Hulton was born on 3 March 1869 in Hulme, Manchester.[1][5] He was the second son of Edward Hulton (1838–1904), a Manchester newspaper publisher,[6] and his wife, Mary Mosley.[1][7]
Edward Hulton and Co., of London and Manchester, a private company of proprietors, printers and publishers that owned a large group of newspapers was sold for £6 million when Hulton retired due to illness in 1923. The newspapers sold, which were subsequently controlled by Lord Beaverbrook and Lord Rothermere, included: Sporting Chronicle,[9]Athletic News,[10]Sunday Chronicle, Empire News, Evening Standard,[11]Daily Sketch, Sunday Herald, Daily Dispatch and Evening Chronicle.[1][12][13][14]
Most of these newspapers were sold again soon afterwards, to the Allied Newspapers consortium formed in 1924 (renamed Kemsley Newspapers in 1943 and bought by Roy Thomson in 1959).[15][16][17]
The newspapers Hulton founded have since merged with other newspapers. In 1955, the Daily Dispatch merged with the News Chronicle, which was subsequently absorbed into the Daily Mail in 1960.[18] The Evening Chronicle merged with the Manchester Evening News in 1963.[8][19] The Daily Sketch merged with the Daily Mail in 1971.[20]
Hulton was first married to Agnes Moir Turnbull Wood in 1900.[24][25] He had a son and a daughter by his second wife,[2]Fanny Warris (1869–1940), whom he married in 1916.[1][26]
Hulton died on 23 May 1925 at the age of 56 after a prolonged illness in Downside, and is buried in Putney Vale Cemetery in southwest London.[1][36][37] The net value of his estate was £2,222,471. He bequeathed £5,000 to the Catholic Church of Our Lady and St Peter, Leatherhead, for which he previously helped finance a new church building completed in 1923.[38][39]
^ ab"Sir E. Hulton, Noted Publisher, is Dead". The Montreal Gazette. 25 May 1925. Retrieved 31 August 2013. His immediate family ... consisted of Lady Hulton and two children, Teddy, 16 and Betty, 15. A baronetcy was awarded to him in 1919 in the list of war honors given by Lloyd George.
^Huggins, Mike; Williams, Jack (2005). Sport and the English, 1918–1939: Between the Wars. Taylor & Francis. p. 25. ISBN978-0-203-39802-9. In the north the Sporting Chronicle (founded 1871) was the leading racing daily. In 1924 it was acquired from its founder Sir Edward Hulton by the press barons Northcliffe and Beaverbrook
^Tate, Stephen (2007). The professionalisation of sports journalism, c. 1850 to 1939, with particular reference to the career of James Catton(PDF) (PhD). University of Central Lancashire. p. 321. The Athletic News had only recently changed hands, twice, in fact, in the space of a matter of months as a makeweight in a complex deal in the autumn of 1923 involving Lord Beaverbrook, Lord Rothermere, and the Berry brothers. The severing of the Hulton family ties, extending in Catton's case to more than 30 years, heralded a period of change and can only have served to further weaken any resolve on his part to extend his career in Manchester.
^British and Colonial Printer and Stationer: And Newspaper Press, Volumes 96-97. W. J. Stonhill. 1925. pp. 92, 464. Sir Edward Hulton, who died on Saturday at his residence near Leatherhead, at the age of 56, was till about 18 months ago the owner of a large group of newspapers, being the founder of the business of Edward Hulton and Co..
^Gleanings and Memoranda, Volume 58. National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations. 1923. p. 589. Newspaper Changes: The Daily Mail announced, Oct. 13, that the Daily Mail Trust, Ltd., had acquired the business of Messrs. Edward Hulton and Co., Ltd., of London and Manchester, for £6 million. The papers taken over include: Evening Standard, Daily Sketch, Sunday Herald, Daily Dispatch, Evening Chronicle, Sunday Chronicle and Empire News.
