Scotland George Brown was born in
Alloa,
Clackmannanshire, Scotland on November 29, 1818. His father, Peter Brown, ran a
wholesale business in
Edinburgh and managed a
glassworks in Alloa. These members separated from the Church of Scotland in May 1843 and formed the
Free Church of Scotland. While George was touring Canada, they asked him to present an offer to his father: to move publication of the
British Chronicle to Upper Canada in exchange for a bond of $2500. George supported the proposal, as he felt there were more opportunities to succeed in Canada. He thought that there was hostility towards the paper in New York because of the paper's focus on Britain. Upon meeting
Reform politicians in his travels through Canada, George felt that they would support his paper should it relocate to the province. George convinced his father to move to Canada and they published the last issue of the
British Chronicle on July 22, 1843.
Canada George and Peter rented a storefront in Toronto and on August 18, 1843, they published the first edition a new paper called
Banner. George managed the secular department of the newspaper, commenting on non-religious issues.
Banner initially did not commit to any political causes, although it supported many policies advocated by
Reformers. This changed when the governor-general of the province,
Charles Metcalfe,
prorogued the Reform-dominated Canadian assembly when several Reform politicians resigned from the government. George published an editorial on December 15 that was critical of the governor-general's actions. In the subsequent weeks,
Banner published editorials that disputed political accusations against Reformers and called for unity behind
Liberal candidates in future elections. In 1844, Reformers were concerned that Tories, in the upcoming election for the legislature of the Province of Canada, would appeal to the citizen's sense of loyalty to the British monarch and thus not vote for Reformers. They wanted to establish newspapers that would publish their ideas and offered Brown £250 () to begin a new paper. In March, Brown published the first issue of
The Globe as its editor and publisher. Two months later, Brown bought a
rotary press, the first press of this type used in Upper Canada. This purchase increased his printer's efficiency and allowed Brown to create a book publishing and printing office business. Although George was focused on politics, he still wrote articles for the
Banner and travelled in July to
Kingston to report on the Canadian Synod for the Church of Scotland. After the meeting, Brown sat on the committee of
Free Kirks in Kingston who wanted to secede from the Church of Scotland. In the fall, Brown campaigned for Reform candidates in communities surrounding Toronto. In
Halton, Reformers asked Brown to convince one of the three Reform candidates to end their campaign as the county would only elect two candidates and Reformers did not want to split the vote; Brown convinced
Caleb Hopkins to end his campaign. Brown declined to run as a candidate because he wanted to help his father pay off his financial debts and focus on improving his newspapers. Reformers were mostly unsuccessful in the election, with many prominent members not returning to the legislature. In the summer of 1845, Brown put his father in charge of
The Globe and travelled to
Southwestern Ontario to increase subscriptions to his paper. He discovered that a rival Reform newspaper called
Pilot was selling copies at a lower rate and people did not want to subscribe to more than one paper. Brown appealed to Reform leaders, who convinced
Francis Hincks, the editor of
Pilot, to raise the cost of his paper. In October, Brown published the first edition of
Western Globe in
London, Canada West, which combined editorials from
The Globe with local stories from the southwestern region. In 1846, Brown began publishing the
Globe semi-weekly, proclaiming that he was the first Reform-newspaper in Toronto to do so. During the 1848 Province of Canada legislative election, Hincks was in
Montreal attending to business concerns and did not go to
Oxford county to campaign for his re-election as the constituency's representative. Brown spoke at the nomination meeting on Hincks's behalf and Hincks was successfully reelected. Reformers won the majority of seats in the election to form an administration led by Baldwin and
Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine. In July 1848 Brown and his father closed the
Banner to focus on expanding
The Globe and their publishing business. In the summer of 1848, Brown was appointed by the administration to lead a
Royal Commission to examine accusations of official misconduct in the
Provincial Penitentiary in
Portsmouth, Canada West. The commission's report, drafted by Brown in early 1849, documented abuse within the penitentiary perpetrated by its staff members. He recommended changes in the jail's structure such as separating juvenile, first-time, and long-term prisoners and hiring prison inspectors. While the commission was conducting its investigation, the prison's Board of Inspectors resigned and Brown, along with
Adam Fergusson and
William Bristow. Although initially volunteers, Brown and Bristow were later paid for their work, becoming the first government inspectors to be employed in this role. In October 1853
The Globe started printing new issues daily and claimed that the paper had the largest circulation in
British North America. ==Early political career==