Harold Evans

Sir Harold Matthew Evans (born 1928) is a British-born journalist and writer. He currently lives in New York City with his wife Tina Brown and their two children.

Harold Matthew Evans was born in 1928 in Manchester, England, where he attended school with Auberon Waugh, who nicknamed him "Poshie" due to the fact that his father was the only one in the school with a car. They would be lifelong friends and rivals.

His career began as a reporter for a weekly newspaper at the age of 16. He began to make a reputation as editor of The Northern Echo, where one of his campaigns resulted in a national programme for the detection of cervical cancer.

Becoming one of Britain’s most respected journalists, Evans was editor of The Sunday Times for 14 years from 1967 to 1981, and was responsible for that newspaper’s crusading style of investigative reporting which brought to public attention many stories and scandals which were officially denied or ignored.

One such report was about the plight of hundreds of British Thalidomide children who had never had any compensation for the severe birth defects some of them had suffered. This turned into an ongoing campaign for the newspaper’s Insight investigative team, and Evans himself 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. As a result, the victims’ families won compensation after more than a decade.

Other influential investigative reports included the expose of the Kim Philby spy scandal and the publication of the diaries of former Labour Minister Richard Crossman, by doing so risking prosecution under the Official Secrets Act.

When Rupert Murdoch acquired Times Newspapers in 1981, Harold Evans was appointed editor of The Times, although his tenure lasted only a year, as he resigned over policy differences relating to editorial independence.

On leaving The Times, Evans became director of Goldcrest Films and Television, but moved to the USA in 1984, where he taught at Duke University, North Carolina. He was subsequently appointed editor-in-chief of The Atlantic Monthly Press and later would become editorial director of US News and World Report.

Evans was appointed president and publisher of Random House trade group from 1990 to 1997 and editorial director and vice chairman of US News and World Report, the New York Daily News, and The Atlantic Monthly from 1997 to January 2000, when he resigned to concentrate on writing.

His most famous work The American Century won critical accaim when it was published in 1998. They Made America, the sequel published in 2004, described the lives of some of the country's most important inventors and innovators, and was adapted as a four-part television miniseries that same year.

Harold Evans was knighted for services to journalism in 2004.

Since May 2005 he has been a contributing blogger at The Huffington Post, and starting the end of July he will be presenting A Point of View on BBC Radio 4. [1] (http://www.holdthefrontpage.co.uk/news/2005/06june/050609nibs.shtml)

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