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The Irish in Britain, including those of Irish descent, make up a significant part of the UK population. Here, you will find news, entertainment, events, sports and features from the local Irish Post newspaper.

 
 
 
 

BOOK REVIEWs: Bringing the Post to book

Tony Beatty was behind the launch of The Irish Post some 36 years ago. His autobiography From Post To Post tells the story of his journey from a rural Irish post office to the heart of London’s Irish community. In an exclusive extract he recounts the birth of the paper which became the voice of the Irish in Britain.

THE Irish Post was born in a hotel in the English Midlands. My accountancy business was going through a particularly busy period between 1967 and 1969 and I virtually lived out of a suitcase as my hectic schedule took me to all corners.

During these travels I would meet members of the Irish community in various clubs and haunts and it became very clear to me that they had no means of communicating with Irish groups in other towns. The Irish of Nottingham, for instance, knew nothing of their counterparts in Newcastle. The Coventry Irish were strangers to their soulmates in Cardiff and there was no bond between Willesden and Walsall.

The logical way to reach them seemed to be a newspaper or magazine: A national organ and information sheet dedicated solely to the welfare of the Irish community in Britain and to furthering their cause. Ideally, it should be run by an experienced team of Irish journalists with a fellow-countryman at the helm. Like Topsy the idea grew and I started to look for a professional newspaperman who fitted the bill.

Eventually, I found Brendan MacLua, who had a publishing background in Ireland and I persuaded him to join me in the venture. We worked tirelessly side-by-side formulating the style and content of my new baby and so jointly founded the Irish Post.

We had appointed Pat Chatten, an experienced Irish journalist, as our first editor and in order to attract potential advertisers we produced our first dummy issue in December 1969.

I was relieved to find that it had generated a high level of interest among the Irish financial and industrial corporations. The tourist industry supported us too, and we soon had comments from Ryans, B & I Line, Murphy’s the builders and the Irish TGWU.

To cap this, both main Irish banks bought a whole page of advertising.

We decided to fly in the face of superstition by launching The Irish Post on Friday, February 13, 1970. We felt we were big enough to overcome any bad ju-ju and, in retrospect, it proved to be a lucky day for us.

There was plenty of interest in the inaugural issue.

I often thumb through that first issue. The lead story picked the bones out of a speech made at our inaugural luncheon by the late George Colley, Irish Minister for Industry and Commerce, who made an impassioned plea for the Irish in Britain to use their voting power to support candidates who sympathised with the Irish viewpoint.

Other issues covered included the outburst from Enoch Powell, then MP for Wolverhampton, who said that his party would ensure that the Irish would have no preference entering Britain and should expect the same treatment as the French, Russians and Australians.

A random survey showed that the Irish were three to one in favour of returning home if they could find a job with similar pay and conditions. There was also an exclusive interview with Con Murphy, chairman of the advisory committee for services to immigrants who wished to return home.

A new Irish centre had just opened in Leeds and the Liverpool equivalent was celebrating its fifth anniversary. There was a round-up of provincial news from Ireland, a women’s page, a showbusiness page and a profile of Johnny Giles of Leeds United and Ireland, certainly one of the sporting heroes of the time.

For advocates of the other variety of football, there was an extensive preview of the match between England and Ireland at Twickenham the following day and all this for an old-fashioned shilling! We printed 84,000 copies of the first issue.

As I have said, the initial reaction was encouraging but my concern was to ensure that both readers and advertisers would stick with it and I embarked on a lengthy programme of promotional visits to Irish clubs and centres — not just to sell the paper but also to sell its concept.

I had to answer countless questions on editorial policy and gradually it became clear to the much-maligned and often-rejected Irish community in Britain that they had a champion — an ally on whom they could rely. People started to write letters, airing their views on controversial issues.

Other readers reacted and this spawned more correspondence making the letters page an open forum for diverse points of view on anything that breathed, moved or perhaps, more pertinently, occupied a Parliamentary seat. I can still recall, in those early days, the pride I felt just seeing the paper in newsagents in all parts of Britain. It was sold in Ireland too, for many emigrants returned to their homeland in the 1970s and wanted to keep up with news of their colleagues in Britain.

It was important that we indicate our stance on a wide variety of topical and controversial issues affecting the Irish community. First of all, we refused to be neatly categorised. We also wanted to retain the facility to communicate with the great mass of Irish people in Britain.

Major points in our manifesto included our views on jobs: We provided practical information on employment opportunities in Ireland and helped to create more work by the promotion of Irish goods and services to Britain; on the reunification of Ireland we pointed out that in the unlikely event of this happening in the immediate future the vast majority of Irish emigrants would have to remain in Britain and it would be the duty of The Irish Post to safeguard the interests and welfare of these people;

on emigration we emphasised that half the people of Ireland were living in Britain because their own country couldn’t accommodate them. We pointed out that successive Irish governments had done damn all for the welfare of the Irish in Britain, and that The Irish Post would not be guilty of this.

Fortunately, the emigrant community has chosen to nurture its roots rather than sever them, and Irish culture, particularly dancing, is more popular in Britain than it is in Ireland.

Ireland has many champions and may it always have them but aren’t the half who have opted to live in Britain entitled to have one champion who will put their interest above all other things? This was the role to which The Irish Post committed itself from the start. Its banner head said: A Voice For The Irish In Britain and nothing changed during my period as co-proprietor of the newspaper.

From Post To Post is available to order from all good bookshops or log on to the publisher’s website at www.currach.ie.

 
 
 
 
 
 © IrishAbroad.com 2009