Honorific-Prefix: | Sir |
Charles Frederick Higham | |
Constituency Mp: | Islington South |
Parliament: | United Kingdom |
Term Start: | 1918 |
Term End: | 1922 |
Predecessor: | Thomas Wiles |
Successor: | Charles Samuel Garland |
Birth Date: | 1876 1, df=y |
Birth Place: | Walthamstow, London, England |
Death Place: | Godstone, Surrey, England |
Party: | Conservative |
Occupation: | Publicist, advertising consultant |
Sir Charles Frederick Higham (17 January 1876 – 24 December 1938) was a British publicist, advertising consultant prominent in World War I and a Conservative Party politician elected as the Member of Parliament for Islington South in the County of London for one term, from 1918 to 1922.
Born in Walthamstow, he was the eldest son of Charles and Emily Higham. His father, a solicitor's clerk, died when he was nine years old. Along with his mother and two brothers he emigrated to the United States shortly after his father's death. Leaving home aged 13, he had a series of varied jobs including chemist's assistant, newspaper reporter and assistant hotel manager.[1] [2] [3]
In 1906 he returned to England, eventually establishing his own advertising agency, Charles F. Higham Limited.[2]
During the First World War the importance in waging a successful war against Germany and Austria-Hungary of advertising for army recruitment was realised by the government and Higham was appointed a member of the Committee on Recruiting Propaganda.[2] He was later appointed Director of Publicity for the National War Savings Committee.[2] He was knighted in 1921 for his wartime creativity and services.[3]
At the 1918 general election that followed the war, Higham was elected Coalition Conservative MP for Islington South. He chose to only serve a single term, standing down at the 1922 general election.[2] In 1924–25 he visited America to popularise tea-drinking, also publicising the British Empire Exhibition. He was also made a Freeman of the City of London, and in 1930 was presented with the Publicity Cup by the Lord Mayor.
He was the author of a number of books on advertising including Scientific Distribution (1918), Looking Forward: Mass Education Through Publicity (1920), Advertising and the Man-in-the-street (1929) and Advertising: Its Use and Abuse (1931).
Higham married five times. He died at his home in South Godstone, Surrey, on Christmas Eve, 1938, of pneumonia and cancer of the mouth. A son, also Charles Higham, from his fourth marriage (to Josephine Janet Keuchenius Webb), became a biographer and writer[4] and his daughter, Anna Higham went on to become a teacher.