Walter Fuller (editor)

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Born
Walter Gladstone Fuller
OccupationsWriter, editor
KnownforAnti-war activist, editor of the Radio Times
Walter Fuller
Born
Walter Gladstone Fuller
OccupationsWriter, editor
Known forAnti-war activist, editor of the Radio Times
SpouseCrystal Eastman
ChildrenJeffrey Fuller and Annis Fuller
RelativesRosalinde Fuller (sister)

Walter Gladstone Fuller (1881–1927) was an English editor who managed his sisters' singing of folksongs, created anti-war propaganda during the First World War and then worked in New York on The Freeman (208 numbers between March 1920 and March 1924). He was largely responsible for its antiquated layout and use of English spelling; then he became the first BBC employee to edit the Radio Times.

Walter Fuller was born in 1881 to Walter Henry and Elizabeth Fuller.

After studying medicine at Owen's College, Manchester, and failing to get his degree in 1904, Fuller edited the University Review, Comradeship (for the Co-operative Holidays Association and the National Home Reading Union), and the Reader's Review (for the Library Association and National Home Reading Union). By 1910, they were all either defunct or on the brink of closure.[1]

Managing The Fuller Sisters

Activism and career as an editor

References

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