Joseph Drew


Joseph Drew was an English newspaper editor, steamboat proprietor, art collector, writer and lecturer.

Life

Joseph Drew was born in Deptford, son of Joseph Drew of the Royal Navy dockyard service and Martha Gale. The family probably came to London from Dorset shortly before Joseph was born, as his elder siblings Sarah and Henry had been baptised in Wyke Regis. Following the shutting down of Deptford Dockyard in 1830, his family moved to Melcombe Regis where he worked in his father's confectionery business. He later started a grocery business which went bankrupt. In about 1838 he moved to Guernsey with his wife and their four young children and set up his own confectioners in St. Peter Port, but returned to Weymouth a few years later.
Drew founded the newspaper The Southern Times, published in Weymouth in 1850, which he edited until 1862. For most of his life he was active in local affairs, becoming a JP and town councillor.
In 1852, by reason of his wealth and influence as a newspaper proprietor, Joseph Drew became a partner in the company Cosens & Co. which operated paddle steamers from Weymouth. He became chairman of Cosens in 1874.
Drew was, from 1854, proprietor of the Victoria Hotel, where in 1857 he opened a refreshment room and art gallery displaying his valuable collection of works 'by the great Masters and modern artists'. Drew's collection included 'the equestrian Vandyke' ; and there were pencil sketches by Turner, Rembrandt, Rubens, Paolo Veronese, Andrea del Sarto and Titian. Mentioned is 'Danaë and her golden shower'. There were also paintings by Sir David Wilkie, Danby, Niemann, Webster and Wilson. Joseph Drew sold, from his collection, Nicholas Poussin's The Testament of Eudamidas to the Rev. Thomas Mawkes for £2000. In 1859 it was reported that he had purchased a portrait of Shakespeare by 'Zucchero'. Drew's wide knowledge of art and his concern for it is shown in his 1871 address to the British Archaeological Association, Art Treasures and their Preservation, published fully in his Synopsis of Fourteen Popular Lectures.
Joseph Drew died at Weymouth in 1883 and was buried in Melcombe Regis Cemetery. There is a memorial to him, his wife and two children near the west wall of the cemetery.

Works

Drew wrote and lectured on a wide range of subjects in the fields of art, science, history and religion.
In 1851 he strongly criticised Pope Pius IX with an essay Popery against the Pope, an Appeal to Protestants and satirical verse The Vision of the Pope; or A Snooze in the Vatican. These works were prompted by the re-establishment of the Catholic hierarchy in 1850, when the pope created 12 Catholic dioceses in England and appointed diocesan bishops.
Between 1866 and 1872 he delivered a series of free lectures which he described in A Synopsis of Fourteen Popular Lectures. In 1871 he gave a lecture to the British Archæological Association on Art Treasures and their Preservation.
He ventured into historical fiction with his short novel The Poisoned Cup, published in many editions between 1876 and 1962. His last written work, The Rival Queens, factually written in a popular style, is an account of the eventful but troubled life of Mary Queen of Scots, and her unhappy fate in the hands of her English cousin Queen Elizabeth.

Family

When he was only 18 Joseph Drew married Eliza Monday, six years his senior, at St Bride's Church, Fleet St, London. They had four children: Mary Jessie Drew, Joseph William Drew, Alice Martha Drew and Fanny Eliza Drew. His wife died at the age of 38, and two years later he married her younger sister Caroline Agnes Monday, a school teacher, at St Mary Magdalen Bermondsey, by whom he had two children Caroline Agnes Drew and musician Harry Drew.
Drew's daughter Fanny Eliza married organist William James Rooke and their daughter Mabel Wells Annie Rooke was the mother of the heroine of the French Resistance Agnès Humbert. Drew's son Harry married missionary teacher Georgiana Down and their son Harry Guy Radcliffe Drew was the father of architect Jane Drew.

Honours

Among his honours were

Writings

Include poems, essays, lectures, and books.