Advertisement

Sir Harold Evans, trailblazing newspaper editor, dies aged 92 from heart failure

Sir Harold in New York last year - REUTERS/Bria Webb
Sir Harold in New York last year - REUTERS/Bria Webb

Sir Harold Evans, a British-American editor whose 70-year career as a hard-driving investigative journalist, magazine founder, book publisher and author made him one of the most influential media figures of his generation, died on Wednesday at the age of 92.

Sir Harold died of congestive heart failure in New York, according to his wife Tina Brown.

A former editor of Britain's Sunday Times and, at his death, Reuters editor-at-large, Evans put a unique stamp on investigative journalism. Championing causes either overlooked or denied, he and his team uncovered human rights abuses and political scandals, and advocated for clean air policies.

One of his most famous investigations exposed the plight of hundreds of British thalidomide children who had never received any compensation for their birth defects. Evans organized a campaign to take on the drug companies responsible for manufacturing the drug, an effort that eventually won compensation for the families after more than a decade.

"All I tried to do - all I hoped to do - was to shed a little light," Evans said in an interview with the Independent in 2014. "And if that light grew weeds, we'd have to try and pull them up."

Sir Harold Evans speaks at a Reuters Newsmaker event in New York -  REUTERS/Gary He/File Photo
Sir Harold Evans speaks at a Reuters Newsmaker event in New York - REUTERS/Gary He/File Photo

After 14 years at the Sunday Times, Evans became editor of the Times of London shortly after media mogul Rupert Murdoch purchased the paper in 1981. Evans left a year later in a dispute with Murdoch over editorial independence.

A few years later, Evans moved to the United States with Brown, the journalist and editor to whom he was married for nearly 40 years. He continued his career as an author, publisher and university lecturer. He penned several books, including "The American Century" (1998) and its sequel "They Made America" (2004), as well as an ode to good writing called "Do I Make Myself Clear?" (2017).

He became the subject of books and documentaries, including "Attacking The Devil: Harold Evans and the Last Nazi War Crime" (2014), about the thalidomide campaign.

Evans founded Conde Nast Traveler magazine and served as president and publisher of Random House from 1990 to 1997.

Under his leadership, Random House scored various publishing successes, including the best-selling "Primary Colors," a satire about Bill Clinton by Anonymous, later revealed to be journalist Joe Klein, and Colin Powell's "My American Journey."

Born to a family from what he called "the respectable working class," Evans received one of the highest honors of the British monarchy when he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth in 2004 for his services to British journalism. Two years earlier, a poll by Britain's Press Gazette and the British Journalism Review named him the greatest newspaper editor of all time.

Evans joined Reuters in 2011. In his role as editor-at-large, Evans moderated conversations with global newsmakers in business and politics who included Tony Blair, Mark Cuban, Al Gore, John Kerry, Henry Kissinger, Jim Mattis and Satya Nadella.

"Harry Evans was an inspiration, not only as a great journalist but as a great man. He had an insatiable intellect, extraordinary tenacity, high principle, and a generous heart," Stephen J. Adler, Reuters editor-in-chief, said.

Evans also had a sense of humor. "Editor-at-large means you're free to create as much havoc as they will tolerate," Evans was quoted as saying by the Financial Times.

"He was the inventor of team journalism. In the editorial chair, he was a human dynamo and set in motion such a stream of powerful stories and campaigns that his rivals (I was one) could only struggle to keep up," Donald Trelford, the former editor of the Observer, wrote in a review of Evans' memoir published in 2009 called, "My Paper Chase: True Stories of Vanished Times."

Harold Matthew Evans was born in Greater Manchester, England, on June 28, 1928, the son of a train driver.

He entered journalism in what was then the traditional way, taking his first reporting job at a weekly newspaper at age 16. He went on to study at Durham University.

After serving in the military and earning a master's degree, Evans became an assistant editor at the Manchester Evening News.

In 1961 he was named editor of the Northern Echo and first developed his reputation as a relentless journalist with campaigns against air pollution and for a national program to detect cervical cancer, an initiative that still saves thousands of lives each year.

Evans became editor of national weekly the Sunday Times in 1967, and made it an exemplar of investigative journalism, with reports from its Insight team.

Kim Philby, British intelligence agent, jokes with newsmen at his mother's London home during a 1955 press conference where he was formally cleared of tipping off fellow agents Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean - Bettmann
Kim Philby, British intelligence agent, jokes with newsmen at his mother's London home during a 1955 press conference where he was formally cleared of tipping off fellow agents Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean - Bettmann

In addition to helping win compensation for Britons who suffered birth defects from thalidomide, a drug taken for pregnancy sickness, the Sunday Times published in 1967 an expose of high-ranking British intelligence officer Kim Philby's decades as a Soviet spy, despite objections from the British government that the report would endanger national security.

When Murdoch bought the Sunday Times and Times of London in 1981 from the Thomson Corp, he installed Evans as editor of the Times but the relationship quickly turned sour - and stayed that way. Evans said the British government allowed Murdoch to buy the Times newspapers on the strength of pledges he made to uphold editorial independence.

