BBC Radio 4
Posted: Mon Jul 07, 2008 11:57 pm
has a programme called Writing The Century which features readings from unpublished letters and dramatised extracts from the letters too.
The programme this evening was from 1933 and one of the correspondents featured was the editor of the Leeds Mercury, Linton Andrews.
I'm 99.99% sure that there was an Old Blue journalist called Linton Andrews as I remember reading a book written by somebody with that name at CH when I harboured a never to be fulfilled notion of becoming a sports journalist.
Andrews came across as a decent, compassionate man on the programme. There was an economic depression in the early thirties and the editor of the Yorkshire Post, very much the senior paper to the Leeds Mercury, suggested disciplining recalcitrant workers by docking their wages £1 a week! Linton firmly rejected this idea. He also visited a recently discovered Roman villa near Scarborough with his wife and commented on the timelessness of the surroundings. His wife commented that for a journalist he was an incurable romantic. Linton replied that a journalist must paint the picture, always paint the picture.
I've heard other episodes of this programme and it often makes for a fascinating 15 minutes of radio as did this episode. I assume it will be available via the listen again option on the Radio 4 website.
The programme this evening was from 1933 and one of the correspondents featured was the editor of the Leeds Mercury, Linton Andrews.
I'm 99.99% sure that there was an Old Blue journalist called Linton Andrews as I remember reading a book written by somebody with that name at CH when I harboured a never to be fulfilled notion of becoming a sports journalist.
Andrews came across as a decent, compassionate man on the programme. There was an economic depression in the early thirties and the editor of the Yorkshire Post, very much the senior paper to the Leeds Mercury, suggested disciplining recalcitrant workers by docking their wages £1 a week! Linton firmly rejected this idea. He also visited a recently discovered Roman villa near Scarborough with his wife and commented on the timelessness of the surroundings. His wife commented that for a journalist he was an incurable romantic. Linton replied that a journalist must paint the picture, always paint the picture.
I've heard other episodes of this programme and it often makes for a fascinating 15 minutes of radio as did this episode. I assume it will be available via the listen again option on the Radio 4 website.