George Norman Ffitch was an English newsreader, television presenter, radio personality and journalist.
25 Facts About George Ffitch
George Ffitch began working for ITN as an industrial and political correspondent and later a programme editor when it was founded in 1955, covering elections and results broadcasts, political conventions in the United States and party conferences in the United Kingdom.
George Ffitch worked as the political and assistant editor at The Economist and at the Daily Express.
George Ffitch was managing director of LBC and Independent Radio News from 1979 to his retirement in 1985.
George Ffitch was born at 29 Charlotte Street in West Ham in Essex on 23 January 1929.
George Ffitch was the son of the railway porter Robert George Ffitch and his wife Margaret Matilda.
George Ffitch and was educated in state schools such as Barking Abbey School.
George Ffitch was a graduate of the London School of Economics.
George Ffitch was selected to take part in an academic diploma in Slavonic and east European studies as an internal student at the UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies and graduated in 1952 while serving in the Royal Army Service Corps as part of his National Service in Finland.
George Ffitch was chosen to do the Army's Russian course at Bodmin during the early 1950s; Ffitch retained his knowledge of Russian.
George Ffitch wrote for the Tokio Evening News newspaper, helped the political scientist Robert McKenzie to prepare the 1955 work British Political Parties and worked for the local Dagenham Times newspaper.
George Ffitch began working for ITN as an industrial and political correspondent and later a programme editor following the launch of the commercial television network ITV in 1955.
George Ffitch covered the South Lewisham and Carmarthen by-elections in 1957, the 1958 Rochdale by-election, and the weekly feature programme Roving Report in 1959 on ITV.
In 1962, George Ffitch became a freelancer, and worked for ITV on a permanent basis on the broadcaster's current affairs programme, This Week, and the BBC on the show Gallery.
George Ffitch covered elections and results broadcasts, political conventions in the United States, party conferences in the United Kingdom and Trades Union Congress debates live for ITN.
George Ffitch supported the newscast from its start having noticed the success it had in the United States.
George Ffitch worked at The Economist as their political editor and assistant editor with articles published on a weekly basis, replacing Ian Trethowan who later became the BBC's Director-General.
George Ffitch joined the Daily Express as an associate editor in 1974 and remained there until 1976.
George Ffitch was chair of the panel of the ITV programme Face the Press that was broadcast from 1976 to 1978.
George Ffitch was later employed by Geoffrey Cox to be the managing director of LBC and Independent Radio News.
George Ffitch held the position from January 1979 until he left in March 1985 due to ill health and was temporarily replaced by LBC's general manager Bill Coppen-Gardner.
George Ffitch retired that same year; David Nicolas wrote in The Guardian that George Ffitch was known as an effective leader who was devoted to his colleagues.
George Ffitch married Pamela Lyle on 6 February 1958, after the two met at ITN and they had two children; a daughter and a son.
George Ffitch's home was burgled while he was away in August 1967.
George Ffitch died at the Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Trust in Chelsea, London on 5 July 2001.