Thomas Newcomen Archibald Grove (1855[1] – 4 June 1920[2]), commonly known as Archibald Grove, was a British magazine editor and Liberal Party[3] politician.
Early life
He was the second son of Captain Edward Grove and Elizabeth née Watts,[1][4][5] following private education he attended Oriel College, Oxford, matriculating 21 January 1875, then later was entered as a student to the Inner Temple on 19 April 1883.[6] He married Kate Sara (widow of Edmund Gurney) in 1889.[1][4][5]
The New Review
In 1889 Grove became the founding editor of the New Review.[1][4][7][8] He launched the publication at the low price of sixpence, as he sought "to place within the reach of all a critical periodical of the first order".[9] The Review was initially successful, with contributors such as Rider Haggard, Thomas Carlyle and Henry James, while some of Tennyson's poems first appeared there.[1][10][11] However, by 1892 he had been forced to double the cover price, and was suffering competition from newer and illustrated periodicals such as The Strand Magazine, The Idler and the Pall Mall Gazette.[9] At the end of 1894 he sold the magazine.[9]
He contested South Northamptonshire again at the 1906 general election. There was a swing to the Liberals, and Grove returned to the Commons. In September 1908, Grove announced that he would not be standing for election again due to ill health.[21] He accordingly retired from politics at the January 1910 general election.
After parliament
In 1916 Grove was a member of the executive committee of the Anglo-Russian Trade Bureau.[22] He died in Weybridge, Surrey in June 1920.[2]
^Craig, F. W. S. (1989) [1977]. British parliamentary election results 1832–1885 (2nd ed.). Chichester: Parliamentary Research Services. pp. 206, 360. ISBN0-900178-26-4.
^Brake, Laurel; Demoor, Marysa (2009). Dictionary of nineteenth-century journalism in Great Britain and Ireland. Academia Press. p. 445. ISBN978-90-382-1340-8.
^Tennyson and Victorian Periodicals: Commodities in Context, by Kathryn Ledbetter, 2007, p. 99.