Tributes to former Peterborough Evening Telegraph editor

Tributes have been paid to a former Peterborough Evening Telegraph editor who has died following a battle with cancer.
Former Peterborough Evening Telegraph editor, Norman Carroll, who has died aged 78, pictured earlier this year with grandchildren Oliver and Tom EMN-190923-171012001Former Peterborough Evening Telegraph editor, Norman Carroll, who has died aged 78, pictured earlier this year with grandchildren Oliver and Tom EMN-190923-171012001
Former Peterborough Evening Telegraph editor, Norman Carroll, who has died aged 78, pictured earlier this year with grandchildren Oliver and Tom EMN-190923-171012001

Norman Carroll was editor of the Peterborough paper in the 1980s and went on to teach journalists in countries which had been released from dictatorial rule on how to report freely on stories.

He also worked as editor of the Melton Times.

Mr Carroll, a grandfather, retired to live in Cumbria and was diagnosed with liver cancer 15 months ago.

He died aged 78 last week.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

His son, Steve, said: “Dad was a real newspaper man and right up to his dying day he had The Times delivered and read it from cover to cover.

“He kept quite a lot of copies from his newspaper career including many issues of the Melton Times and Peterborough Evening Telegraph, where he was also editor.

“He lived in Langham while he was working in Melton and had a lot of fond memories of the town and the colleagues he worked with.”

Mr Carroll was born in Peterborough and after leaving school he took a job as a junior reporter at the Evening Telegraph.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

He then went overseas for a number of years working in a PR role with the British army in Malaysia, Hong Kong and Singapore before returning to the UK to become deputy editor of the Northants Evening Telegraph at Kettering.

His first editorship followed at Peterborough before he took over as editor of the Melton Times in the mid-1980s, succeeding Rod Jones, and he worked there until the end of the decade.

Brian Johnson worked with Norman at the Kettering paper and again at Melton when Brian was deputy to Norman.

He said: “Norman was a lovely man to work with - a very friendly chap and a good boss.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“The Melton Times went through a lot of changes in the early 1980s as the paper evolved and expanded.

“I have so many great memories of those days.

“Norman was a real gentleman and the newsroom was always a happy place to work in.”

Norman then went abroad with the Home Office to China and countries in the Middle East to teach reporters in a society where there was a new-found free press.

A return to the PR industry followed that, with a job north of the border with the Royal Bank of Scotland.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

He was first married to Helena and latterly to Diana, who he spent 20 years with before she passed away.

Mr Carroll leaves three sons - Steve and Jonny, who both emigrated to Australia, and Nick, who lives at Redmile.

He also had four grandchildren - Oliver, Aidan, Annie and Tom.

A funeral service for Mr Carroll, who passed away at a care home near Melton, is at St Cuthbert’s Church, at Holme St Cuthbert in Cumbria, at 1pm on October 3.

Related topics: