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‘Visionary’ editor who ran daily for 10 years dies aged 84

Colin BranniganA “visionary” editor who ran a regional daily for a decade and was awarded the OBE for services to journalism has died aged 84.

Tributes have been paid to Colin Brannigan, who edited Sheffield daily The Star from 1968 to 1978.

Colin, pictured, subsequently served as editorial director of Essex County Newspapers and deputy chief executive of Reed Southern Newspapers.

He also held a number of national industry positions including chairman of the National Council for the Training of Journalists.

Former editor of The Star Alan Powell, who was a junior reporter when he first met Colin, said: “He was the sort of editor all young and aspiring reporters needed – full of praise when you did things right, and straight talking but still supportive when you got things wrong.

“He was also a visionary. He started a region-wide collaboration of local authorities called the 44 Group in the 1960s because he believed that acting regionally was a better option than councils going it alone.

“Remarkably, more than 50 years later it acted as a template for the Sheffield City Region.

“Colin believed a newspaper’s community of readers was at the centre of everything they should do. Hundreds of journalists who worked under him as editor, have taken that mantra forward.”

The son of a Lancashire butcher, Colin joined The Star as a sub-editor in the early 1960s and quickly rose through the ranks to become news editor.

He then became only its 10th editor in 80 years upon his appointment in 1968.

In an obituary, former Star assistant editor Peter Goodman wrote: “Colin was best known for his fervent campaigning zeal on behalf of readers, taking up a wide range of local issues to improve their wellbeing.

“His achievements had a profound and lasting impact on welfare services in the Sheffield region and his ability to identify problems in the community led to him winning a top national award in 1970, Campaigning Journalist of the Year, in the British Press Awards for a campaign called On Our Conscience.

“It uncovered vulnerable people in the Sheffield area who were in need of help and a team of journalists worked for several months to identify and highlight areas of neglect, their work leading to the publication of a Penguin paperback.”

Colin left Sheffield in 1978 and served as president of the Guild of Editors from 1979-80, for which he was also a council member, in addition to his role with the NCTJ.   He was awarded the OBE for services to journalism in 1993.

Former colleague Nigel Pickover, who went on to edit titles including the Eastern Daily Press and Ipswich Star, said: “Colin was a trailblazing editor who lit a path for those who followed him.

“I had a disagreement with him at interview but he clearly forgave me as he appointed me as a trainee reporter with The Star and we stayed in close touch over five decades.

“He was a passionate, campaigning editor and I had his guiding spirit alongside as I fought my own battles.

“It was true to Colin’s pioneering attitude that on retirement he launched Brannigan’s Newsletter, a guide to the latest news in the developing online world of newspapers. It became an early touchstone for the digital age.”

Colin, who died at a hospice near his home in Ripon, North Yorkshire, is survived by wife Joy, son Garry, daughters Colette and Pip and four grandchildren.