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Anthony Howard (journalist)

Anthony Michell Howard, CBE (12 February 1934 – 19 December 2010) was a British journalist, broadcaster and writer. He was the editor of the New Statesman and The Listener and the deputy editor of The Observer. He selected the passages used in The Crossman Diaries, a book of entries taken from Richard Crossman's The Diaries of a Cabinet Minister.

Anthony Howard
Appearing (left) with Lord Lambton on television programme After Dark in 1991
Born
Anthony Michell Howard

(1934-02-12)12 February 1934
London, England
Died19 December 2010(2010-12-19) (aged 76)
London, England
Alma materChrist Church, Oxford
Occupations
  • Journalist
  • editor
  • biographer
Years active1958–2005
Employers
Spouse
Carol Anne Gaynor
(m. 1965)

Early life edit

Howard was born in London,[1] the son of Canon (William) Guy Howard (1902–1981), a Church of England clergyman (at the time of his son's birth, priest in charge at Christ Church, Victoria Road, Kensington),[2] and Janet Rymer (1904–1983; née Hogg).[3][4] He studied at Purton Stoke School at Kintbury in Berkshire and Highgate Junior School, followed by Westminster School and Christ Church at the University of Oxford, where he read jurisprudence.[5] In 1954 he was chairman of the Oxford University Labour Club and, the following year, President of the Oxford Union.[4]

Howard had planned a career as a barrister, having been called to the Bar (Inner Temple) in 1956. Meanwhile, he was fulfilling his National service obligations in the army, during which he saw active service in the Royal Fusiliers during the Suez War. He wrote (initially unsigned)[6] articles for the New Statesman about his reluctant involvement in the conflict, an action for which he was almost court-martialled.[4]

First posts in journalism edit

Despite this early experience as a freelance contributor, he "stumbled" into his career as a journalist in 1958, beginning on Reynolds News as a political correspondent. Howard moved to the Manchester Guardian in 1959. The following year he was awarded a Harkness Fellowship to study in the United States, though he remained on the Guardian’s staff.

Howard was political correspondent of the New Statesman from 1961 until 1964. An admirer of Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell during this period, he was a strong advocate of the democratic process:

I strongly believe that people should have the right to elect their own rulers and for a long time I was deeply affronted by what the Conservative Party did and never more affronted than when Alec Douglas-Home became leader of the Conservative Party. That seemed to me to be an Etonian fix organised by Harold Macmillan.[7]

In January 1965 Howard joined The Sunday Times as its Whitehall correspondent, reporting on the activities of senior civil servants.[8] He saw his Whitehall brief as being in advance of the journalistic practices of that time.[9] Cabinet Ministers were instructed by Prime Minister Harold Wilson's private secretary not to co-operate with Howard. Civil servants received similar instructions.[9] Phillip Knightley reported a conversation with Howard in 2003 in which Howard had said Wilson "understood I was only trying to do my job but he had a job to do, too, and his was more important than mine. He made it very plain that all conventional sources of information would remain shut until I was willing to return to the cosy but essentially sham game of being a political correspondent."[10] Wilson is thought by journalist John Simpson to have had a preference for secrecy and to have been fearful that such a practice would give his enemies and rivals a potential outlet.[8]

Howard, however, was soon invited to become The Observers chief Washington correspondent, serving in the role from 1966 to 1969, later contributing a political column (1971–72). During his period in America he made regular contributions to The World at One on Radio 4. "It got to where I was almost the World at One Washington correspondent", he once remarked.[11] He was, though, absent from his post when President Johnson announced he would not seek re-election in the Presidential election of 1968, which did not help relations with David Astor, Observer editor at the time.[4]

Editorial roles edit

As editor of the New Statesman (1972–78), succeeding Richard Crossman, whose deputy he had been (1970–72), he appointed Robin Cook as the magazine's parliamentary adviser in 1974[12] (Cook also contributed articles), James Fenton, Christopher Hitchens, and Martin Amis[5] as literary editor in 1977. Future New Statesman editor Peter Wilby, for whom Howard was a mentor, was a staff member during this period.[13]

Under Howard's editorship the magazine published a rare non-British contributor: Gabriel García Márquez in March 1974, on the overthrow of Salvador Allende's elected government in Chile the previous September. Perhaps out of a sense of balance, he featured a series of critiques of the British Left, by the magazine's former editor Paul Johnson, a drinking companion and friend of Howard's, whose political rightward drift was well advanced by then.[5] He also employed Auberon Waugh as a columnist.[4] Howard was unable to halt the magazine's fall in circulation, however.[14] He then edited The Listener for two years (1979–81).

