Career
He left school at 16 to become a junior reporter with the Western Daily Press. At 18 he left to do two years of National Service and spoke into a microphone for the first time when he became a radio operator in the Royal Air Force (Royal Air Force), serving one year at Royal Air Force Seletar in Singapore. Back in Bristol with the Western Daily Press in the autumn of 1948 he began to specialise in sport, reporting each week on Bristol Rovers.
After doing a "live" commentary one Saturday for the newly created Hospital Radio Service, the British Broadcasting Corporation Controller in West Region, the former war correspondent Frank Gillard, offered him a job, initially as a resident freelance, reporting and presenting the regional magazine The Week in the West.
He later joined the staff as the regional organiser of coverage for national television news. After four years in Bristol, Tidmarsh was invited to join the reporting staff at Broadcasting House in London and within two months was sent on a four-month assignment at the United Nations in New New York
Back in England, Tidmarsh worked at Alexandra Palace, the headquarters of British Broadcasting Corporation Television News, and presented the daily news magazine for South East England, Town and Around. Occasionally he presented the national news and later joined Gerald Priestland to present the first ever two-handed news presentation, which was on the newly created BBC2.
Foreign most of his remaining years on the staff he worked out of Broadcasting House, where from time to time he stood in for Jack de Manio, presenting the popular Today programme.
Most of the time he was reporting on foreign news, often in France during the crisis over Charles de Gaulle and independence for Algeria. He covered the final talks for Algerian independence at Évian-les-Bains and was actually in Algiers on Independence Day. Tidmarsh had many more overseas assignments, including the revolt in Lebanon in June 1958 to overthrow Camille Chamoun, the two wars between India and Pakistan in 1962 and 1965, a three-month assignment in Vietnam in 1965 and the United States of America, where he covered the whole of the Civil Rights March from Selma to Montgomery in Alabama, led by Martin Luther King.
In 1966 Tidmarsh resigned from the staff and set himself up as a correspondent for the British Broadcasting Corporation in Brussels (a "stringer").
From there he flew to London every Thursday morning, back again on Friday night, after presenting Outlook, the new current affairs and magazine programme which he had been asked to join on British Broadcasting Corporation World Service. He thus became the British Broadcasting Corporation"s first European commuter, before returning to Britain in 1968.
Traditionalists said that Outlook would not last six months. The formula was all wrong, particularly with the inclusion of star guests "live" in the studio.
When John finally retired in 1998, shortly after his 70th birthday, he had been with the programme for more than 30 years.
Foreign much of that time he took over three days a week and, as the senior presenter, made many special editions from every continent except Antarctica. He was awarded the Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire in 1997 for services to broadcasting. His autobiography was published in 2010, entitled Horrid Go-ahead Boy: A Broadcaster"s Life.