How sheer luck and a wannabe gumshoe helped launch my long journalistic career

Jeremy Miles (seated and bearded) takes centre stage Christmas 1971

By Jeremy Miles

Fifty-five long years ago today I began work as a young newspaper reporter. Green, naive and pretty clueless but bolstered by the confidence of youth, I quickly became surprisingly well-regarded.

This was not because I was particularly good at the job but simply because a fellow junior hack taken on on the same day as me was so spectacularly useless that by comparison, my mediocrity looked quite impressive. Better still, by the time my hopeless colleague was sacked three months later, I had had time to learn.I met him a year or so later. He was working as a trainee private detective. I’m told that it didn’t last long. Apparently he was rubbish at being a gumshoe too.

In retrospect, I realise that I must havebeen a cocky little sod. I found this picture of me (the one with a with a beard) aged 20 and not yet a year into the job, grabbing the central position in the photograph and holding court at the firm’s Christmas dinner. Happy memories!

Learning a reporter’s trade amid multiple shipping disasters

The Folkestone Herald editorial office in early 1970s on a day when no ships sank
The Folkestone Herald editorial office in early 1970s on a day when no ships sank

Exactly 43-years ago today I walked into my first newspaper office to start a long and eventful career in journalism. The bi-weekly Folkestone Herald and Gazette was a great place to learn the reporters trade. The paper had the advantage of being based in one of the most characterful towns on the south east coast. It had been on the front-line during the war. Hell-Fire Corner they called it when the bombs rained down. I grew up there during the 1950s and had an unquestioning understanding of the place. It was strange but I knew nothing else. Continue reading “Learning a reporter’s trade amid multiple shipping disasters”