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Christopher Morgan (Read 9031 times)
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Christopher Morgan
Jun 4th, 2008, 8:06am
 
This is taken from The Guardian:

Christopher Morgan: journalist and broadcaster dies
by Ben Dowell
Tuesday June 3 2008


Christopher Morgan, the former religious affairs correspondent of the Sunday Times, has died after a long battle with depression.

The 55-year-old, who enjoyed a lengthy career in broadcast and print media, took his own life on Friday.

He had been struggling with clinical depression and friends said he had been badly hit by the death of his mother three years ago.

Morgan's family said in a statement: "The death of Christopher's mother nearly three years ago affected him deeply. However he strived to maintain the highest of standards in journalism across a number of media, though it was clear to those close to him that he was struggling to come to terms with one of life's ultimate bereavements.

"Last summer Christopher started suffering from bouts of depression and sought psychiatric help. He contributed a couple of stories to the Sunday Times in the spring of this year, and his family and friends thought he was slowly on the road to recovery. However, on Friday May 30, 2008 he took his own life."

Morgan began his media career in broadcasting in 1977 in the BBC's religious department before moving in 1978 to BBC Wales, where he worked as a reporter and contributor to news programmes on BBC1 and BBC Radio 4.

This experience led him to become one of the main presenters on the BBC Wales flagship regional news programme, Wales Today.

In 1990, he moved to London where he worked as a reporter for Thames News and TV-am. Between 1990 and 1997, he presented BBC Radio 4's Sunday programme focusing on religious news and moral issues.

In 1997, he became religious affairs correspondent for the Sunday Times where he was a popular and valued colleague. He also enjoyed a close relationship with the archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams and was best man at his wedding.

Among the many stories Morgan broke at the Sunday Times included the revelation that Cormac Murphy-O'Connor was to be the next Archbishop of Westminster.

During his time on the paper he also began contributing to a number of TV religious affairs programmes on channels including BBC News 24, Sky News and CNN.

His friend, the religious affairs correspondent of the Times, Ruth Gledhill, has posted a tribute on the Times website.

"He had been a true and faithful support to me throughout my 21 years at the Times, as he was to all his friends, godchildren, family and contacts," she wrote.

"I'll never forget the wonderful lunches he treated me to at the Savoy and elsewhere, many of them hotels too luxurious and plush for me to have ever heard of without his introduction."

Another friend, the Daily Telegraph religious affairs reporter, Damian Thompson, has also posted a tribute on his newspaper's website.

"Chris was a bon viveur, a journalist with an ever-twitching nose for a story, and a devout Anglo-Catholic with a profound love of the Roman Catholic church," Thompson wrote.

"He was a complicated and private man who was deeply scarred by bereavements in his own family. Yet his simple delight in the good things of life - especially lunch at the Connaught - was a joy to behold."
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Re: Christopher Morgan
Reply #1 - Jun 4th, 2008, 8:18am
 
This is taken from The Times, June 3, 2008:

Christopher Morgan, religious affairs writer
The Religious Affairs correspondent for The Sunday Times had a flair for the groundbreaking scoop and was famous for his generous entertaining


When Christopher Morgan was a young man aged 22 and living with his family in Cardiff, his three younger siblings would be fascinated by the somewhat eccentric, bearded chap who regularly turned up to partake of their mother's excellent Sunday lunches. Morgan would silence their irreverent giggles with the statement: "You do know that one day this man will be Archbishop of Canterbury." And so it came to pass. But even before that, Morgan had been fascinated by the trappings of high office in Church and State. The play room in the house in Victoria Park became the setting for countless enthronements of Archbishops of Canterbury and Kings of England, with Morgan invariably playing the lead.

Many predicted that Morgan, with his high intelligence and deep, Anglo-Catholic spirituality, would go far in the Church , and ordination seemed a natural calling. But he felt otherwise, and as he left childhood his apparent ambition for high office left him. Instead, his vocation was to be the ultimate lay person. He took it upon himself to relieve the clergy at St Luke's, the family's parish church, of all responsibilities save those of preaching, presiding and otherwise ministering. Morgan took over organising the choir, managing the rotas, any duties that required paperwork. Passionate about a well-ordered liturgy, he once had a choir of 30 working - class teenagers rehearsing at 4.30pm for that evening's Holy Saturday service nearly five hours later, and rewarded their devotion by organising a memorable outing to Weston-super-Mare.

