Bill Richardson (journalist)
Sir William Robert Richardson (16 January 1909 – 16 January 1986), known as Bill Richardson, was a British newspaper editor.
Born in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Richardson studied at the Co-operative College, and was appointed editor of the Co-operative News in 1938. In 1942, he switched to edit Reynold's News, serving until the paper's closure in 1967. He later served on the Post Office Users National Council, and wrote several books about trade unionism and the co-operative movement.[1]
Books
- A Union of Many Trades: A History of USDAW
- The CWS in War and Peace
gollark: There's an easy solution to that.
gollark: C ones are highly pointerious also, no?
gollark: I'm fairly satisfied with python ones, and would be apioformically æææ with C ones.
gollark: Stable sortoiding algorithms other than bubblesort exist however?
gollark: As an intellectual, I would just dump the data into better-documented JSON and make the frontend someone else's problem.
References
- "RICHARDSON, Sir William (Robert)", Who Was Who
Media offices | ||
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Preceded by Sydney Elliott |
Editor of Reynold's News 1941–1967 |
Succeeded by Position abolished |
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