"He broke them all within a year," Evans said in a 2013 Reuters interview.

He said his own writings about then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher were the source of the rift with Murdoch.

"When she started to dismantle the British economy, the most cogent critic of that policy ... was the Sunday Times," he told the Independent. "I wrote 70 percent of that criticism myself. When I became editor of the Times, I continued to criticize monetarism."

Within a year, Evans was ousted from the Times in what he called "the saddest moment of my life." Murdoch said he made the move to avert a staff rebellion and insisted he had never tried to dictate newspaper policy.

That same year, Evans married Brown in New York. The two had met in 1973 when she had been a writer for the Sunday Times.

In 1984, Evans and Brown moved to the United States, where he taught at Duke University in North Carolina and later held various positions with U.S. News & World Report, the Atlantic Monthly and New York Daily News among others.

In London, Brown had edited The Tatler magazine. In America, she became editor of Vanity Fair magazine and later the New Yorker, before co-founding the Daily Beast news website in 2008. Evans became a U.S. citizen in 1993 and Brown followed suit in 2005.

In addition to his wife, Evans leaves his children Isabel, Georgie, Ruth, Michael and Kate Evans, grandchildren Anna and Emily Vanderpool, and brother Peter Evans. His first wife, Enid, from whom he was divorced in 1978, died in 2013.

Adler said: "I am so grateful Harry became my mentor and friend, and all of us at Reuters are blessed to have worked with him and learned from him these past 10 years. His example will continue to guide us."

Tributes have poured in from across the world.

His wife, Tina Brown said: "I lost the love of my life last night, my darling Harry. He was peaceful at home with his family. My soulmate for 39 years. Thank you for all the beautiful tributes to the most magical of men."

Prime Minister Boris Johnson, a former journalist at the Times newspaper, said Sir Harold was a "true pioneer".

He said: "Sir Harold Evans worked his way up from local papers to become a giant of British journalism. He will always be remembered for exposing the thalidomide scandal and for tirelessly campaigning on behalf of those who were affected. A true pioneer of investigative journalism."

Victims of the thalidomide scandal, whose families his groundbreaking campaign helped, were among those to pay their respects.

Ian Murray, executive director of the Society of Editors, said: "Sir Harold Evans was a giant among journalists who strove to put the ordinary man and woman at the heart of his reporting.

"He took on the establishment without fear or favour and earned a deserved reputation as one of the world's greatest editors.

"In his 70 years as a journalist he never lost sight of the need to maintain integrity in our profession.

"He was a true champion of a free press and holding the powerful to account."

Former Sunday Times Insight editor Bruce Page, who worked at the paper with Sir Harold during the 1960s and 1970s, described him as "unique".

The 83-year-old said: "All of his work was marked by his respect for - and understanding of - the reporter's skills and duties.

"He has given us an essential standard which will in time prevail against the reckless fabrications of social media."

Glen Harrison, a thalidomide survivor and deputy chairman of the campaign group Thalidomide UK, said Sir Harold Evans was "an outstanding human being for our cause".

Another thalidomide campaigner, Guy Tweedy, from Harrogate, who last met up with his "dear friend" in July 2019, said: "He was an icon.

"The world's greatest journalist and Harry was, and will always remain, a hero of Thalidomiders worldwide."

Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon offered her condolences to his family and said: "I always enjoyed talking to Harry and we had a lively conversation when he interviewed me at Women in the World in 2015."

Oliver Dowden, Culture, Media and Sport Secretary, said: "The passing of Sir Harold Evans should remind us of the vital role the free press plays in our democracy.

"He was a giant of investigative journalism - uncovering great injustices and informing the public without fear or favour."

Peter Barron, Northern Echo editor from 1999 to 2016, paid tribute to his predecessor, saying: "I was editor half a century later and the people of County Durham, North Yorkshire and Darlington still revered him."

Mr Barron met Sir Harold two years ago for a BBC documentary, recalling: "He was 90 years old and quite frail but when he talked about the thalidomide campaign he still leaned forward and he still thumped the desk with anger that the Government and the drug companies had tried to brush this scandal under the carpet."

Good Morning Britain host Piers Morgan described Evans as a "witty, charming, fiercely intelligent man".

He wrote on Twitter. "One of the all-time great newspaper editors.

"His stunning Thalidomide investigation when he ran the Sunday Times epitomised his crusading, campaigning, fearless style."

Former Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger tweeted: "Harry Evans was the master craftsman of journalism. But he was so much more.

"He reminded us why journalism mattered and of the good that it could, and should, do.

"He was the editor we all wanted to be - brave, enlightened and tough. RIP"

Professor Stuart Corbridge, vice-chancellor of Durham University, where Sir Harry studied, edited the student newspaper and which later gave him an honorary doctorate, said: "Our community is devastated to learn of the loss of alumnus Sir Harold Evans - a journalistic pioneer whose exceptional career spanned decades and whose legacy will influence generations to come."