^"English Publishers Confirm Big Combine". The Milwaukee Sentinel. 13 October 1923. Retrieved 30 August 2013. Recent reports that the Lord Rothermere and Lord Beaverbrook combine had acquired the Sir Edward Hulton newspaper interests, comprising the Evening Standard, the Daily Sketch, the Sunday Herald and several Manchester newspapers, are confirmed by an official announcement in the Daily Mail that the Daily Mail trust has bought the Hulton interests for £6,000,000. The announcement says Lord Beaverbrook will control the Evening Standard and that the Daily Mail trust will control all the other publications.
^"Life Stories of Famous Jockeys. Frank Wootton". The Register (Adelaide, SA). 19 January 1924. Retrieved 30 August 2013. While the father [Richard Wootton], at Treadwell House, trained many fine horses for Sir E. Hulton (then racing as Mr. Lytham)
^James, Gary (2008). Manchester – A Football History. Halifax: James Ward. p. 111. ISBN978-0-9558127-0-5.
^"FreeBMD – Search". Retrieved 1 September 2013. Marriages Jun 1900 – Surname: Hulton/Wood/Turnbull, Given Name: Edward/Agnes Moir, District: Bedford, Volume: 3b, Page: 785
^"FreeBMD – Search". Retrieved 1 September 2013. Marriages Mar 1916 – Surname: Hulton/Warriss/Wallen, Given Name: Edward/Florence E, District: Marylebone, Volume: 1a, Page: 1418
^"FreeBMD – Search". Retrieved 1 September 2013. Births Jun 1869 – Surname: Warriss, Given Name: Fanny Elizabeth, District: Kings Norton, Volume: 6c, Page: 388
^"FreeBMD – Search". Retrieved 26 August 2013. Births Jun 1909 – Surname: Hulton, Given Name: Mary Frances, District: Strand, Volume: 1b, Page: 540
^"FreeBMD – Search". Retrieved 26 August 2013. Marriages Jun 1931 – Surname: Hulton/Stevens, Given Name: Frances M/Charles G B, District: St. Martin, Volume: 1a, Page: 1214
^"FreeBMD – Search". Retrieved 26 August 2013. Deaths Mar 1932 – Surname: Stevens, Given Name: Frances M, Age: 22, District: Marylebone, Volume: 1a, Page: 776
^Farndale, Nigel (24 October 1998). "A hard man to like". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 28 August 2013. When his mother, Betty, went into labour with him there were dangerous complications. The child lived but she died a few days later ... He had four children, two boys and two girls. One of them, Rupert, was disabled with palsy and died at the age of 22 in 1989.Alt URL
^Greenstreet, Rosanna (4 February 1996). "How We Met – Jocelyn Stevens and John Hedgecoe". The Independent. Archived from the original on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 29 August 2013. Jocelyn's mother died a week after his birth and he inherited all this money.
^"FreeBMD – Search". Retrieved 26 August 2013. Births Jun 1932 – Surname: Stevens, Given Name: Jocelyn E G, Mother: Hulton, District: Marylebone, Volume: 1a, Page: 594
^"FreeBMD – Search". Retrieved 24 August 2013. Deaths Jun 1925 – Surname: Hulton, Given Name: Edward, Age: 56, District: Epsom, Volume: 2a, Page: 76
^Pearson, Lynn F. (2004). Discovering Famous Graves. Princes Risborough: Shire. p. 71. ISBN978-0-7478-0619-6. In the popular Putney Vale Cemetery, Kingston Road, SW15, with its many monuments of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, are buried ... Sir Edward Hulton (1869–1925), the newspaper proprietor[permanent dead link]
^"Wills – Sir Edward Hulton, Bart". The Tablet. 11 July 1925. Retrieved 31 August 2013. Sir Edward Hulton, Bart., who died on May 23, left property valued at £2,222,471. Among his bequests he leaves £5,000 to the church of Our Lady and St Peter, Leatherhead.
^"History". Catholic Church of Our Lady and St Peter, Leatherhead. Retrieved 1 September 2013.