Ivor Wynne Jones (1927 – 1 April 2007) was a Welsh journalist and a noted historian.[1]
Wynne Jones was born in the Liverpool suburb of Allerton.[2] He served in World War II as a paratrooper, and later joined the Forces Broadcasting Service in Jerusalem.[2] Finally, he worked in broadcasting in Cyprus before returning to the UK in 1948.[2]
Jones was editor of the Caernarvon and Denbigh Herald[2] before joining the Liverpool Daily Post, to which he contributed for 52 years.[1] He was the paper's chief foreign correspondent. His weekly column, which continued to appear until two months before his death, was entitled "Forthright and Fearless".[1]
He was also a founder member of the Lewis Carroll Society in 1969.[3]
He died in hospital at Colwyn Bay aged 80 and the funeral was on 10 April at Llanrhos, Llandudno.[1] He was survived by his wife, Jeanette, son Mervyn, an army spokesman in Northern Ireland, daughter Sian and two grandchildren.[3]
Works
edit- Llandudno Regina, the Queen of Welsh Resorts (1973)
- Shipwrecks of North Wales (1986)
- The Llechwedd Strike of 1893 (1993)
- Colwyn Bay: a Brief History (1995)
- Gold, Frankincense and Manure (1997)
- Alice's Welsh Wonderland (1999)
- Hitler’s Celtic Echo
- Victorian Slate Mining (2003)
References
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