WE are very sad to report the death of the Free Press’s long-serving editor, Gareth Purcell, who died at his Williton home last Friday aged 70.
Gareth retired in 2020 after being at the helm of the Free Press for 37 years, steering it through major technological changes from broadsheet to tabloid, surviving a fire which closed the offices for months and, preparing it for the traumas of the Covid pandemic.
Whatever the circumstances, under Gareth’s calm and steady leadership, the paper never failed to appear on a Friday.
Born in Buckinghamshire, Gareth left school to join the Bucks Examiner weekly newspaper in Chesham as a junior reporter, later moving to the Beds and Bucks Observer, where he became deputy editor.
His ambition to be an editor by the age of 30 was fulfilled in 1983 when he arrived in West Somerset to lead the Free Press’s editorial team. This week, tributes poured in praising Gareth’s hard work and dedication over three decades and his insistence on solid accurate local journalism and balanced news content.
Local MP Ian Liddell-Grainger said: “Gareth really understood what local newspapers are about. The great sadness is that he didn’t live long enough to enjoy the long and comfortable retirement which was undeniably his due reward.”
Gareth died at home, surrounded by his family. He leaves his wife, Sandy, son Gavin, daughter Rhiannon, daughter-in-law Josie, son-in-law Kevin and two grandchildren.