BERNARD INGHAM
'Sir Bernard Ingham' (born June 21 1932) is a journalist best known as Margaret Thatcher's press secretary. [1]
Ingham was educated at Hebden Bridge Grammar School and joined the ''Hebden Bridge Times'' newspaper at the age of 16. He went on to work for the ''Yorkshire Evening Post'', ''the Yorkshire Post'', latterly as Northern Industrial Correspondent, and The Guardian. Whilst a reporter at the Yorkshire Post, Ingham was an active member of the National Union of Journalists and was vice chairman of the Leeds branch.
Ingham's father was a Labour Party councillor and he was himself a member of the Labour Party until he joined the Civil Service. He contested the safe Conservative Moortown ward of Leeds City Council in the 1965 council elections.
In 1967, he joined the Civil Service. He spent 11 years as Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's Chief Press Secretary in No. 10 Downing Street. In 1989-90 he was also Head of the Government Information Service. In the course of his Civil Service career he was also press secretary to Barbara Castle, Robert Carr, Maurice Macmillan, Lord Carrington, Eric Varley and Tony Benn.
Although a career civil servant as opposed to a political appointee like his successor-but-three Alastair Campbell, Ingham gained a reputation for being a highly effective propagandist for the Thatcherite cause (despite his earlier political affiliation). The phrase spin doctor did not really enter common parlance until after his retirement and the rise of New Labour, but he was nevertheless a gifted exponent in what came to be known as the "black arts" of spin. In those days, Downing Street briefings were "off the record," meaning that information given out by Ingham could be attributed only to "senior government sources." Occasionally he used this deniability to brief against the Government's own ministers, such as when he described the Leader of the House of Commons John Biffen as a "semi-detached" member of the Government. Sure enough, Biffen was dropped at the next reshuffle.
However Ingham managed to stay out of the damaging Westland helicopter crisis in 1986, correctly realising that any involvement by him would directly link Mrs Thatcher to the affair.
He was knighted on Thatcher's resignation - and retirement - in 1990. His successor as press secretary was Gus O'Donnell, who went on to become Cabinet Secretary and Head of the Civil Service in 2005.
Ingham helped Thatcher in the writing of the ''Yes Minister'' sketch which she performed in public with Paul Eddington and Nigel Hawthorne.[1]
Ingham lectures in Public Relations at Middlesex University in London.
In 1999, Ingham was arrested and questioned by Police after it was alleged he kicked and damaged a car belonging to a neighbour, Barry Cripps, in a dispute over a right-of-way. He later voluntarily paid money to cover the repairs to the vehicle, and agreed to be bound over to keep the peace by local magistrates.
Sir Bernard Ingham is secretary to Supporters of Nuclear Energy (SONE), a group of individuals who seek to promote nuclear power.
He also holds the position of Vice President of 'Country Guardian', a UK based anti wind energy campaign group.
He is also a regular panelist on BBC current affairs programme Dateline London.
Sir Bernard Ingham's ancestry, revealing him to be of both Yorkshire and Lancashire stock, with one ancestral line from Staffordshire, was published in an article in the September 2006 issue of the UK genealogy magazine, Practical Family History. This article was researched and written by Roy Stockdill, an old friend of Sir Bernard's when they both worked as young journalists in Halifax in the 1950s. It showed that the Inghams originally came from Manchester and Salford, but Sir Bernard's grandfather Henry Ingham moved to the Calder Valley and Hebden Bridge, no doubt to find work in the cotton mills. On his maternal side, Sir Bernard's ancestors were mostly from Hebden Bridge and Heptonstall, whilst his maternal grandmother Jane Vernon descended from Staffordshire coal miners. Sir Bernard's authentic working class ancestry is thus well documented.
