Born at Burford, Oxfordshire on 30 March 1824, he was second son of George Newmarch, a solicitor of Cirencester, and Mary his wife.
After education from March 1837 at Rugby School, he spent some time in the merchant shipping service and in Eastern travel.
He became joint editor of that paper, and till the end of his life was a regular contributor under the name of "Rambler".
He was interested in agricultural matters, contributing to Bell's Life in London on the subject; he championed the cause of the village labourers, who took his part against Joseph Arch, when Arch visited Belton in his tour of the village districts in 1872.
[1] Deafness led to Newmarch's retirement in 1893 to 37 Upper Grosvenor Road, Tunbridge Wells, where he died on 14 June 1903.