Howard was deputy editor of The Observer (1981–88), where one of his journalist protégés was the journalist and (later) novelist Robert Harris, whom he appointed as the newspaper's political correspondent.[15] His professional relationship with the editor, Donald Trelford, ultimately broke down over allegations that Trelford had allowed the newspaper's proprietor Tiny Rowland to interfere in editorial content. After leaving The Observer, following an ill-fated editorial coup against Trelford,[4] he was a reporter on Newsnight and Panorama (1989–92), having previously presented Channel Four's Face the Press (1982–85). According to Charter88 founder Anthony Barnett he opposed that organisation's petition, and helped run the official committee dedicated to commemorating the 300th anniversary of the Glorious Revolution in 1988.[16]

Later career edit

His last editorial positions before turning freelance were at The Times as Obituaries editor (1993–99),[6] and chief political book reviewer (1990–2004), though he contributed opinion columns to the newspaper until September 2005, when his regular column was discontinued. Howard assisted his long-standing friend Michael Heseltine[17] on his memoirs, Life in the Jungle: My Autobiography (2000),[18] and later published an official biography, Basil Hume: The Monk Cardinal (2005).

Personal life edit

Howard married Carol Anne Gaynor, a journalist, in 1965. He was the lover of Corinna Adam (former wife of journalist Neal Ascherson) for several decades, but did not leave his wife.[19] Corinna Adam, also known by her married name, died in March 2012.[19][20] At the time of his death, Howard lived between London and Ludlow.[1]

Howard was appointed CBE in 1997. He died in London on 19 December 2010, aged 76, from complications of surgery for an aneurysm.[17][21] Since 2013 the annual Anthony Howard Award has offered one young journalist two six-month paid placements on the politics desks of the New Statesman and The Times.[22]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Grimes, William (28 December 2010). "Anthony Howard, 76, Commentator and Editor". The New York Times. p. B15. Retrieved 20 February 2023.
  2. ^ Web of Stories, Anthony Howard, 'Beginnings'- https://www.webofstories.com/play/anthony.howard/1
  3. ^ Wilby, P. (2016, January 07). Howard, Anthony Michell (1934–2010), journalist and broadcaster. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 13 Apr. 2021 (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  4. ^ a b c d e f Obituary: Anthony Howard, The Daily Telegraph, 20 December 2010
  5. ^ a b c Peter Wilby Obituary: Anthony Howard, The Guardian, 20 December 2010
  6. ^ a b Michael Leapman "Anthony Howard: Journalist, broadcaster and writer, respected as one of the most astute political analysts of his generation", The Independent, 21 December 2010
  7. ^ Ciar Byrne , The Independent, 12 June 2006. Retrieved 20 October 2008.
  8. ^ a b John Simpson Unreliable Sources: How the 20th Century was Reported, London: Macmillan, 2010, p.437
  9. ^ a b , The Independent, 3 July 2003. Retrieved 20 December 2010.
  10. ^ Phillip Knightley "Of secrets and spies", The Independent on Sunday, 17 August 2003
  11. ^ Quoted in Simon Elmes And Now on Radio 4, 2007, London: Random House, p.161
  12. ^ Anthony Howard "Natural-born writer: Robin Cook: a tribute", New Statesman, 15 August 2005
  13. ^ Wilby, Peter; Morris, Sophie (3 October 2005). "My Mentor". The Independent. Retrieved 23 April 2014.[dead link]
  14. ^ Julian Barnes "'Under the briskness, he was a softie'", The Observer, 26 December 2012
  15. ^ Robert Harris "Anthony Howard: 'A wonderful combination of paradoxes'", Channel 4 News, 7 January 2011
  16. ^ Anthony Barnett "Anthony Howard: Amanuensis to the old regime", Our Kingdom (Open Democracy website), 19 December 2010
  17. ^ a b Pidd, Helen (20 December 2010). "Anthony Howard dies". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 February 2023.
  18. ^ Roy Hattersley "'A genuine radical who loved the business of politics'", The Observer, 26 December 2010
  19. ^ a b Pavan Amara "Rhyl Street flat blaze victim, Corinna Ascherson, an idealistic socialist once one half of ‘journalism’s golden couple’" 8 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Camden New Journal, 15 March 2012
  20. ^ "Corinna Ascherson". The Times. 29 March 2015. Retrieved 16 September 2015. (subscription required)
  21. ^ Harry Wallop "Anthony Howard dies", The Daily Telegraph (blog), 19 December 2010
  22. ^ "The Anthony Howard Award". Retrieved 15 June 2020.