★ Routledge, Paul, ''Bumper Book of British Lefties'', 2003, Politicos (ISBN 1-84275-064-X) - provides further information on Ingham's early involvement with the Labour Party
★ Practical Family History magazine, September 2006, No 105, pages 6-10; A Foot In Both Red & White Rose Camps; the family tree of Sir Bernard Ingham by Roy Stockdill
★ 2003 Book, Kill the Messenger...Again
Ingham was educated at Hebden Bridge Grammar School and joined the ''Hebden Bridge Times'' newspaper at the age of 16. He went on to work for the ''Yorkshire Evening Post'', ''the Yorkshire Post'', latterly as Northern Industrial Correspondent, and The Guardian. Whilst a reporter at the Yorkshire Post, Ingham was an active member of the National Union of Journalists and was vice chairman of the Leeds branch.
Ingham's father was a Labour Party councillor and he was himself a member of the Labour Party until he joined the Civil Service. He contested the safe Conservative Moortown ward of Leeds City Council in the 1965 council elections.
In 1967, he joined the Civil Service. He spent 11 years as Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's Chief Press Secretary in No. 10 Downing Street. In 1989-90 he was also Head of the Government Information Service. In the course of his Civil Service career he was also press secretary to Barbara Castle, Robert Carr, Maurice Macmillan, Lord Carrington, Eric Varley and Tony Benn.
Although a career civil servant as opposed to a political appointee like his successor-but-three Alastair Campbell, Ingham gained a reputation for being a highly effective propagandist for the Thatcherite cause (despite his earlier political affiliation). The phrase spin doctor did not really enter common parlance until after his retirement and the rise of New Labour, but he was nevertheless a gifted exponent in what came to be known as the "black arts" of spin. In those days, Downing Street briefings were "off the record," meaning that information given out by Ingham could be attributed only to "senior government sources." Occasionally he used this deniability to brief against the Government's own ministers, such as when he described the Leader of the House of Commons John Biffen as a "semi-detached" member of the Government. Sure enough, Biffen was dropped at the next reshuffle.
However Ingham managed to stay out of the damaging Westland helicopter crisis in 1986, correctly realising that any involvement by him would directly link Mrs Thatcher to the affair.
He was knighted on Thatcher's resignation - and retirement - in 1990. His successor as press secretary was Gus O'Donnell, who went on to become Cabinet Secretary and Head of the Civil Service in 2005.
Ingham helped Thatcher in the writing of the ''Yes Minister'' sketch which she performed in public with Paul Eddington and Nigel Hawthorne.[1]
Ingham lectures in Public Relations at Middlesex University in London.
In 1999, Ingham was arrested and questioned by Police after it was alleged he kicked and damaged a car belonging to a neighbour, Barry Cripps, in a dispute over a right-of-way. He later voluntarily paid money to cover the repairs to the vehicle, and agreed to be bound over to keep the peace by local magistrates.
Sir Bernard Ingham is secretary to Supporters of Nuclear Energy (SONE), a group of individuals who seek to promote nuclear power.
He also holds the position of Vice President of 'Country Guardian', a UK based anti wind energy campaign group.
He is also a regular panelist on BBC current affairs programme Dateline London.
Sir Bernard Ingham's ancestry, revealing him to be of both Yorkshire and Lancashire stock, with one ancestral line from Staffordshire, was published in an article in the September 2006 issue of the UK genealogy magazine, Practical Family History. This article was researched and written by Roy Stockdill, an old friend of Sir Bernard's when they both worked as young journalists in Halifax in the 1950s. It showed that the Inghams originally came from Manchester and Salford, but Sir Bernard's grandfather Henry Ingham moved to the Calder Valley and Hebden Bridge, no doubt to find work in the cotton mills. On his maternal side, Sir Bernard's ancestors were mostly from Hebden Bridge and Heptonstall, whilst his maternal grandmother Jane Vernon descended from Staffordshire coal miners. Sir Bernard's authentic working class ancestry is thus well documented.
| Contents |
| References |
| Bibliography |
References
★ Routledge, Paul, ''Bumper Book of British Lefties'', 2003, Politicos (ISBN 1-84275-064-X) - provides further information on Ingham's early involvement with the Labour Party
★ Practical Family History magazine, September 2006, No 105, pages 6-10; A Foot In Both Red & White Rose Camps; the family tree of Sir Bernard Ingham by Roy Stockdill
Bibliography
★ 2003 Book, Kill the Messenger...Again
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