Scottish Daily Mail

Here’s to Fleet St’s finest ( and that includes you )

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REadInG the supplement­s celebratin­g 125 glorious years of the daily Mail has been like watching my life flash before me. not that I’ve been around for 125 years, although sometimes it feels like it.

the lovingly recreated highlights of this newspaper’s, and our nation’s, history have transporte­d me on a sentimenta­l journey.

For instance, I was reminded of the first time I encountere­d in the flesh the Grande dame of Fleet Street, ann Leslie.

I was assigned (condemned?) to spend a month on neil Kinnock’s battle bus during the 1987 election campaign. ann was parachuted in for a day, sweeping on board like a Spanish galleon under full sail.

despite seemingly spending most of her time dealing loudly with some domestic crisis, after commandeer­ing the Mail political reporter’s cumbersome mobile telephone, she managed to produce an impeccable hatchet job on the hapless Labour leader for the following morning’s paper.

Like everything she touched, it was insightful and elegantly written. Later we were to become firm friends and colleagues.

ann is just one of the roll call of Fleet Street legends featured over the past six editions. Some, like the brilliant Ian Wooldridge and the wonderful Lynda Lee-Potter, I have been privileged to know. Others I have known only by reputation.

On Saturday, we featured rex north’s marvellous dispatch from HMS Belfast during the d-day landings. His was a name I’ve been aware of for most of my career, but to my eternal shame until this week I had no idea he had been a war correspond­ent. I always thought of him as a gossip columnist.

In the early 1970s, I worked for a provincial news agency in Peterborou­gh run by former Fleet Street hack rex needle. One of needle’s proudest possession­s was a framed herogram from north when he wrote for rex north’s diary in the Sunday Mirror.

Monday’s supplement reproduced Vincent Mulchrone’s legendary ‘two rivers’ report on Winston Churchill lying in state. I felt as if I knew it off by heart.

It used to hang on the wall of the bar named in honour of Mulchrone at the Harrow pub, off Fleet Street, where as a young industrial correspond­ent on the Evening Standard I would often meet my colleagues from the rival Evening news for a mid-morning heart-starter.

Perhaps the greatest of them all was Edgar Wallace, who covered the Boer War for the Mail before decamping to Hollywood and writing King Kong.

One of Wallace’s most devoted admirers was Keith Waterhouse, the columnists’ columnist, also formerly of this parish. In the volume of his memoirs covering his arrival in Fleet Street, Keith writes about making a point of paying homage to the Edgar Wallace memorial plaque at Ludgate Circus — a ritual he would repeat over the years.

Wallace’s job descriptio­n reads simply: ‘reporter.’ underneath is engraved: ‘Of his talents he gave lavishly to authorship — but to Fleet Street he gave his heart.’

that’s a sentiment which I am certain could be applied to all those whose work has been featured this week. they are first and foremost reporters, and Fleet Street is their spiritual home.

reading the immaculate copy filed by Mulchrone, Wallace, Wooldridge and Leslie reminds those of us still chipping away at the wordface of the standards to which we must aspire daily.

But journalist­s privileged to work front-of-house must acknowledg­e that none of it would be possible without our colleagues who toil in the engine room — the subeditors, the secretarie­s, the artists, the printers, the delivery drivers.

nor would our endeavours have much purpose were it not for the

AFTeR news that lockdown has led to more people turning to drink, the Medicines and healthcare products Regulatory Agency has declared: ‘There is currently no evidence that drinking alcohol interferes with the efficacy of the Covid-19 vaccines.’ Thank goodness for that. We’re safe! most important element in the newspaper equation — the loyalty of our magnificen­t army of readers. Over the past 125 years, the Mail has run countless campaigns, which could not have been successful without your wholeheart­ed support.

time and again, Mail readers have demonstrat­ed their overwhelmi­ng generosity, most recently giving £160,000 in just six days to our appeal to establish a lasting, multi-faith memorial to our Covid dead.

It’s not just the financial donations, either. I can remember Keith Waterhouse writing a column lamenting the fact that he could no longer obtain new ribbons for his trusty sit-up-andbeg typewriter. Within days, he was inundated with ribbons from readers all over Britain.

you also provide so much of the inspiratio­n and, indeed, raw material. I get hundreds of emails and letters each week, not just commenting on what I’ve written but offering ideas, jokes, cuttings from local newspapers — some of which end up in the column or supply the spark for one of Gary’s fabulous cartoons.

So let me thank you, from all of us at the Mail. I’ve said it before and it’s worth saying again as we celebrate a landmark anniversar­y: this column, this newspaper, simply wouldn’t be the same without you.

Here’s to the next 125 years.

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