Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Henry Mayhew and the Mayhew Brothers

View through CrossRef
Henry Mayhew and his brothers were writers in the early and mid-Victorian periods. The most famous of the siblings was Henry Mayhew. Henry and his brothers were born in an upper-middle class family of seventeen children. Their father, Joshua Dorset Joseph Mayhew, who left £50,000 in his will, attempted in vain to discipline his boys. Several his children began public careers as writers and artists: Thomas (b. 1810–d. 1834) a journalist; Henry (b. 1812–d. 1887) author and journalist; Edward (b. 1813–d. 1868) dramatist, journalist, and veterinarian; Horace (b. 1816–d. 1872) author and journalist; Julius (b. 1820–d. 1908) photographer and architect; Augustus (b. 1826–d. 1875) author and journalist. Three siblings became known as the “Brothers Mayhew”: Henry and Augustus, who regularly published together, with occasional contributions by Horace. Henry has been the object of most of the scholarly attention, albeit for a limited portion of his work, yet a more holistic perspective would consider his work more widely and that of his brothers and collaborators. The eldest, Thomas Mayhew, editor of Henry Hetherington’s Poor Man’s Guardian (1831–1832), succeeded by the Chartist James Brontere o’Brien (b. 1805–d. 1864), deserves particular attention. The Mayhews belonged to a generation of highly enterprising and financially insecure men of letters (Thomas and Henry faced bankruptcy) associating with more successful authors such as Charles Dickens (b. 1812–d. 1870), Douglas Jerrold (b. 1803–d. 1857), William Makepeace Thackeray (b. 1811–d. 1863), Gilbert Abott à’Beckett (b. 1811–d. 1856), George Augustus Sala (b. 1828–d. 1895), Edmund Yates (b. 1831–d. 1894), Henry Vizetelly (b. 1820–d. 1894), William Tinsley (b. 1831–d. 1902). The Mayhews embraced the democratization of print culture and produced cheap and popular novels, humorous texts, and newspapers. They were associated with dissident and radical publications: Henry Mayhew was a founder of The Thief, Figaro in London, and most importantly Punch in 1841. The Mayhew brothers worked with caricaturist and illustrator George Cruikshank (b. 1792–d. 1878). As a journalist Henry Mayhew also wrote for the Illustrated London News. He was employed by the Morning Chronicle in 1849 when he launched into his social journalism, defying any straightforward classification, as it combined interviews and economic and cultural reporting on the poor as well as “urban exploratory” work. His initial journalism was continued independently as London Labour and the London Poor and its sequel, in 1856, The Criminal Prisons of London and Scenes of Prison Life. The significance of London Labour and the London Poor (including the articles in the Morning Chronicle leading to it and the Criminal World of London which followed) dominates any reference to other writings by Henry or his brothers. The second and greater part of this entry will be devoted to Henry Mayhew and the London Labour and the London Poor while it will seek to highlight new or less explored themes in the writings of Henry Mayhew and his brothers and invite further research across their work.
Oxford University Press
Title: Henry Mayhew and the Mayhew Brothers
Description:
Henry Mayhew and his brothers were writers in the early and mid-Victorian periods.
The most famous of the siblings was Henry Mayhew.
Henry and his brothers were born in an upper-middle class family of seventeen children.
Their father, Joshua Dorset Joseph Mayhew, who left £50,000 in his will, attempted in vain to discipline his boys.
Several his children began public careers as writers and artists: Thomas (b.
1810–d.
1834) a journalist; Henry (b.
1812–d.
1887) author and journalist; Edward (b.
1813–d.
1868) dramatist, journalist, and veterinarian; Horace (b.
1816–d.
1872) author and journalist; Julius (b.
1820–d.
1908) photographer and architect; Augustus (b.
1826–d.
1875) author and journalist.
Three siblings became known as the “Brothers Mayhew”: Henry and Augustus, who regularly published together, with occasional contributions by Horace.
Henry has been the object of most of the scholarly attention, albeit for a limited portion of his work, yet a more holistic perspective would consider his work more widely and that of his brothers and collaborators.
The eldest, Thomas Mayhew, editor of Henry Hetherington’s Poor Man’s Guardian (1831–1832), succeeded by the Chartist James Brontere o’Brien (b.
1805–d.
1864), deserves particular attention.
The Mayhews belonged to a generation of highly enterprising and financially insecure men of letters (Thomas and Henry faced bankruptcy) associating with more successful authors such as Charles Dickens (b.
1812–d.
1870), Douglas Jerrold (b.
1803–d.
1857), William Makepeace Thackeray (b.
1811–d.
1863), Gilbert Abott à’Beckett (b.
1811–d.
1856), George Augustus Sala (b.
1828–d.
1895), Edmund Yates (b.
1831–d.
1894), Henry Vizetelly (b.
1820–d.
1894), William Tinsley (b.
1831–d.
1902).
The Mayhews embraced the democratization of print culture and produced cheap and popular novels, humorous texts, and newspapers.
They were associated with dissident and radical publications: Henry Mayhew was a founder of The Thief, Figaro in London, and most importantly Punch in 1841.
The Mayhew brothers worked with caricaturist and illustrator George Cruikshank (b.
1792–d.
1878).
As a journalist Henry Mayhew also wrote for the Illustrated London News.
He was employed by the Morning Chronicle in 1849 when he launched into his social journalism, defying any straightforward classification, as it combined interviews and economic and cultural reporting on the poor as well as “urban exploratory” work.
His initial journalism was continued independently as London Labour and the London Poor and its sequel, in 1856, The Criminal Prisons of London and Scenes of Prison Life.
The significance of London Labour and the London Poor (including the articles in the Morning Chronicle leading to it and the Criminal World of London which followed) dominates any reference to other writings by Henry or his brothers.
The second and greater part of this entry will be devoted to Henry Mayhew and the London Labour and the London Poor while it will seek to highlight new or less explored themes in the writings of Henry Mayhew and his brothers and invite further research across their work.

