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British journalist and writer (1928–2020) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sir Harold Matthew Evans (28 June 1928 – 23 September 2020) was a British-American journalist and writer. In his career in his native Britain, he was editor of The Sunday Times from 1967 to 1981, and its sister title The Times for a year from 1981, before being forced out of the latter post by Rupert Murdoch.[3] While at The Sunday Times, he led the newspaper's campaign to seek compensation for mothers who had taken the morning sickness drug thalidomide, which led to their children having severely deformed limbs.
Sir Harold Evans | |
---|---|
Born | Harold Matthew Evans 28 June 1928 Eccles, England |
Died | 23 September 2020 92) New York City, U.S. | (aged
Nationality | British and American |
Alma mater | University College, Durham |
Occupation | Journalist |
Notable credit(s) | The Sunday Times The Week The Guardian BBC Radio 4 |
Spouses | |
Children | 5 |
In 1984, he and his wife Tina Brown moved to the United States where he became an American citizen, retaining dual nationality. He held positions in journalism with U.S. News & World Report, The Atlantic Monthly, and the New York Daily News. In 1986, he founded Condé Nast Traveller.[4] He wrote books on history and journalism, such as The American Century (1998).[5] In 2000, he retired from positions in journalism to spend more time on his writing. From 2001, he served as editor-at-large of The Week magazine and, from 2005, he was a contributor to The Guardian and BBC Radio 4. Evans was invested as a Knight Bachelor in 2004, for services to journalism. On 13 June 2011, Evans was appointed editor-at-large of the Reuters news agency.[6] From 2013 until 2019, he served as chairman of the European Press Prize jury panel.
Evans, the eldest of four sons, was born at 39 Renshaw Street, Patricroft, Eccles, to Welsh parents, Frederick and Mary Evans (née Haselum), whom he described in his 2009 memoir as "the self-consciously respectable working class".[3][7] His father was an engine driver, while his mother ran a shop in their front room to enable the family to buy a car.[8] He failed the eleven-plus, needed to gain entry to grammar schools, and attended St Mary's Central School in Manchester and a business school for a year to learn shorthand, a requirement to become a journalist.[9]
Evans began his career as a reporter for a weekly newspaper in Ashton-under-Lyne, Lancashire, at 16. During his national service in the Royal Air Force (1946–1949),[3] he passed an intelligence test to become an officer, but did not hear anything further and served as a clerk.[9] He entered University College, Durham University, after contacting every one of the fourteen universities in Great Britain at the time.[7] While a student, he edited the university's independent newspaper, Palatinate.[10] After studying economics and politics, he graduated in 1952.[3]
Following his appointment as a sub-editor on the Manchester Evening News, he was chosen by the International Press Institute to teach newspaper technique in India.[9] Evans won a Harkness Fellowship in 1956–1957 to travel and study in the United States, spending periods at the universities of Chicago and Stanford.[3][7] After his return, to the UK, he became an assistant editor on the Manchester Evening News.[9] Nicholas Lemann observed that he "joined a long line of British journalists" who did similar studies, from Alistair Cooke to Andrew Sullivan.[7] Evans was appointed editor of a regional daily, The Northern Echo, in 1961.[11] While at the Darlington title, Evans successfully campaigned for cervical smear tests to be remedied so that he could be more available for journalistic work, and he campaigned tirelessly to pardon of Timothy Evans,[12] wrongly convicted and hanged for murders in Notting Hill, London.[13] The Northern Echo was able to demonstrate that there had been a miscarriage of justice.[8]
In 1966, Harold Evans moved to London to become assistant to the editor of The Sunday Times. The owners of the newspaper, the Thomson Organisation, acquired The Times not long afterwards, and Evans' editor, Denis Hamilton was promoted to editor-in-chief of the Times group.[14] He recommended Evans to the board as the next editor of The Sunday Times.[13]
Evans became editor of The Sunday Times in 1967.[15] Early on during his period as editor came the title's exposure of Kim Philby in that year as a member of the Cambridge Spy ring who had been involved in espionage on behalf of Russia from 1933.[16] Previously it had been claimed that Philby was a low-level diplomat at the time he fled to Moscow in 1963, whereas in actuality, he had been in charge of anti-Soviet intelligence and the chief officer responsible for maintaining contacts with the CIA.[3] Evans was warned the revelations risked national security, receiving a D-notice requesting he should not publish at the beginning of September.[17] Despite this, he went ahead with publication believing the D-notice had been issued to inoculate the government against bad publicity, rather than to maintain the country's security.[8] The official complaint was later withdrawn.[3]