Bibliography edit

  • Richard Crossman (Anthony Howard, ed.; 1979) Diaries of a Cabinet Minister: Selections, 1964–70, Hamish Hamilton
  • Philip French & Michael Sissons (1963) The Age of Austerity, Hodder & Stoughton [reprinted by Oxford University Press 1986 (contributed chapter "'We Are the Masters Now'", on the Attlee government) pp. 1–20)]
  • Stephen Glover (ed; 1999) Secrets of the Press: Journalists on Journalism, Allen Lane (reprinted as The Penguin Book of Journalism: Secrets of the Press, Penguin, 2000; contributed chapter "Dealing with Mr Murdoch" pp. 260–271)
  • Michael Heseltine (2000) Life in the Jungle: My Autobiography, Hodder & Stoughton [acknowledged assistance]
  • Anthony Howard and Richard West (1965) The Making of the Prime Minister, Jonathan Cape [USA edition: The Road to Number 10 Macmillan 1965]
  • Anthony Howard (1987) Rab: Life of R.A. Butler, Jonathan Cape
  • Anthony Howard (1990) Crossman: The Pursuit of Power, Jonathan Cape
  • Anthony Howard (ed) (1993) Lives Remembered: "Times" Obituaries, The Blewbury Press
  • Anthony Howard (2005) Basil Hume: The Monk Cardinal. Headline Books ISBN 0-7553-1247-3
  • John Raymond (ed) (1960) The Baldwin Age, Eyre & Spottiswoode [contributor]
  • Anthony Howard tells his life story at Web of Stories

External links edit

  • Anthony Howard at journalisted
  • Childe Harold: New Statesman article from 1964 on the newly elected government of Harold Wilson (6 December 1999 reprint).
  • New Statesman articles by Anthony Howard (1999–2010)
Media offices
Preceded by Editor of the New Statesman
1972–1978
Succeeded by
Bruce Page
Preceded by Deputy Editor of The Observer
1981–1988
Succeeded by
Adrian Hamilton

