Fownhope’s Heart of Oak Society traces its roots to the age of friendly societies, when communities provided their own safety net. Its anniversary celebrations reveal a tradition still very much alive, says MARK SEDDON
HERE’S a thought: Barry Hines’s novel A Kestrel for a Knave wouldn’t exist without the BBC — in particular, without the key role of Alfred Bradley, a Leeds-based producer for the BBC North region based in Woodhouse Lane, Leeds, from 1959 to 1980.
Bradley fostered distinctive northern talent on the regional radio programme The Northern Drift: realists such as Alan Plater and Stan Barstow, the humour of Henry Livings and the touching, sometimes softly lyrical songs and sketches of Alex Glasgow.
Hines had written a few pieces for Bradley, notably the fable-like radio play Billy’s Last Stand (1965) which so impressed Bradley that he recommended that BBC North give Hines a bursary.
Forty years on, TONY DUBBINS revisits the Wapping dispute to argue that Murdoch’s real aim was union-busting – enabled by Thatcherite laws, police violence, compliant unions and a complicit media
The once beating heart of British journalism was undone by technological change, union battles and Murdoch’s 1986 Wapping coup – leaving London the only major capital without a press club, says TIM GOPSILL
As advertising drains away, newsrooms shrink and local papers disappear, MIKE WAYNE argues that the market model for news is broken – and that public-interest alternatives, rooted in democratic accountability, are more necessary than ever
A handful of journalists at The Times faced a stark personal and political choice in 1986 – cross the picket lines for cash and career, or stand with organised labour at great personal risk. BARRIE CLEMENT recalls why refusing to scab at Wapping was not just an act of union loyalty, but a stand for the future of journalism


