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An appreciation of former Monitor Editor John Hughes

John Hughes, a journalistic force of nature who loved the Monitor deeply and served it with distinction both as a foreign correspondent and as editor, died on Wednesday.

Beyond the Monitor, Mr. Hughes is known for his accomplishments and for the breadth of his remarkable career. He won the Pulitzer Prize, worked as editor of the Deseret News, and took up a prominent role in the Reagan administration, serving as assistant secretary of state for public affairs under George Shultz, as well as the director of Voice of America.

Within the Monitor, he is remembered as one of its most influential and respected editors – a man of decency, hard work, and a deep commitment to the principles upon which the Monitor was founded.

Why We Wrote This

Former Monitor Editor John Hughes lived principles upon which the Monitor was founded – a love for the world he reported on, and a conviction of its enduring hope and humanity.

“He’s loved the world he’s covered … engaged, expectant of progress, and understanding of human challenges though never discouraged by them,” said John Yemma, a former Monitor editor, introducing Mr. Hughes at an event for the Mary Baker Eddy Library in 2014. 

Mr. Hughes won the Pulitzer Prize for international reporting on the attempted Communist coup in Indonesia in 1965 and the purge that followed. Cut off from the outside world, he delivered his stories to his editors by giving copies to strangers at the airport, asking them to take the dispatch to a wire office after they landed. “Human pigeons,” he called them. Through them, at least one copy of each report made it to Boston.

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