Roger T. Steam
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War correspondents and colonial war, c. 1870–1900
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The Victorian era was one of hero worship and myth-making, and war correspondents contributed much to the making of popular military heroes. Correspondents and artists justified colonial wars largely by the benefits to the native people and the contrast between pre-British and British rule. The first important British war correspondent was William Howard Russell of The Times, in the Crimea. Russell set the pattern for British war correspondents. By 1900 an era was ending which had begun with Russell in the Crimean War. Contemporaries regarded the period from the Crimea to the Boer War as its golden age, with frequent wars, minimal official restrictions on correspondents, and public demand for war news. The Franco-Prussian War increased newspaper circulations, notably of the Daily News, as did the 1898 Sudan campaign and the Boer War, notably that of the Daily Mail.

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