The owners and editors of Bombay Gazette included the British journalist and politician,
James Mackenzie Maclean, Adolphus Pope (1821), Fair (1826), Francis Warden (1827), R. X. Murphy (1833), Grattan Geary (1890),
Sir Frank Beaman and Galium (1840). It was not unheard of for its proprietors to include British civil servants. In 1911,
Sir Pherozeshah Mehta and
Benjamin Horniman attempted to purchase Bombay Gazette, to counteract the influence of another newspaper
The Times of India, and to give a voice to
Indian nationalists, but his attempts were thwarted by one of the directors,
Sir Frank Beaman, which led Mehta to establish a separate newspaper,
The Bombay Chronicle in 1913. == Content ==