop into a draughtsman and designer".[4][1]

Publishing

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In the early 1890s Benn's father stood as a parliamentary candidate and Ernest assisted with his political campaign, in addition to his regular office work.[5] Benn's father, in his furniture design business, had established a trade journal in 1880 called The Cabinet Maker and Art Furnisher, an illustrated monthly publication dealing with the artistic and technical aspects of furniture, published by the family company Benn Brothers Ltd.[1][6][7] From about 1894 Ernest Benn was appointed manager of The Cabinet Maker and went on the road selling advertisement space, in which capacity he "worked hard and happily" until 1900.[5][1]

In December 1899 the firm of Hazell, Watson and Viney, who owned and published The Hardware Trade Journal, offered to sell the monthly publication to Benn's father. John Benn "saw an opportunity to allow his son to develop on his own account" and encouraged and assisted his son to purchase The Hardware Trade Journal, to be managed along with The Cabinet Maker.[8] In order to purchase The Hardware Trade Journal Ernest Benn joined with F. J. Francis, an experienced trade journal sub-editor, to form a company and issue a prospectus to secure the required capital via one pound shares. Hazell, Watson and Viney accepted a proposition to receive the purchase price of £1,500 in shares (to be paid out within seven years), but the prospectus was initially met with little response. John Benn then offered to subscribe 500 shares, if it could be matched by an equal amount or more from other investors. Francis was able to take advantage of his contacts in the retail ironmongery trade and was eventually able to secure a thousand shares to enable the sale to go through.[9] As Ernest Benn later wrote, the added responsibility "marked the end of my period of apprenticeship as a publisher and the beginning of my real life's work".[8]

The first issue of The Hardware Trade Journal, under its new management, was produced in March 1900, with Francis as editor and Benn as publisher and manager, working from offices in Finsbury Square in central London. It had been decided to publish the journal on a weekly basis. Benn later described the years 1900 to 1907 as "the hardest years of my life". Francis died in about 1902 ("his end being unquestionably hastened by the strain of that period"), after which Benn took on the additional role as editor.[9]

Ernest Benn and Gwendoline Dorothy Andrews were married on 3 January 1903 at the parish church at Edgbaston, a suburb of Birmingham in the West Midlands.[10]

During the lead-up to the 1906 general election, Benn acted as the election agent for his brother, William Wedgwood Benn, in his successful campaign as the Liberal Party candidate for the electorate of Tower Hamlets (St. George Division).[11]

The business of publishing The Hardware Trade Journal gradually achieved a sound financial footing and by the end of 1908 Benn had complete responsibility for the enterprise and owned most of the company shares.[12]

The firm began to expand, publishing a number of trade journals and other journals designed for the export market. Ernest Benn provided the inspiration and energy behind the expansion, a situation readily acknowledged by his father, John Benn, who had been elected to the London County Council (LCC) after it was established in 1889. He became leader of the Progressives faction on the LCC and was active as an office-holder and committee member.[1][13]

As a civil servant in the Ministry of Munitions and Reconstruction during the First World War he came to believe in the benefits of state intervention in the economy. In the mid-1920s, however, he changed his mind and adopted "the principles of undiluted laissez-faire".[14]

Benn was also a principal and manager of the publishing firm Benn Brothers, later Ernest Benn Ltd.

BENN Sir John Andrews Benn, 3rd Bart., of High Field, Limpsfield, succeeded his father Sir Ernest John Pickstone Benn, 2nd Bart., of Old Knoll, Lewisham, also of Blunt House, Oxted, and Morven, Oxted, (d.1954). Arms: Argent two barrulets indented Gules between in chief as many dragons' heads erased and in base a pencil and a pen in saltire Proper tied with a lace Azure pendant therefrom a torteau charged with figures 1914. Crest: On a rock a spear erect Proper flowing therefrom a pennon Azure charged with the word ‘Onward’ letters Or. Motto: Deo favente. Burke's Peerage and Baronetage.[15]

Youngest brother was killed in action in 1915.

In 1916 Benn was appointed Director of Training in the ministry of Munitions.[16]

Ernest Benn (in about 1922).

In 1917 Benn was appointed chairman of the Trade Organisation Commission.[16]

In 1918 Benn was awarded a Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (CBE).[17]

Post-war

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In the early 1920s Benn established the book publishing company of Ernest Benn Ltd.[1]

British publisher whose Sixpenny Library and Sixpenny Poets were among the first popular series of paperback educational books.

In 1921 William Benn introduced his brother to Victor Gollancz, and on William's recommendation Gollanz was employed by Benn Brothers Publishing to review and develop the list of magazines published by the company.[11]

By the early 1920s Benn was honorary treasurer of the Industrial League and chairman of the Higher Production Council.[16]

Benn's father had been created a baronet in June 1914.[18] After Sir John Benn's death in April 1922 the baronet was conferred upon Ernest Benn, his eldest son.[19]

Liberalism

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From his conversion to classical liberalism in the mid-1920s until his death in 1954 Benn published more than twenty books and an equivalent amount of pamphlets propagating his ideas. His The Confessions of a Capitalist was originally published in 1925 and was still in print twenty years later after selling a quarter of a million copies.[20] In it, he rejected the labour theory of value and argued that wealth is a by-product of exchange.

