Frank Newnes
Sir Frank Hillyard Newnes, 2nd Baronet was a British publisher, businessman and Liberal politician.
Family and education
Frank Hillyard Newnes was born in Manchester, the son of George Newnes, the newspaper publisher and Liberal MP first for Newmarket and later for Swansea. His mother was Priscilla Newnes the daughter of the Reverend James Hillyard. He had an older brother who died aged eight years and whose death was said to have devastated his father. Newnes was educated privately before attending Clare College, Cambridge where he graduated with MA and LL.B. degrees in 1897.In 1913 Newnes married Emmeline Augusta Louisa, the daughter of the late Sir Albert de Rutzen, who had held the office of Chief Metropolitan Magistrate at Bow Street. Lena Newnes became a well-known society hostess and philanthropist, raising thousands of pounds for various charitable and educational causes. She was a Dame of Grace of the Order of St John of Jerusalem. She died in 1939.
Newnes married again in 1946. His second wife was Dorothy, the widow of Stephen Delmar-Morgan, who was originally from Perth, Western Australia. There were no children from either marriage.
Career
On leaving university in 1897, Newnes followed his father into his publishing business, eventually becoming President of George Newnes Ltd. He also became Chairman of Country Life, Ltd and a director of other companies in the publishing trade, including The Westminster Gazette, the Liberal-supporting newspaper founded by his father. The paper was dubbed the "pea-green incorruptible" – Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone having personally approved its green colour. The firm was based at 17-21 Tavistock Street in premises leased from the eleventh Duke of Bedford.Newnes also had other commercial and investment interests, and served on the boards of the Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society and Norwich Union Life Insurance Society. He also served as a director of City & Commercial Investment Trusts Ltd and Redeemable Securities Trust Ltd and was Chairman of Associated Weavers, Ltd and Armoride Ltd. In addition to his business career, Newnes was called to the Bar by the Inner Temple in 1898, although it is not recorded that he ever practised the law. In 1907, he became a director of The Inambari Para-Rubber Estates, Limited, a joint stock company that exported rubber from the Inambari River in Peru.