Henry Williamson

Henry Williamson

Portrait by Charles Tunnicliffe, c. 1935
Born (1895-12-01)1 December 1895
Brockley, London
Died 13 August 1977(1977-08-13) (aged 81)
Georgeham, Devon
Nationality English
Known for Ruralist books (Tarka the Otter)

Henry William Williamson (1 December 1895 13 August 1977) was an English army officer, naturalist, farmer and ruralist writer known for his natural history and social history novels. He won the Hawthornden Prize for literature in 1928 with his book Tarka the Otter.

Early years

Henry Williamson was born in Brockley in south east London. In early childhood his family moved to Ladywell, and he received a grammar school education at Colfe's School. The then semi-rural location provided easy access to the Kent countryside, and he developed a deep love of nature throughout his childhood.[1]

First World War

On 22 January 1914, Williamson volunteered as a rifleman with the 5th battalion of the London Regiment ("London Rifle Brigade"), part of the British Army's Territorial Force, and was mobilised when war was declared upon Imperial Germany by the British Empire on 5 August 1914. In November 1914, he departed England with the Regiment's 1st Battalion and went to France, entering the Western Front's trenches in the Ypres Salient, where he witnessed and took part in the Christmas Truce between British and German troops. In January 1915, he was withdrawn from the winter trenches with trench foot and dysentery and evacuated back to England. After convalescence, he was commissioned on 10 April 1915[2] as a second lieutenant with the 10th (Service) Battalion of the Bedfordshire Regiment. In May 1915, he was attached for training to the 2/1st Cambridgeshire Regiment's at Newmarket. In October 1915, he was transferred to the 25th Middlesex Regiment at Hornchurch. He volunteered to specialise in machine-gun warfare, and consequently, in January 1916, joined No. 208 Machine Gun Company of the Machine Gun Corps at Belton Park, Grantham. In May 1916, he entered hospital in London with anaemia, and was granted two months' medical leave. He rejoined No. 208 MGC and in February 1917 departed England with it for the Western Front, the unit taking the field with the 62nd (2nd West Riding) Division, Williamson acting as his company's transport officer. In June 1917, he was gassed whilst transporting ammunition up to the front line, and was returned to England, spending the next few months in military convalescent hospitals. In September 1917, he was attached for garrison duty as the adjutant of the 3rd Battalion Bedfordshire Regiment at Felixstowe. Medically classed B1 by an Army Medical Board, from the effects of the gas, he was judged to be unfit for active service. After a year at Felixstowe, and frustrated at the nature of garrison life, Williamson attempted to get back to front-line action in September 1918 with an application to be transferred to the Royal Air Force, but this was rejected due to his medical classification. He then applied for a transfer to the Indian Army, which was granted, but the war was ending and the order was cancelled. He spent a year afterwards on administrative duties demobilising soldiers from military camps on the south east coast of England, and was discharged from the army himself on 19 September 1919.[3]

He became disgusted with the pointlessness of the war and was angry at the greed and bigotry he saw as causing it. He became determined that Germany and Britain should never go to war again. Williamson was also strongly influenced by the camaraderie of the trenches and in particular what he saw as the bonds of kinship that existed between the ordinary British and German soldiers, despite their being at war with one another.[4]

Early writing

Crowberry Cottage, Georgeham, with a blue plaque commemorating Williamson living there, 1925–1929

He told of his war experiences in The Wet Flanders Plain (1929), The Patriot's Progress (1930) and in many of his books in the semi-autobiographical 15-book series A Chronicle of Ancient Sunlight (1951–1969).

After the war, he read Richard Jefferies' book The Story of My Heart.[1] This inspired him to begin writing seriously. In 1921, he moved to Georgeham, Devon, living in a small cottage. He married Ida Loetitia Hibbert in 1925; they had six children.

In 1927 Williamson published his most acclaimed book, Tarka the Otter; it won him the Hawthornden Prize in 1928, and made him enough money to pay for the wooden hut near Georgeham where he wrote many of his later books, often sitting alone there for 15 hours a day.[5] The wooden writing hut was granted Grade II listed status by English Heritage in July 2014 because of its "historical interest".[6] Tarka also sparked a friendship with T. E. Lawrence who had similar views about the need for a lasting peace settlement in Europe.[7]

In 1936 he bought a farm in Stiffkey, Norfolk. The Story of a Norfolk Farm (1941) is his account of his first years of farming there.