In 1926 the company constructed new offices in Fleet Street, in a building known as Bouverie House.[1][21]

In 1928 and 1929 Benn served as president of the National Advertising Benevolent Society.[22]

Benn admired Samuel Smiles and in a letter to The Times Benn claimed ideological descent from leading classical liberals: "In the ideal state of affairs, no one would record a vote in an election until he or she had read the eleven volumes of Jeremy Bentham and the whole of the works of John Stuart Mill, Herbert Spencer and Bastiat as well as Morley's Life of Cobden".[23]

In 1932 Benn served as High Sheriff of the County of London.[22]

In 1933 and 1934 Benn was president of the Printers' Pension Corporation.[22]

Benn was president of the Advertising Association in 1936.[22]

Benn was also a member of the Reform Club and a founder of what would become the Society for Individual Freedom.[citation needed]

Last years

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Sir Ernest Benn died in hospital on 17 January 1954 at Oxted, county Surrey.[1] His eldest son, John Andrews Benn (1904–1984), succeeded as 3rd Baronet.

Quotes

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"Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it wrongly and applying unsuitable remedies".[24]

A paraphrased variation of Benn's quote has been attributed to Groucho Marx: "Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it, misdiagnosing it and then misapplying the wrong remedies".[25]

Books

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A German edition of Benn's Confessions of a Capitalist (1926).

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h 'Obituary: Sir Ernest Benn', The Times (London), 18 January 1954, page 8.
  2. ^ "Alumni". Central Foundation Boys' School. 2013. Archived from the original on 3 October 2015. Retrieved 9 October 2015.
  3. ^ Ernest Benn (1925), page 27.
  4. ^ Ernest Benn (1925), page 27.
  5. ^ a b Ernest Benn (1925), pages 28-29.
  6. ^ The Cabinet Maker and Art Furnisher, Volumes 1-2 (1880), Google Books; accessed 28 January 2025.
  7. ^ John Simkin (1997), John Benn, Spartacus Educational website, Spartacus Educational Publishers Ltd.; accessed 31 January 2025.
  8. ^ a b Ernest Benn (1925), pages 31-32.
  9. ^ a b Ernest Benn (1925), pages 72-76.
  10. ^ 'Marriages', The Times (London), 5 January 1903, page 1.
  11. ^ a b John Simkin (1997), Ernest Benn, Spartacus Educational website, Spartacus Educational Publishers Ltd.; accessed 31 January 2025.
  12. ^ Ernest Benn (1925), pages 83-84.
  13. ^ '"Father" of the L.C.C.: Death of Sir John Benn', The Times (London), 11 April 1922, page 16.
  14. ^ Deryck Abel, Ernest Benn: Counsel for Liberty (London: Benn, 1960), p. 11.
  15. ^ benn.
  16. ^ a b c 'Sir Ernest Benn', Notable Londoners, an Illustrated Who's Who of Professional and Business Men (1922), London: London Publishing Agency, page 164; accessed 27 January 2025.
  17. ^ Charles Mosley (editor-in-chief) (1999), Burke's Peerage & Baronetage (106th edition), Vol. 1, Crans, Switzerland: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd., page 251.
  18. ^ 'Baronets', The Times (London), 22 June 1914, page 10.
  19. ^ '"Father" of the L.C.C.: Death of Sir John Benn', The Times (London), 11 April 1922, page 16.
  20. ^ W. H. Greenleaf, The British Political Tradition. Volume II: The Ideological Heritage (London: Methuen, 1983), p. 302.
  21. ^ Bouverie House, Claxity website; accessed 31 January 2025.
  22. ^ a b c d Obituary: Sir Ernest Benn, Advertiser's Weekly, 21 January 1954, page 108.
  23. ^ Ernest Benn, The Letters of an Individualist to The Times, 1921-1926 (London: Benn, 1927), p. 13.
  24. ^ Original source: Henry Powell Spring (1944), What is Truth, Orange Press, page 31; cited in: Anthony Jay (editor) (2010), Lend Me Your Ears: Oxford Dictionary of Political Quotations (4th edition), Oxford: Oxford University Press, page 27.
  25. ^ For example: David Brown (2002), The World According to Groucho Marx, London: Michael O'Mara Books Ltd., page 131.
Sources
  • Ernest Benn (1925), The Confessions of a Capitalist (1948 edition), London: Ernest Benn Ltd.

Further reading

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Honorary titles
Preceded by High Sheriff of the County of London
1932–1933
Succeeded by
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Baronet
(of Old Knoll)
1922–1954
Succeeded by