Horace Stebbing Roscoe St John (1832 â 29 February 1888) was an English author and journalist.
St John was the youngest son of James Augustus St. John. He was born in Normandy in 1832 and educated under his father. He began his journalistic career as a boy, and while âÂÂin a round jacket and turn-down collarâ wrote a leading article for the âÂÂSunday Times.â With his brothers Bayle and Percy Bolingbroke St. John, both of whom are separately noticed, he edited in 1854 âÂÂUtopia: a political, literary, and industrial journal,â which only ran to six numbers. For many years he was a leader-writer on political topics on the âÂÂDaily Telegraph,â and frequently acted as special correspondent of the âÂÂTimes,â the âÂÂStandard,â and other newspapers. During 1862 and 1863 he was a contributor to the âÂÂAthenæum,â to the âÂÂSeven Days' Journal,â and to the âÂÂLeader.â Falling into pecuniary difficulties, he was, on his own petition, made a bankrupt on 9 January 1862, and received a conditional order of discharge on 11 April 1862.
He died at 49 Sydenham Place, Anerley, Surrey, on 29 February 1888 and was buried in the St John family grave on the western side of Highgate Cemetery.
He was the author of:
His wife, a daughter of Thomas Roscoe, was author of: