Colm Brogan


Colm Brogan was a Scottish journalist and author.

Background

He was born in Glasgow to Denis Brogan, a tailor from Donegal. One of Colm Brogan's four brothers was the historian Denis William Brogan and his maternal grandfather was a founder of Celtic F.C. He was educated at St Aloysius and then at Glasgow University, where he studied English. After attending teacher training college, Brogan become a master at St Mungo's Academy and then at St Gerard's.

Career

Brogan began his career in journalism by writing for the Glasgow University magazine and the Scottish schoolmasters' periodical. He then began a weekly column in the Glasgow Bulletin before moving to The Herald. He also worked for The Daily Telegraph as a leader-writer and wrote a daily column for the Daily Sketch.
He reviewed Whittaker Chambers's posthumous book in "The Comfort of Cold Friday" for National Review magazine.
In Who are 'the People'? published in 1943, he promoted the idea that political ideologies of the Left were responsible for the raise to power of Adolf Hitler. He continued with this thesis in Our New Masters, published in 1947. Michael Foot replied to Who are 'the People'? with Who are the Patriots?, to which Brogan wrote Patriots? My Foot! in response. Our New Masters was an attack on Clement Attlee's Labour government.

Legacy

After his death, The Times described Brogan as:
one of the few journalists and pamphleteers of the Welfare era to assail the idols and institutions of the Left with the same zest and skill that Socialist intellectuals devoted to personalities and policies of the Right.... Brogan's pamphleteering was the more vigorous because he had no reverence for the Conservative establishment. It was disconcerting to conventional Tories to discover an ally contemptuous of the Crown, but Brogan conformed to no class-image. In the first postwar years he rapidly turned out anonymous colloquial leaflets addressed to working-class readers.

Books