Pardon was born in London, educated at a private school, and at the age of 15 entered the printing office of Stevens & Pardon in Bell Yard,
Temple Bar. Soon afterwards he contributed articles to
The Old Monthly and
The Sunbeam, periodicals edited by
John Abraham Heraud. From 1841–2 he sub-edited the
Evening Star, founded by
Feargus O'Connor, and became close to most of the radical
Chartist leaders. He made a serious financial loss on the
Star, for which he was the London publisher from July 1842 to February 1843. From 1847 to 1850 he edited ''The People's and Howitt's Journal
, and in summer 1850 he joined the staff of John Cassell as editor of the Working Man's Friend''. In 1851 Pardon launched the
Illustrated Exhibitor, a weekly description of the
Great Exhibition, which was revived in 1862, and then merged in the
Magazine of Art. In 1851 he also planned and edited for Cassell the
Popular Educator and others educational publications in Cassell's stable. In 1854–5 he was engaged as editor of the
Family Friend and the
Home Companion; and he assisted in launching ''
Orr's Circle of the Sciences''. Pardon died suddenly on 5 August 1884, at the Fleur de Lis Hotel,
Canterbury, while on a visit. ==Works==