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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Post columnist Russell Luckock looks back on 60 years of the newspaper

One of the Birmingham Post's most recognisable columnists, industrialist Russell Luckock, looks back 60 years after he first contributed to the newspaper. Graeme Brown spoke to him

Russell Luckock

There have been many radical changes in the newspaper industry in the past six decades – but at the Birmingham Post there has been one constant.

The man sporting the second most recognisable pair of mutton chops in the region – just behind Noddy Holder – has now been associated with this newspaper for more than 60 years.

Winston Churchill was the prime minister when Russell Luckock, chairman of Birmingham pressings firm AE Harris, first saw his name printed in the Post.

He has now written his weekly column on business and civic matters for decades but it was actually a photograph taken by him in Libya on September 24, 1954 which first introduced him to readers.

It is a remarkable achievement in a remarkable career – he is still working at the age of 80, no less than 38 years after he was advised to retire because of kidney problems.

But the industrialist, who started working for AE Harris in 1955, does not believe in retirement and plans to continue writing for as long as his mind and body allow it.

“I love that when you write something it immediately becomes a first – nobody has ever done it before,” he said.

“I had regularly commented for the Birmingham Post and Mail but then about 25 years ago former Post business editor John Duckers rang me and asked me to do 500 words on something or other.