Background
He was born in London the second of three sons to Sir William Ingram, 1st Baronet, and Mary Eliza Collingwood Stirling (d1925).
He was born in London the second of three sons to Sir William Ingram, 1st Baronet, and Mary Eliza Collingwood Stirling (d1925).
He was the editor of The English Illustrated Magazine (September 1899 – September 1901), The Sketch, and The Illustrated London News from 1900 to 1963. Ingram was credited with introducing greater use of photography in the News and introducing the Rembrandt Regalio process which enabled faster printing of the paper. During the First World War he had a distinguished service record.
He joined as a Lieutenant in the East Kent Yeomanry then transferred to the Royal Garrison Artillery in France.
He rose to the rank of Captain. He was awarded the Military Cross for bravery in 1917 and was three times Mentioned in Dispatches.
He was also Honorary Vice-President, Society for Nautical Research, Honorary
Keeper of Drawings, Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge and Honorary Adviser on pictures and drawings, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich.
He was knighted in 1950 and received the French Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur"Honneur in the same year. In 1957 (to mark his 80-th birthday) he presented 700 seascape drawings by the Van de Velde family to the Greenwich Maritime Museum.
Oxford University awarded him an honorary Doctor of Letters (Doctor of Letters ) in 1960.
He died at home, Great Bednor Manor, in Buckinghamshire on 8 January 1963. After death he left a substantial number of paintings (mainly seascapes and naval scenes) to the Greenwich Maritime Museum now known as The Ingram Collection. Major donations of art and archaeological artefacts were also made to the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, Birmingham Art Gallery and the Royal Scottish Museum.He also donated the painting Angelique et Medor to the Louvre in 1953.
Ingram chose his journalists and columnists carefully.
In 1905 he employed G. K. Chesterton to write the Notebook feature in his papers. On Chesterton"s death in 1936 Ingram replaced him with Arthur Bryant.
They had one son, who died in childhood. Ingram organised and paid for the Battle of Britain Roll of Honour to the losses of the Royal Air Force which stands in Westminster Abbey.