Frank Branston

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Frank Branston
Mayor of Bedford
In office
6 October 2002  14 August 2009
Preceded by New Office
Succeeded by Dave Hodgson
Personal details
Born (1939-05-09)9 May 1939
Retford, Notts
Died 14 August 2009(2009-08-14) (aged 70)
Political party Independent
Website www.bedford.gov.uk

Frank Branston (9 May 1939 14 August 2009) was a journalist, novelist and newspaper proprietor, and the first directly elected mayor of the Borough of Bedford in Bedfordshire, England.

Early life and career

Frank Branston was born in Retford, Nottinghamshire, brought up in Chelsea, west London, and educated at Sloane Grammar School, Chelsea leaving in 1955 aged 16. He had been married to the German-born Marlies since 1968, and was the father of two children, Naomi (a lawyer) and Antonia (marketing).

Prior to entering politics he was a journalist, although he was for a while a member of the Labour Party in the 1970s. In 1974 he was the first weekly newspaper owner to be honoured in national press awards. After launching his own newspapers he also received a number of other awards.

Branston was the owner of five local newspapers, Bedfordshire on Sunday, 'Luton on Sunday', 'Hertfordshire on Sunday', 'Leighton Buzzard on Sunday' and the 'Milton Keynes News', with a total distribution approaching 400,000. He and his wife sold their 88% stake in the newspapers in 2005.[1] He was also the author of two novels, "Sergeant Ritchie's Conscience" (1978) and "An Up and Coming Man" (1977).[2]

Religion

He described his religion as "non-practising" Jewish, and was the town's second Jewish mayorcoincidentally following on from the first Jewish mayor of the town. Talking about a visit to a local school arranged by the Board of Deputies.

Bedford Modern gave room for a travelling exhibition at the request of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and asked me to open it. I am sure they were not aware that I am Jewish (non-practising). I pointed out that while Bedford is certainly one of the oldest boroughs in the country, having been chartered in 1166, it had to wait a long time before getting its first Jewish mayor, Cllr Judith Cunningham in 2002. I succeeded her. Isn’t that always the way? You wait 836 years for a Jewish Mayor then two come along at once..[3]

Political career

Frank Branston stood as an independent in the borough's first direct election for mayor in 2002,[4] backed at the time by the Better Bedford Independent Party, which has since announced that it will field no further candidates.[5] His platform was based on encouraging investment in the town and on focussing on getting things done rather than on party politics (the borough and the county both had a history of hung councils and unimplemented development plans over several decades).

Branston was reelected with an increased majority on Thursday 3 May 2007, after a count which lasted 16 hours due to problems with an experimental electronic counting system.[6]

Death

In July 2009, he suffered an aortic aneurysm and underwent emergency surgery at Papworth Hospital.[7] He died on 14 August 2009.[8][9][10]

In December 2009, a new section of the A428 trunk road bypassing the west of Bedford was named The Branston Way in his memory.[11]

References

External links

Preceded by
New Creation
Mayor of Bedford
2002–2009
Succeeded by
Dave Hodgson
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