Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Tributes after the death of veteran journalist Stan

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HE was an old school journalist whose heyday in newspapers was a very different world.

Stan Solomons, who has died aged 85, was one of journalism’s few remaining characters.

But to dismiss him solely as a journalist is to sell short a man who was so much more than that.

Stan, who lived in Fixby, may have made his name as half of a renowned freelance double act with the late Alan Cooper.

But Stan, married to Nancy for 57 years, was rooted in the Huddersfie­ld community and was a talented bass singer and a long-standing and loyal member of Honley Male Voice Choir.

Singing was a passion in the latter part of his life and he regularly performed solo at concerts and other events until well into his 80s.

Stan, who followed the Jewish faith, also carried out voluntary work for the Bradford Reform Synagogue and he and Nancy brought comfort and friendship to the sick and those in need.

Stan rarely spoke about his charity work and donations, the extent of which only became clear after his death.

As well as covering news stories for the agency he and Alan ran together Huddersfie­ld-based West Riding News Service. Stan was a familiar figure in the press box at both Huddersfie­ld Town and Halifax Town.

He reported on football and rugby league for national and local newspapers and is thought to have covered his first Huddersfie­ld Town game 59 years ago.

Stan launched the careers of countless journalist­s, most notably football writer Martin Lipton, now deputy head of sport at The Sun.

Stan was delighted to watch Huddersfie­ld Town in the Premier League this season but also had a soft spot for Halifax Town, often joking that he would “buy the club on Saturday when I’ve won the lottery.”

Born in Stepney, East London, to Jewish parents Stan went on to join the airforce and completed his National Service, serving in the former Rhodesia.

Afterwards he learned shorthand and typing and found an aptitude for shorthand. He was exceptiona­lly fast and could write 180 words a minute at his peak. By comparison journalist­s today are only required to reach 100 words a minute.

He had a near ‘photograph­ic memory’ which made shorthand virtually redundant and that was needed later as he could dictate match reports over the phone to seven or eight different newspapers, one after the other and each different to the rest.

Stan got a job as a reporter on the Surrey Mirror but had loftier ambitions.

Meanwhile in Huddersfie­ld, Alan Cooper and the late Stanley Vaughan set up West Riding News Service when they left the Daily Mirror in February 1954.

Stanley Vaughan returned to the Mirror a few months later and Stan applied for the job, moving from Surrey in October 1954, later becoming a partner in the firm.

Like chalk and cheese in many ways, Alan and Stan built ‘West Riding’ into one of most reliable and reputable agencies in a partnershi­p lasting 40 years.

The pair covered some of the biggest stories in West Yorkshire as well as pulling off some harmless ‘stunts’ to bring a smile to the faces of tabloid readers in the 1970s and 1980s.

One of Stan’s more creative stunts involved ‘kidnapping’ the famous Gretna Green anvil. Stan drove to Scotland, taking a couple of Huddersfie­ld students with him, and pinched the anvil, loading it into the car and driving it to London!

Stan also had the ear of disgraced peer Lord Kagan, the Elland textile magnate famous for making the Gannex raincoat worn by Huddersfie­ld-born Prime Minister Harold Wilson.

Lithuanian-born Kagan was jailed on theft and fraud charges in the late 1970s and served time in an open prison in North Yorkshire.

When he was released all the national press were on his tail – but Stan was the only journalist he would talk to.

The last big murder case Stan covered was the killing of teacher Eve Howells in Dalton in 1995.

Mrs Howells was found brutally battered to death with a hammer at her home and suspicion quickly fell on her husband David and their two sons, then aged 14 and 15.

Detectives put Howells up for interview by the media and Stan led the questionin­g, senior officers hoping that Stan’s incisive probing could illicit a breakthrou­gh.

Howells and the boys were later convicted and Howells was jailed for life for murder.

By coincidenc­e, the day after that murder took place Stan took a step into retirement when he sold the agency to Martin Shaw, now news editor at the Huddersfie­ld Examiner.

Alan Cooper had retired a couple of years earlier and Martin took on the agency with Stan as mentor and trusted ally.

Martin said: “Stan was a tremendous journalist and a real character in every sense of the word. His career was nothing short of remarkable and he told me some tales that couldn’t possibly be repeated!

“He could be brilliant yet infuriatin­g. He would defend his territory ferociousl­y and woe betide any other freelance who encroached on his patch.

“He could be gruff on the outside but once he trusted you and let you beyond that stern exterior there wasn’t a more loving and generous man to be found anywhere.

“Stan was a one-off, a complex character. We would be laughing one minute and rowing the next but that was Stan and no-one would want him any other way.”

Stan’s family – wife Nancy, sons Andrew and Mark and their wives Helen and Amanda and grandchild­ren Peter, Katy and Dan and Matthew and Rebecca – have been touched by people’s response since the news of Stan’s death.

Nancy said: “Everybody knows what Stan was like but he was a kind, generous man and everybody who has written to us has said how wonderful he was.”

Stan died peacefully on March 1 at Huddersfie­ld Royal Infirmary after a short illness.

His funeral will be held on Monday, March 26 (10.30am) at Huddersfie­ld Crematoriu­m.

Donations in lieu of flowers should go to Kirkwood Hospice.

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