âHIS PEN could lay bare the bones of a book or the soul of a statesman in a few vivid linesâ. These words were written in praise of the man who founded the Sun newspaper: journalist, politician and Irish nationalist, TP OâConnor.
The inscription appears, etched in brass, below a bust of a hirsute OâConnor on an easily missed plaque, halfway down Fleet Street, in central London. The Royal Courts of Justice, where the Sunâs current proprietor, Rupert Murdoch, has been defending himself at the Leveson inquiry, is just a couple of hundred metres down the street. Between OâConnorâs statue and the courts stands âThe Tipperaryâ, formerly the Boarâs Head, reputedly the first Irish pub outside the island.
OâConnor established the Sun in 1891. As he later admitted, in his Memoirs of an Old Parliamentarian, the paper was started with âinsufficient capitalâ and quickly degenerated into a âFrankenstein of a monsterâ.
OâConnor âgot rid of the struggle and the agony by selling the Sunâ a short time later. Despite this setback, OâConnorâs life, and work, had a long-lasting influence on both British journalism and the UKâs Irish community.
Thomas Power OâConnor (better known as TP or Tay Pay) was born in Athlone in 1848. He was the eldest son of Thomas OâConnor, a small tradesman, while his mother hailed from the minor gentry; his second name was in honour of her father, Capt Power, who served with Wellington. A gifted student, he won a scholarship to Queenâs College, Galway, graduating at 18 in history and modern languages.
After a spell at the Dublin daily, Saunderâs Newsletter â which he described as âa good old State-and-Church full-blown Protestant organâ â OâConnor left for London, and Fleet Street, in 1870. That year war broke out between France and Germany; OâConnorâs linguistic skills landed him a lucrative job as a sub-editor on the Daily Telegraph.
A quarrel over money led to a premature exit from the Telegraph. OâConnor spent the next seven years scraping a living as a freelance until, in 1880, his biography of then prime minister Benjamin Disraeli launched an unlikely career as a politician and newspaper owner. In the general election that same year Disraeli was heavily defeated by Gladstone and the Liberals â aided by OâConnorâs critical account of the Tory leader â with TP winning a Home Rule seat in Galway by just six votes.
Five years later, as Parnell won âevery seat in Ireland outside eastern Ulster and Trinity College, Dublinâ, OâConnor was returned as the Irish Parliamentary Party member for the Scotland division of Liverpool. OâConnor, the only Irish Home Rule candidate elected in England, held the seat continuously until his death, in 1929.
In 1888, at the age of 40, OâConnor founded the paper that made his name: the Star. The rationale behind the paper was simple: âThe cause of Home Rule was without any advocate in the evening press of London; I conceived the idea, half in hope, half in terror, that I might start a journal myself in favour of the views of myself and my friendsâ. Within weeks he had convinced friends and benefactors to invest £40,000 in the new publication.
The halfpenny Star was no partisan Home Rule sheet. Inspired by the âNew Journalismâ of the American newspapers, OâConnor, a self-styled âradicalâ, assembled a stellar team of writers and editors: George Bernard Shaw began his career as a leader writer on the Star (although political quarrels later necessitated a move to musical criticism); Henry William Massingham went on to edit the Morning Chronicle and the Nation; Gordon Hewart was later lord chief justice.
Writing of his time at the Star, OâConnor later complained, âsome of our biggest things in life turn to bitterness and futilityâ. Indeed, TP lasted only three years at the newspaperâs helm â staying up late at the Commons, rising early to write leader articles â but he made his mark on Fleet Street. OâConnor was arguably the first newspaper owner to appreciate the power of human-interest stories; his âMainly About Peopleâ proving a huge hit with the Starâs ever-increasingly readership. It was a technique imitated by many of his competitors.
While the fortunes of the Irish Parliamentary Party fell, OâConnor remained a popular Irish voice in the Commons. He became âFather of the Houseâ during the first Labour government and was a columnist for both the Daily Telegraph and the Sunday Times, another publication now owned by Murdochâs News International.
A crafty operator, OâConnor was not above journalismâs dark arts. After being erroneously identified as Jack the Ripper by an injudicious Star sub-editor, an East End man known universally as âLeather Apronâ demanded £100 in compensation.
Under OâConnorâs permiture, he was given £50 and told where another £50 could be easily found: by approaching another Fleet Street paper that had repeated the Starâs insinuations. âLeather Apronâ accepted the offer and took no legal action.