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 was the author of: 1. ‘Schinderhannes, the Robber of the Rhine,’ printed in the ‘Library of Romance,’ No. 2, 1833; reprinted in the ‘Parlour Library,’ No. xiii. 1848, and as a separate volume 1878. 2. ‘The Magician,’ 1836, 3 vols.; reprinted in the ‘Parlour Novelist,’ 1846, and in the ‘Parlour Library,’ 1853. 3. ‘Beauty's Costumes, a Series of Female Figures in the Dresses of all Times, by Charles Heath, with descriptions by L. Ritchie,’ 1838. 4. ‘The Wye and its Associations: a Picturesque Ramble,’ 1841. 5. ‘A View of the Opium Trade, Historical, Moral, and Commercial,’ 1843. 6. ‘The British World in the East,’ 1847, 2 vols. 7. ‘Windsor Castle and its Environs, including Eton College;’ 2nd edit. 1848. 8. ‘Liber Fluviorum, or River Scenery of France, from Drawings by J. M. Turner, with descriptive letterpress by L. Ritchie,’ 1853; another edit. 1887. 9. ‘Wearyfoot Common,’ 1855. 10. ‘The New Shilling,’ 1857. 11. ‘Winter Evenings,’ 1859, 2 vols. 12. ‘The Midnight Journey, by L. Ritchie, and other Tales, by Mrs. Crowe and others;’ reprinted from ‘Chambers's Journal,’ 1871. He also edited ‘Friendship's Offering,’ 1824, and ‘The Poetical Works of T. Pringle,’ 1838 (2nd edit. 1839), with a sketch of Pringle's life.

[Times, 21 Jan. 1865, p. 9; Gent. Mag. March 1865, p. 390; Some Literary Recollections by James Payn, pp. 72–3; Chambers's Biographical Dictionary of Eminent Scotsmen, 1870, iii. 287–288; Men of the Time, 1862, pp. 656–7; Scotsman, 20 Jan. 1865, p. 2.]  RITCHIE, WILLIAM (1781–1831), one of the founders of the ‘Scotsman’ newspaper, was born in 1781 at the village of Lundin Mill, Fifeshire, where his father had a flax-dressing business. At the age of nineteen he came to Edinburgh. After being employed for some years in the offices of two writers to the signet, he joined the society of solicitors before the supreme courts in 1808, and soon acquired a good legal business. His first literary essay was a paper entitled ‘Effect of Taste on the Heart,’ which appeared in the ‘Scots Magazine,’ 1808. In 1810 he printed an address to the 1st regiment of Edinburgh volunteers, of which corps he was a member, successfully dissuading them from consenting to the proposal to change the volunteers into local militia. At the age of twenty-one he planned a ‘Biographia Scotica,’ but, after writing one or two lives, abandoned the task owing to stress of other work. Between 1806 and 1813 he contributed articles on the national debt and other subjects to the local newspapers.

In 1816 the local papers refused to insert a criticism by Ritchie of the management of the Royal Infirmary. Thereupon he joined a friend, Charles Maclaren [q. v.], in founding the ‘Scotsman.’ It was projected as a weekly newspaper, price tenpence, advocating liberal reforms. The prospectus was issued on 30 Nov. 1816, and the first number appeared on 25 Jan. 1817, Ritchie writing a ‘preliminary note’ and three articles for that number. ‘He assisted,’ wrote Maclaren, ‘in forming the plan, suggested the title, drew up the prospectus, and, by his exertions and personal influence, contributed more than any other individual to establish the paper.’ Till his death in 1831 Ritchie acted with Maclaren as joint editor, providing the paper with ‘all the articles on law, the reviews of novels and poems, and biographical works, with few exceptions, many papers on metaphysics and morals and political subjects, nearly all the notices of the fine arts and of the theatre, with numerous articles on local and miscellaneous matters.’ After six years the ‘Scotsman’ was converted from a weekly into a bi-weekly in 1823. In 1855 it was first issued as a daily, the bi-weekly issue also continuing till 1859. The ‘Weekly Scotsman’ was started in 1860. In 1823 the price was reduced from tenpence to sevenpence, and later became fourpence-halfpenny. ‘From 1817 to 1830,’ writes Grant in his ‘History of the Newspaper Press,’ ‘the “Scotsman” rendered greater service to the cause of reform than all its Scottish liberal contemporaries taken together’ [see ].

In 1824 Ritchie published his ‘Essays on Constitutional Law and the Forms of Process’ (Edinburgh, 1824, 8vo). In 1827 he was appointed a commissioner under the Improvements Act, and did good service on the board. He was instrumental in improving the Edinburgh police system, and interested himself deeply in the amelioration of prison discipline, in the institution of a house of refuge, and in the establishment of the society for the relief of poor debtors, all of which causes he assisted by labour and money. He was an ardent phrenologist and supporter of George Combe. He died on 4 Feb. 1831, and was buried in Greyfriars churchyard. He was survived by his wife, Alison Sandeman. His elder brother,

(1778–1870), born at Kirkcaldy on 3 Feb. 1778, was sent to service as a boy with a small farmer near Largo. After some years of farm work he returned to Kirkcaldy, where he worked as a hand-loom weaver. He went to Edinburgh about 1800, and started business as a draper. He contributed to the foundation of the ‘Scotsman.’ On the death of William in 1831, he