He took this attitude, one of service for the higher good of God and country, through his life. The concept of service for the greater good underpinned all he did as a radio and television presenter and then Royal and Religious Affairs Correspondent for The Sunday Times. An innocent who occasionally veered over into naivety, he found it difficult to believe that anyone born, ordained or elected to high office in Church or State could be in any way defective. Should a senior bishop or politician then emerge as somehow imperfect in the conduct of his office, and particularly in the area of finance, Morgan found this difficult to forgive or understand. Generous beyond a fault, Morgan's love of entertaining his friends and contacts was legendary. His sense of fun and love of gossip made these occasionals memorable for all those privileged to be on his invitation list. He preferred restaurants such as the Gavroche and the Savoy because the prices of his guest's portions were not stated on the menus. But his own finances were not well-organised, and he ended up paying for many of the meals himself simply by failing to submit his expenses to the BBC or Sunday Times.

Morgan was assiduous in "working" his contacts and his energy and dedication were seemingly endless. If a guest did not crack over four courses, two bottles of wine and port to follow at the Savoy, he would get what he needed in a series of follow-up phone calls. Friends thus assailed always forgave him, or nearly always, because of the heavenly flattery he tirelessly employed, the beautiful quality of his voice and the native charm inherent to his cultured and "proper" manner of speaking. These were gifts that came from his parents, both bank cashiers, because he was educated wholly in the state system.

He was also renowned for not driving and for rarely walking anywhere. Working for the BBC in Wales on Sunday morning shifts, he would summon a taxi to the family home in Cardiff after work and would then pay for the taxi driver to wait while he showered, shaved and changed. He would then take the taxi the hundred yards up the road to church. Immaculately turned out, he also regularly used taxis to take his shirts to the drycleaners, and to bring them back

Ultimately, in spite of his drive, he was loyal. Rowan Williams was one of his closest friends and he was even best man at the future Archbishop's wedding . When Dr Williams was translated many assumed that Morgan would be unstoppable in terms of scoops, but if anything the elevation of his close friend had the reverse effect on Morgan's career as a journalist. He was extremely distressed in the last period of his life by the criticism the Archbishop encountered for his apparent betrayal of the liberal lobby over homosexuality and over his controversial speech on Sharia. What was especially upsetting, for a man who had a habit of placing such friends on impossible pedastals, was that he felt some of the criticism might be deserved.

However, he had many scoops that he could and did publish, and he was one of the first journalists to recognise the importance that Islam would assume in British public life. His biggest story was news of the next Archbishop of Westminster, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor. He obtained this from a contact in England who had confirmed it with the Vatican. Christopher's other Catholic scoop was that Joseph Ratzinger would be the next Pope. One of his last stories for the Sunday Times, that the Abbot of Pluscarden might succeed Cardinal Murphy-O'Connor when he retires next year, also came via Vatican sources.

Morgan had been ill for some time and at one point was sectioned, but when his Catholic Archbishop succession story appeared a few weeks ago, many of his friends read it as a sign that he was on the mend. Sadly, this was not the case. Like all his siblings he had been deeply affected by the death of their mother nearly three years ago. She was a remarkable woman who adored all her children and Morgan telephoned her at least three times a day. Lacking the support of a spouse or children, he was perhaps affected more deeply than the others. However he strived to maintain the highest of standards in journalism across a number of media, but confided to friends that he was tired of the sheer hard slog of finding news stories. The gravity of his struggle to come to terms with one of life’s ultimate bereavements was becoming clear to his family and friends. Always private about his personal life, he became reclusive and difficult to reach. At 55, he decided to end his own life on a railway line in north London.

Morgan was educated at Cardiff High School, Atlantic College (The International Sixth Form College) and The University of St Andrews where he graduated as a Master of Theology in 1976. He then became treasurer of The National Union of Students working alongside the union's then-president, Charles Clarke.

In 1977 he began his career in broadcasting in the BBC’s Religious department headed up by John Stuart Roberts. In 1978 he moved into news and current affairs working as a reporter and presenter for BBC Wales Radio and Television while regularly contributing to news programmes on BBC1 and BBC Radio 4. This experience led him to become one of the main presenters on the BBC Wales flagship regional news programme ‘Wales Today’. In 1990, Morgan moved to London where he worked as a reporter for Thames News and TVAM.