A long-running issue during his tenure was thalidomide, a drug prescribed to expectant mothers suffering from morning sickness, which led to thousands of children in Britain having deformed limbs. They had not received compensation from the drug manufacturers, who in the United Kingdom were the Distillers Company. He organised a campaign by the newspaper's Insight investigative team, appointing Phillip Knightley to run the investigation.[18][19] Evans took on the drug companies responsible for the manufacture of thalidomide, pursuing them through the English courts and eventually gaining victory in the European Court of Human Rights in 1979. The British government was compelled to change the law on contempt of court which had inhibited the reporting of civil cases. While it was legal for the newspaper to campaign, it was not possible for the journalists to report its factual basis. After the ruling in the European Court, the British media was now able to report such cases without restraint.[10][11] The families of thalidomide victims eventually won compensation of £32.5 million as a consequence of Evans' Sunday Times campaign.[19] A documentary about Evans and the thalidomide campaign, Attacking The Devil: Harold Evans and the Last Nazi War Crime, appeared in 2016.[15]
The British government attempted in 1974 to prevent Evans from publishing extracts from the diaries of former Labour cabinet minister Richard Crossman, shortly after Crossman had died and ahead of the diaries publication in book form. Evans risked prosecution under the Official Secrets Act 1911 for breaking the thirty-year rule preventing disclosures of government business. Lord Chief Justice Widgery ruled that publication would not be against the public interest.[13]
When Rupert Murdoch acquired Times Newspapers Limited in 1981, he appointed Evans as editor of The Times. He remained with the paper only a year, during which time The Times was critical of Margaret Thatcher. Over 50 journalists resigned in the first six months of Murdoch's takeover, a number of them known to dislike Evans. In March 1982, a group of Times journalists called for Evans to resign, despite the paper's increase in circulation, claiming that he had overseen an "erosion of editorial standards".[20] Evans resigned shortly afterwards, citing policy differences with Murdoch relating to editorial independence. Evans included an account of the episode in his book Good Times, Bad Times (1984). In the introduction to the 1994 edition, Evans wrote of Murdoch: "When I come across him socially in New York I find I am without any residual emotional hostility ... I have to remind myself ... that Lucifer is the most arresting character in Milton's Paradise Lost."[21]
On leaving The Times, Evans became director of Goldcrest Films and Television.[13]
In 1984, Evans moved to the United States, where he taught at Duke University in North Carolina and Yale University.[3] He was appointed editor-in-chief of The Atlantic Monthly Press and became editorial director of U.S. News & World Report and worked for the New York Daily News. In 1986, he was the founding editor of Conde Nast Traveller where, unlike other publications, the staff were barred from receiving any free travel or hospitality from the organisations they wrote about.[3] Evans was appointed president and publisher of Random House from 1990 to 1997.[22] He acquired rights for $40,000 to the memoir, Dreams from My Father, by Barack Obama, then at the start of his political career.[22]
Evans was editorial director and vice-chairman of U.S. News & World Report, and The Atlantic Monthly from 1997 to January 2000, when he resigned.[23] His work The American Century was published in 1998.[24] The sequel, They Made America (2004), described the lives of some of the country's most important inventors and innovators. Fortune characterised it as one of the best books in the 75 years of that magazine's publication.[25] The book was adapted as a four-part television mini-series that same year and as a National Public Radio special in the US in 2005.[26][27]
Evans became a naturalised United States citizen in 1993.[28] On 13 June 2011, he became editor-at-large at Reuters.[29]
In 1953, Evans married fellow Durham graduate Enid Parker, with whom he had a son and two daughters; the marriage was dissolved in 1978.[21] The couple remained on good terms; Enid Evans died in 2013.[30] In 1973, Evans met Tina Brown, a journalist 25 years his junior. In 1974, she was given freelance assignments with The Sunday Times in the UK, and in the U.S. by its Colour magazine.[31] When a sexual affair emerged between the married Evans and Brown, she resigned and joined the rival The Sunday Telegraph. On 20 August 1981, Evans and Brown married at Grey Gardens, in East Hampton, New York, the home of Ben Bradlee, then The Washington Post executive editor, and Sally Quinn.[31] Evans and Brown had a son and daughter.[21]
Evans died in New York City on 23 September 2020 at the age of 92.[3] The cause of death given was congestive heart failure.[32][33]
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