Remembering Niagara’s Henry Burgoyne – One Of The Last Great Publishers Of A Family-Owned Newspaper In Canada

“What was remarkable is that (Henry) was born into power and wealth in a small conservative city, yet he never wavered even slightly in championing our duty to stand for the truth, regardless of the consequences.” – Kevin McMahon, former St. Catharines Standard reporter and now a documentary filmmaker in Toronto

A Tribute by former St. Catharines Standard reporter & columnist John Nicol, first posted shortly after Henry Burgoyne’s death in 2011

Re-posted March 8th, 2026 on Niagara At Large

The last Burgoyne family publisher, Henry Burgoyne, at work at the newspaper he was so proud of. file photo

A Brief Foreword by Doug Draper, Niagara At Large reporter/publisher and a former reporter at The St. Catharines Standard – When a fire gutted the former St. Catharines Standard newspaper building in that city’s downtown this past December, 2025, I was far from the only former Standard employee who made a pilgrimage to the burnout remains in the days following the blaze to remember all of the great times we had working there up to 1996 and before the arrival of the corporate chains with their axes, when the Burgoyne family still owned the paper.

We went to work every day knowing that Henry and his family were truly dedicated to serving the community without fear or favour. For this reporter, it was a dream job and Henry was the best boss I ever had.

It was 15 years ago this just past winter that Henry died an untimely death following a brave battle with cancer and I am reposting this piece written at the time by my old friend and colleague John Nicol as a way of reminding everyone what is lost when a once-proud local, family owned newspaper dies.

I am sure Henry wouldn’t mind. I am proud to say that I remained friends with him after his family sold the paper and he was as heartbroken to see what the corporate chains did to it, just  as so many of us who worked for him were.

Now here is is John Nicol’s piece –

The author of this tribute,John Nicol, as many St. Catharines Standard readers may remember him from his years as a reporter and columnist for the newspaper

As publisher of The St. Catharines Standard – the newspaper his family founded in 1891, Henry Bartlett Burgoyne, the last of the family-owned daily newspaper publishers in Ontario, died Feb. 7th, 2011 of cancer. He was 61.

Murray Thomson, his long-time managing editor at The Standard in St. Catharines, said the recipe Burgoyne developed for running a newspaper is one all journalists, in all countries, should aspire to.

“When he gave me the job in 1980, he said there would be a fence around the newsroom,” said Thomson, now 82. “He didn’t want us to be influenced by advertisers or the powerful.

“There is no school for publishers, but he understood who the reader was, and he wanted us to be as honest with them as possible. It was not so much about making money as serving the community well.”

Burgoyne was expected to become the fourth generation of publishers for the newspaper his family bought in 1892 for a dollar, but the circumstances didn’t go as planned. In 1970, his larger-than-life father Bill died at age 49, when Henry was only 21 and still a bit of a hellion known for partying and driving fast cars. His apprenticeship, going to other newspapers to learn the business, was accelerated, and with the death of the caretaker publisher in 1975, he became publisher at the tender age of 26.

The Standard newsroom – forever gone – back in 1991 when it was fully staffed and the Burgoyne family still owned the newspaper.

At the time, The Standard was a respectable community oriented newspaper where you could have a job for life, but the newspaper wouldn’t surprise you with exposés or in-depth analyses. Burgoyne made his paper hold a mirror up to the Niagara region, and showed the community he loved both its foibles and how it could improve.

One of his first bold moves, after the 1979 Love Canal disaster in Niagara Falls, N.Y., was to create an environment beat.

Doug Draper – My early years working for The Standard as an environment reporter back in the 1980s when Henry Burgoyne and my managing editor Murray Thomson would send me all over the Great Lakes to cover stories that impacted all of us living around those water bodies. What mid-size community newspaper does that any more?

Doug Draper, who became that environment reporter, says he was amazed at the integrity Burgoyne showed at such a young age.

“Sometimes I would do a story that upset someone Henry knew and sometimes they would complain to him,” said Draper, who now runs the Niagara At Large website, “but he never once stopped me just so long as my stories were accurate and fair.”

Burgoyne allowed reporters to do exposés that affected his friends, the police and the mayor, and also his advertisers, in some cases costing the paper tens of thousands of dollars in advertising.

What was remarkable, says Kevin McMahon, now a documentary filmmaker in Toronto, is that Burgoyne “was born into power and wealth in a small conservative city, yet he never wavered even slightly in championing our duty to stand for the truth, regardless of the consequences. But he was never pompous about it.

“As young journalists, he made us feel our work was important – but also insisted it be fun.”

In 1985, McMahon was part of The Standard‘s series on the police handling of a washroom sex scandal that won the top award at Canada’s investigative journalism conference in Vancouver. The picture of The Standard team that he feted first class to the conference at the then-new Pan Pacific Hotel, would become an icon for the newsroom.

It would encapsulate the Burgoyne business philosophy: train your charges well, give them confidence, backing and something to look forward to, and most importantly, have fun.

Over the next decade journalists at the relatively small paper would be nominated for three Michener awards, five national newspaper awards and over five years would win four journalist of the year titles in what was then the Western Ontario Newspaper Awards.

The gutted out remains of The Standard renewsroom on the second floor before the machines moved in to knock it to the ground. a parting shot by Doug Draper

The winner of three of those titles, Carol Alaimo, is now a military affairs reporter at the Arizona Daily Star in Tuscon. She felt there was such a fervour for investigative reporting at the paper that it developed a reputation in the community of an Argus, or all-seeing checks-and-balance on society. She had one retiring town clerk tell her, “You don’t know what shit didn’t go down here because somebody thought you’d find out.”

Burgoyne’s concern for the community was never more prevalent than when tragedy struck in the early 1990s with the death of Kristen French at the hands of Paul Bernardo and his wife Karla Homolka.

Henry Burgoyne. Hail to a great old boss and friend to his employees and to the community he lived and ran a newspaper in. file photo courtesy of the Burgoyne family

Anne Marie Owens, now a managing editor of news at the National Post, covered the Bernardo trial for The Standard with instructions to report with decency and honesty.

Henry’s instructions, she said, were: “I don’t care if we sell a single extra paper on this coverage. I just want it done properly.”

Kevin Cavanagh, his last managing editor before Burgoyne sold the paper to Southam and Conrad Black in 1996, said the people of Niagara have no idea of Burgoyne’s real impact. “Every resident in this city benefited from Henry’s integrity, whether they knew it or not,” said Cavanagh, who went on to work at the National Post and Hamilton Spectator.

The biggest compliment for the Burgoyne era came from one of Conrad Black’s minions who took over the paper, declaring it “too good of a newspaper” for a city of 130,000. Whereas Burgoyne was content to get a 10 per cent return, the Black-era people aimed for 35 per cent.

“He was one of a kind and the last emblem in Canada of a sadly missed era of family-owned, community-first daily newspapers,” says Peter Cooney, who toiled at The Standard in the early 1980s and is now an editor working in Washington D.C. “Henry cared about his journalists, valuing us as creative troublemakers rather than ‘content providers’ or ‘profit centers.’

“He was the boss every journalist dreams of and few are fortunate to know.”

John Nicol was an investigative producer with the CBC. He formerly worked with Maclean’s and The St. Catharines Standard. He now lives in Spain.

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