Founder and proprietor of the Illustrated London News, Ingram, who possessed a ‘capricious’ temper, was a self-made man and a popular Liberal MP for his native town, who took a particular interest in financial debates.
The newspaper which made Ingram’s fortune, the Illustrated London News (ILN), launched in May 1842, had originally been conceived to focus on crime and sports, but friends and colleagues persuaded him to adopt a more respectable tone.
Ingram used his wealth to purchase an estate in 1846 at Swineshead Abbey, Lincolnshire, from whence his ancestors allegedly sprang, and to act as a public benefactor for his native town, where he was instrumental in the establishment of a reservoir and numerous railway lines.
In Parliament, Ingram gave general support to the Liberal government, but told a Boston audience in 1857 that despite opposing Cobden’s Canton motion, 3 Mar. 1857, he was no ‘mere Palmerstonian’ and voted against the conspiracy to murder bill, 19 Feb. 1858, which prompted the resignation of Palmerston’s ministry.
Despite his public reputation and status, Ingram’s personal and business affairs were deteriorating. With a few exceptions, such as Mackay, his quarrelsomeness alienated many friends and journalists.
Seeking to recuperate after the trial, and also arrange pictures for the Prince of Wales’s forthcoming tour, Ingram travelled to North America. He boarded a steamer around the Great Lakes, which sank, 8 Sept. 1860, after a collision, resulting in Ingram’s death and that of his eldest son and namesake. His body was subsequently retrieved and buried in Boston, where a statue was erected in 1862, in St. Botolph’s churchyard, where it still stands.