Related Results

Slaveri hos Tuaregerne i Sahara
Slaveri hos Tuaregerne i Sahara
Slavery among the Tuareg in the SaharaA preliminary analysis of its structure.Slavery is an institution of very considerable age. In Europe and the Orient it has been common for as...
Henry Lives! Learning from Lawson Fandom
Henry Lives! Learning from Lawson Fandom
Since his death in 1922, Henry Lawson’s “spirit” has been kept alive by admirers across Australia. Over the last century, Lawson’s reputation in the academy has fluctuated yet fan ...
Curious Conversations: Henry Mayhew and the Street-Sellers in the Media Ecology of London Labour and the London Poor
Curious Conversations: Henry Mayhew and the Street-Sellers in the Media Ecology of London Labour and the London Poor
Abstract Henry Mayhew is renowned as the chronicler and historian of London street-sellers and poor labourers. However, Mayhew’s relationships with his subjects, and...
Henry Mayhew and the British Seaman
Henry Mayhew and the British Seaman
This essay examines the lengthy study into the lives of London Labourers by Henry Mayhew, specifically the lives and working conditions of seamen. The study was conducted in a seri...
London Labour and the London Poor
London Labour and the London Poor
‘I go about the street with water-creases crying, “Four bunches a penny, water-creases.”’ London Labour and the London Poor is an extraordinary work of investigative journalism, a ...
The Emerson Brothers
The Emerson Brothers
Abstract The Emerson Brothers: A Fraternal Biography in Letters is a narrative and epistolary biography based upon the lifelong correspondence exchanged among the fo...
Jonathan Mayhew: Two Discourses
Jonathan Mayhew: Two Discourses
Jonathan Mayhew, a pastor at the West Church in Boston, Massachusetts, offered two sermons on October 25, 1759. Delivered as an observation of thanksgiving following a military suc...
The Hidden Balance
The Hidden Balance
Congregationalist ministers Charles Chauncy and Jonathan Mayhew were among the most influential social and religious thinkers in Boston in the mid-eighteenth century. This 1987 stu...

Back to Top