anthony, howard, journalist, anthony, michell, howard, february, 1934, december, 2010, british, journalist, broadcaster, writer, editor, statesman, listener, deputy, editor, observer, selected, passages, used, crossman, diaries, book, entries, taken, from, ric. Anthony Michell Howard CBE 12 February 1934 19 December 2010 was a British journalist broadcaster and writer He was the editor of the New Statesman and The Listener and the deputy editor of The Observer He selected the passages used in The Crossman Diaries a book of entries taken from Richard Crossman s The Diaries of a Cabinet Minister Anthony HowardCBEAppearing left with Lord Lambton on television programme After Dark in 1991BornAnthony Michell Howard 1934 02 12 12 February 1934London EnglandDied19 December 2010 2010 12 19 aged 76 London EnglandAlma materChrist Church OxfordOccupationsJournalisteditorbiographerYears active1958 2005EmployersReynolds News 1958 1959 The Guardian 1959 1965 The Sunday Times 1965 1966 The Observer 1969 1972 1981 1988 New Statesman 1970 1978 The Times 1990 2005 SpouseCarol Anne Gaynor m 1965 wbr Contents 1 Early life 2 First posts in journalism 3 Editorial roles 4 Later career 5 Personal life 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksEarly life editHoward was born in London 1 the son of Canon William Guy Howard 1902 1981 a Church of England clergyman at the time of his son s birth priest in charge at Christ Church Victoria Road Kensington 2 and Janet Rymer 1904 1983 nee Hogg 3 4 He studied at Purton Stoke School at Kintbury in Berkshire and Highgate Junior School followed by Westminster School and Christ Church at the University of Oxford where he read jurisprudence 5 In 1954 he was chairman of the Oxford University Labour Club and the following year President of the Oxford Union 4 Howard had planned a career as a barrister having been called to the Bar Inner Temple in 1956 Meanwhile he was fulfilling his National service obligations in the army during which he saw active service in the Royal Fusiliers during the Suez War He wrote initially unsigned 6 articles for the New Statesman about his reluctant involvement in the conflict an action for which he was almost court martialled 4 First posts in journalism editDespite this early experience as a freelance contributor he stumbled into his career as a journalist in 1958 beginning on Reynolds News as a political correspondent Howard moved to the Manchester Guardian in 1959 The following year he was awarded a Harkness Fellowship to study in the United States though he remained on the Guardian s staff Howard was political correspondent of the New Statesman from 1961 until 1964 An admirer of Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell during this period he was a strong advocate of the democratic process I strongly believe that people should have the right to elect their own rulers and for a long time I was deeply affronted by what the Conservative Party did and never more affronted than when Alec Douglas Home became leader of the Conservative Party That seemed to me to be an Etonian fix organised by Harold Macmillan 7 In January 1965 Howard joined The Sunday Times as its Whitehall correspondent reporting on the activities of senior civil servants 8 He saw his Whitehall brief as being in advance of the journalistic practices of that time 9 Cabinet Ministers were instructed by Prime Minister Harold Wilson s private secretary not to co operate with Howard Civil servants received similar instructions 9 Phillip Knightley reported a conversation with Howard in 2003 in which Howard had said Wilson understood I was only trying to do my job but he had a job to do too and his was more important than mine He made it very plain that all conventional sources of information would remain shut until I was willing to return to the cosy but essentially sham game of being a political correspondent 10 Wilson is thought by journalist John Simpson to have had a preference for secrecy and to have been fearful that such a practice would give his enemies and rivals a potential outlet 8 Howard however was soon invited to become The Observer s chief Washington correspondent serving in the role from 1966 to 1969 later contributing a political column 1971 72 During his period in America he made regular contributions to The World at One on Radio 4 It got to where I was almost the World at One Washington correspondent he once remarked 11 He was though absent from his post when President Johnson announced he would not seek re election in the Presidential election of 1968 which did not help relations with David Astor Observer editor at the time 4 Editorial roles editAs editor of the New Statesman 1972 78 succeeding Richard Crossman whose deputy he had been 1970 72 he appointed Robin Cook as the magazine s parliamentary adviser in 1974 12 Cook also contributed articles James Fenton Christopher Hitchens and Martin Amis 5 as literary editor in 1977 Future New Statesman editor Peter Wilby for whom Howard was a mentor was a staff member during this period 13 Under Howard s editorship the magazine published a rare non British contributor Gabriel Garcia Marquez in March 1974 on the overthrow of Salvador Allende s elected government in Chile the previous September Perhaps out of a sense of balance he featured a series of critiques of the British Left by the magazine s former editor Paul Johnson a drinking companion and friend of Howard s whose political rightward drift was well advanced by then 5 He also employed Auberon Waugh as a columnist 4 Howard was unable to halt the magazine s fall in circulation however 14 He then edited The Listener for two years 1979 81 Howard was deputy editor of The Observer 1981 88 where one of his journalist proteges was the journalist and later novelist Robert Harris whom he appointed as the newspaper s