Politics

In 1935, Henry Williamson visited the National Socialist German Workers Party Congress at Nuremberg and was greatly impressed, particularly with the Hitler Youth movement, whose healthy outlook on life he compared with the sickly youth of the London slums.[1][8] He had a "well-known belief that Hitler was essentially a good man who wanted only to build a new and better Germany."[9] Opposed to war and believing that wars were caused by Jewish "usurial moneyed interests",[10] he was attracted to Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists, and joined it in 1937.[11]

On the day of the British and French declaration of war on Germany Williamson suggested to friends that he might fly to Germany to speak with Hitler in order to persuade him away from war. Following a meeting with Mosley later that day however he was dissuaded from his plan.[12] At the start of the Second World War Williamson was briefly held under Defence Regulation 18B for his political views, but was released after only a weekend in police custody.[11] Visiting London in January 1944, he observed with satisfaction that the ugliness and immorality represented by its financial and banking sector had been "relieved a little by a catharsis of high explosive" and somewhat "purified by fire". And, "in The Gale of the World, the last book of his Chronicle, published in 1969, Williamson has his main character Phillip Maddison question the moral and legal validity of the Nuremberg Trials".[1]

Williamson initially retained a close relationship with Mosley in the immediate aftermath of the war, but when he brought Mosley as his guest to the Savage Club, the former BUF leader was promptly ejected by club staff.[13] Williamson refused Mosley's request that he join the newly established Union Movement and indeed his suggestion to Mosley that he should instead join him in abandoning politics altogether led to the two men falling out.[14] Nonetheless Williamson did write for Mosley's theoretical journal The European.[15] He also continued to express admiration for aspects of Nazi Germany after the war.[16]

Post-war writing

After the war the family left the farm. In 1946 Williamson went to live alone at Ox's Cross, Georgeham in North Devon, where he built a small house in which to write. In 1947 Henry and Loetitia divorced. Williamson fell in love with a young teacher, Christine Duffield and they were married in 1949. He began to write his series of fifteen novels collectively known as A Chronicle of Ancient Sunlight. In 1950, the year his only child by this marriage Harry Williamson was born, he edited a collection of poems and short stories by James Farrar, a promising young poet who had died, at the age of 20, in the Second World War. From 1951 to 1969 Williamson produced almost one novel a year, while contributing regularly to the Sunday Express and The European, a magazine edited by Diana Mosley. In 1964 he had a short affair with the novelist Ann Quin, who was nearly forty years his junior. This all put great strain on his marriage and, in 1968, he and his wife were divorced after years of separation.[17]

In 1974 he began working on a script for a film treatment of Tarka the Otter, but it was not regarded as suitable to film, being 400,000 words long. Filming went on, unknown to him, and the film, narrated by Peter Ustinov, was released in 1979. On his eightieth birthday he hoped for some honour from the British government. After a general anaesthetic for a minor operation, his health failed catastrophically. One day he was walking and chopping wood, the next day he was unrecognisable and had forgotten who his family were. Suffering from senile dementia, he died on the day the death of Tarka was being filmed. His body was buried in the churchyard of Georgeham.[17]

Henry Williamson Society

The Henry Williamson Society was founded in 1980; another of Williamson's sons, Richard, is its president, and Loetitia supported the society until her death in 1998.[18]

Bibliography

Books about Williamson

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Deavin, Mark "Henry Williamson: Nature's Visionary" in National Vanguard Magazine No. 117 (March–April 1997)
  2. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 29127. p. 3587. 13 April 1915. Retrieved 7 November 2015.
  3. http://www.henrywilliamson.co.uk/hw-and-the-first-world-war
  4. Richard Griffiths, Fellow Travellers of the Right: British Enthusiasts for Nazi Germany 1933-39, Oxford University Press, 1983, ISBN 0192851160, pp. 135, 179
  5. Parry, Lizzie (27 March 2014). "Moorland hut where Tarka the Otter author penned some of his greatest works is for sale - after lying empty for nearly 40 years". Daily Mail. London. Retrieved 29 April 2014.
  6. "Tarka the Otter writer's hut granted Grade II status" BBC News, 29 July 2014
  7. Griffiths, Fellow Travellers of the Right, pp. 134-137
  8. Williamson, Henry (1965). The Phoenix Generation.
  9. The Norfolk Farm at The Henry Williamson Society
  10. Robert Skidelsky, Oswald Mosley, Macmillan, 1981, p. 350
  11. 1 2 Bolton, K., Henry Williamson at OswaldMosley.com
  12. Skidelsky, Oswald Mosley, p. 442
  13. Graham Macklin, Very Deeply Dyed in Black: Sir Oswald Mosley and the Resurrection of British Fascism After 1945, I.B. Tauris, 2007, p. 51
  14. Macklin, Very Deeply Dyed in Black, p. 158
  15. Skidelsky, Oswald Mosley, p. 493
  16. Griffiths, Fellow Travellers of the Right, p. 372
  17. 1 2 "Henry Williamson Society". Retrieved 27 January 2015.
  18. "Henry Williamson Society". Retrieved 27 January 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.