Between 1990 and 1997, he presented BBC Radio 4’s ‘Sunday’ programme focusing on religious news and moral issues. Acclaimed reports included his coverage of the moral questions raised by the 1991 Gulf War and the genocide and ethnic cleansing campaign conducted in Bosnia. Coverage of Islam was also a specialist subject in this period.

In 1997, he became Religious Affairs Correspondent for The Sunday Times and was responsible for providing analysis and reporting about major church news. From the year 2000, he began contributing to a number of television news programmes on religious affairs appearing regularly on BBC News 24, Sky News and CNN.

He was also active in service in the church and in local politics. Posts he held in the 1970s included membership of the All Saints’ Church Vestry, St Andrews, of the University Court at St Andrews, president of the Students’ Representative Council at St Andrews, national treasurer of the NUS and chairman of Endsleigh Insurance Limited and until 1988, he was a member of the Governing Body of the Church in Wales. In the 1980s he also served as lay representative of the Church in Wales at Canterbury Cathedral for the visit of Pope John Paul II, as a member of the Electoral College of the Church in Wales - charged with electing a new Bishop of Llandaff in 1985 - and as liturgical director of St Luke’s Church, Cardiff. He was also a churchwarden there and lay minister of Holy Communion. In the late 1990s he became a governor of South Camden Community School, London NW1 and in 2005 was guest lecturer at a symposium on Muslim-Christian relations in Cairo.

In St Andrew's in the 1970s he stood as a Labour candidate for the local authority and in the 1980s he campaigned successfully to help open Lansdowne Hospital in Cardiff and achieve the building of a new unit for the elderly and mentally infirm. In 1985 he succeeded in persuading the Conservative-controlled city council to remove large amounts of asbestos heating systems from an estate in Cardiff West.

In spite of the way it ended, there is much about Morgan's life that was glorious. It will be celebrated in a way he would have loved. His brother John Morgan, managing director of the advertising agency JM Creative and a master at television production, is orchestrating the Requiem Mass to end all Requiem Masses. On a date yet to be announced, it will be at Llandaff Cathedral and at least one, possibly two, Archbishops will be in attendance. All Morgan's friends are most welcome to come, remember and say goodbye to him there.

Christopher Morgan, Religious Affairs Correspondent for The Sunday Times, was born on July 29 1952. He died on May 30, 2008.
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Re: Christopher Morgan
Reply #2 - Jun 4th, 2008, 8:28am
 
This is taken from BBC News Online:

Tributes after ex-presenter dies

Tributes have been paid to the former BBC Wales Today presenter Chris Morgan, who has died at the age of 55.

Mr Morgan, who was originally from Cardiff, was religious affairs correspondent for the Sunday Times.

British Transport Police said it was investigating the death of a man at King Langley station in Hertfordshire.

A committed Anglo-Catholic, Mr Morgan was a close friend of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams and was the best man at his wedding.

Transport Police said a 55-year-old man died last Friday afternoon.

He was pronounced dead at the scene after the incident involving a Manchester Piccadilly to London Euston train.

An inquest will be held by the Hertfordshire coroner.

Ruth Gledhill, religious affairs correspondent of The Times, said she was "heartbroken" to hear the news of Mr Morgan's death.

"He had been a true and faithful support to me throughout my 21 years at The Times, as he was to all his friends, godchildren, family and contacts," she said.

Damian Thompson, of the Daily Telegraph, wrote on his newspaper's website: "Chris was a bon viveur, a journalist with an ever-twitching nose for a story, and a devout Anglo-Catholic with a profound love of the Roman Catholic Church."

He said Mr Morgan was a born journalist: "He was always looking for a story."

Mr Morgan was educated at Cardiff High School before going to Atlantic College sixth form college in the Vale of Glamorgan and the University of St Andrews in Scotland where he graduated as a Master of Theology in 1976.

He later worked as a reporter and presenter for BBC Wales radio and television, becoming one of the main presenters on the news programme Wales Today.

He became religious affairs correspondent for The Sunday Times in 1997.
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