political correspondent 15 His professional relationship with the editor Donald Trelford ultimately broke down over allegations that Trelford had allowed the newspaper s proprietor Tiny Rowland to interfere in editorial content After leaving The Observer following an ill fated editorial coup against Trelford 4 he was a reporter on Newsnight and Panorama 1989 92 having previously presented Channel Four s Face the Press 1982 85 According to Charter88 founder Anthony Barnett he opposed that organisation s petition and helped run the official committee dedicated to commemorating the 300th anniversary of the Glorious Revolution in 1988 16 Later career editHis last editorial positions before turning freelance were at The Times as Obituaries editor 1993 99 6 and chief political book reviewer 1990 2004 though he contributed opinion columns to the newspaper until September 2005 when his regular column was discontinued Howard assisted his long standing friend Michael Heseltine 17 on his memoirs Life in the Jungle My Autobiography 2000 18 and later published an official biography Basil Hume The Monk Cardinal 2005 Personal life editHoward married Carol Anne Gaynor a journalist in 1965 He was the lover of Corinna Adam former wife of journalist Neal Ascherson for several decades but did not leave his wife 19 Corinna Adam also known by her married name died in March 2012 19 20 At the time of his death Howard lived between London and Ludlow 1 Howard was appointed CBE in 1997 He died in London on 19 December 2010 aged 76 from complications of surgery for an aneurysm 17 21 Since 2013 the annual Anthony Howard Award has offered one young journalist two six month paid placements on the politics desks of the New Statesman and The Times 22 References edit a b Grimes William 28 December 2010 Anthony Howard 76 Commentator and Editor The New York Times p B15 Retrieved 20 February 2023 Web of Stories Anthony Howard Beginnings https www webofstories com play anthony howard 1 Wilby P 2016 January 07 Howard Anthony Michell 1934 2010 journalist and broadcaster Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Retrieved 13 Apr 2021 subscription or UK public library membership required a b c d e f Obituary Anthony Howard The Daily Telegraph 20 December 2010 a b c Peter Wilby Obituary Anthony Howard The Guardian 20 December 2010 a b Michael Leapman Anthony Howard Journalist broadcaster and writer respected as one of the most astute political analysts of his generation The Independent 21 December 2010 Ciar Byrne The Indestructible Journos The Independent 12 June 2006 Retrieved 20 October 2008 a b John Simpson Unreliable Sources How the 20th Century was Reported London Macmillan 2010 p 437 a b Media My Greatest Mistake Anthony Howard The Independent 3 July 2003 Retrieved 20 December 2010 Phillip Knightley Of secrets and spies The Independent on Sunday 17 August 2003 Quoted in Simon Elmes And Now on Radio 4 2007 London Random House p 161 Anthony Howard Natural born writer Robin Cook a tribute New Statesman 15 August 2005 Wilby Peter Morris Sophie 3 October 2005 My Mentor The Independent Retrieved 23 April 2014 dead link Julian Barnes Under the briskness he was a softie The Observer 26 December 2012 Robert Harris Anthony Howard A wonderful combination of paradoxes Channel 4 News 7 January 2011 Anthony Barnett Anthony Howard Amanuensis to the old regime Our Kingdom Open Democracy website 19 December 2010 a b Pidd Helen 20 December 2010 Anthony Howard dies The Guardian Retrieved 20 February 2023 Roy Hattersley A genuine radical who loved the business of politics The Observer 26 December 2010 a b Pavan Amara Rhyl Street flat blaze victim Corinna Ascherson an idealistic socialist once one half of journalism s golden couple Archived 8 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine Camden New Journal 15 March 2012 Corinna Ascherson The Times 29 March 2015 Retrieved 16 September 2015 subscription required Harry Wallop Anthony Howard dies The Daily Telegraph blog 19 December 2010 The Anthony Howard Award Retrieved 15 June 2020 Bibliography editRichard Crossman Anthony Howard ed 1979 Diaries of a Cabinet Minister Selections 1964 70 Hamish Hamilton Philip French amp Michael Sissons 1963 The Age of Austerity Hodder amp Stoughton reprinted by Oxford University Press 1986 contributed chapter We Are the Masters Now on the Attlee government pp 1 20 Stephen Glover ed 1999 Secrets of the Press Journalists on Journalism Allen Lane reprinted as The Penguin Book of Journalism Secrets of the Press Penguin 2000 contributed chapter Dealing with Mr Murdoch pp 260 271 Michael Heseltine 2000 Life in the Jungle My Autobiography Hodder amp Stoughton acknowledged assistance Anthony Howard and Richard West 1965 The Making of the Prime Minister Jonathan Cape USA edition The Road to Number 10 Macmillan 1965 Anthony Howard 1987 Rab Life of R A Butler Jonathan Cape Anthony Howard 1990 Crossman The Pursuit of Power Jonathan Cape Anthony Howard ed 1993 Lives Remembered Times Obituaries The Blewbury Press Anthony Howard 2005 Basil Hume The Monk Cardinal Headline Books ISBN 0 7553 1247 3 John Raymond ed 1960 The Baldwin Age Eyre amp Spottiswoode contributor Anthony Howard tells his life story at Web of StoriesExternal links editAnthony Howard at journalisted Childe Harold New Statesman article from 1964 on the newly elected government of Harold Wilson 6 December 1999 reprint New Statesman articles by Anthony Howard 1999 2010 Media offices Preceded byRichard Crossman Editor of the New Statesman1972 1978 Succeeded byBruce Page Preceded byJohn Cole Deputy Editor of The Observer1981 1988 Succeeded byAdrian Hamilton Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anthony Howard journalist amp oldid 1216634431, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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