Samuel Lister (editor)

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Samuel Lister (c.1833 – 29 November 1913) was a New Zealand printer, newspaper proprietor and editor. He established the Otago Workman, a weekly newspaper that supported working-class communities and allowed Lister to express radical views on politics that were to be influential in shaping labour history in the country.

Lister was born in Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland in either 1832 or 1833, serving an apprenticeship as a lithographic printer. He married Jane Miller in 1862 and two children were born in Scotland.[1]

Move to New Zealand

In 1865 the family sailed to New Zealand and during the voyage Lister is said to have acted as a precentor for the Presbyterians on board.[1] This may validate the claim by one historian that he was born into a Presbyterian family.[2]:347 The family settled in Roslyn, later moving to the suburb of South Dunedin. The family grew in New Zealand and is registered as having eight children.[3] It has been said that the death of his eldest son in 1875[4] was the likely cause of Lister drinking heavily and making a break with the church.[1]:1 He worked as a printer and engraver, qualified as a master in 1867 and established the Otago Workman,[5]:107 a weekly newspaper distributed mostly in South Dunedin.[6]

Activism

Later life and legacy

References

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