Fred_Hando

Fred Hando

Fred Hando

Welsh writer, artist, teacher, and historian


Frederick James Hando MBE (23 March 1888 – 17 February 1970) was a Welsh writer, artist and schoolteacher from Newport. He chronicled the history, character and folklore of Monmouthshire, which he also called Gwent, in a series of nearly 800 newspaper articles and several books published between the 1920s and 1960s.

Quick Facts MBE, Born ...

Biography

Hando was born in Maindee, Newport, the son of a postmaster Alfred and his wife Miriam, and attended school there.[lower-alpha 2][1] He had two younger brothers, Frank and Harry. He trained at Borough Road College, London, before returning to Newport as a teacher.[2] He served as a gunnery officer with the Royal Engineers in the First World War,[1] where his experiences in Flanders had a profound effect on him.[3]

Hando married Alice Stanton, the daughter of a Newport builder, and the couple had two children – Margaret and John. Alice died while still young. After a number of years, Hando married again to Daisy, a staff member at his school. The couple soon had a son, Robert.[1]

Fred Hando unlocked our prison and set free what talents that I am sure would have remained locked in us for ever. Fred was a most talented man. He proved to us that all things were possible... We all of us come to a crossroads in our lives. I can only hope that at every crossroads there will be a smiling Fred Hando pointing the way and saying "This is the most pleasant and interesting way".

Johnny Morris on Hando's teaching style[1]

In 1925 he was appointed as the first headmaster of Hatherleigh School in Newport,[4] where one of his pupils was Johnny Morris, later a noted radio and television presenter. Hando adopted an open and progressive teaching style and was described by Miriam Andrews, a former teacher at the school, as "a wonderful headmaster and he made the children very proud of Hatherleigh".[1]

His interest in local history was given an impetus when he was asked to provide sketches to illustrate Sir Joseph Bradney's multi-volume A History of Monmouthshire from the Coming of the Normans into Wales down to the Present Time[5] and his first articles about Monmouthshire were published in the South Wales Argus in 1922.[6] The then editor, William Collins agreed to an initial run of 15 articles.[3] In total, he contributed 795 articles to the newspaper between 1922 and 13 February 1970, a few days before his death.[6] Due to their high readership, the page of the Argus on which his articles appeared became particularly prized as advertising space.[3] Many of his articles and drawings were republished in anthologies of his work.[1] In his early writings, Hando was particularly interested in ley lines and the alignment of the sun with stone circles. He said that he wanted to add to what was already on the map and that by studying leys he could reach back in history far beyond Roman Britain.[7]

Hando was organist and choirmaster of Summerhill Baptist Church Newport for many years".[1] In 1953 he was awarded the MBE for services to education and to Monmouthshire".[1]

Hando died on 17 February 1970, at St. Joseph's Nursing Home in Newport, at the age of 81. His last article, on District and Street Names, appeared in the South Wales Argus four days before his death.[6]

Works

"The lovely white church of Dixton"[8] – Hando wrote of the church in his 1958 collection, Out and About in Monmouthshire and one of the ‘Hando seats’ in his memory was erected in the churchyard after his death.

Hando's aim in writing his articles was set out in the preface to his The Pleasant Land of Gwent, published in 1944; "to persuade readers to see the little places of a shy county".[9] Monmouthshire's set pieces, such as Raglan Castle and Tintern Abbey were not his focus, he wrote of lesser known sites such as the "Virtuous Well" at Trellech,[10] "the tallest house in Monmouthshire" at Treowen,[11] and the medieval boundary marker at Croes Llwyd.[12] His scope was broader than buildings; in his foreword to the 1964 volume, Here and There in Monmouthshire, Edwin Morris, the then Archbishop of Wales, describes Hando's canvas as "reminiscence, folklore, local history, place names and introductions to interesting people, past and present, illustrated by his own beautiful drawings".[13] He took a relatively early interest in conservation. In his article on Allt-y-Bela, published in Journeys in Gwent in 1951, he wrote of the house's perilous state of dilapidation, noting "unless immediate and drastic action is taken, we shall lose priceless relics".[14] Fifty years later, in the Gwent/Monmouthshire Pevsner, the architectural historian John Newman described Allt-y-Bela as "miserably derelict".[lower-alpha 3][16] His concern for preservation extended beyond individual buildings to the wider Monmouthshire landscape. An article published in Monmouthshire Sketch Book in 1954, was entitled "The Threat to Machen Vale" and condemned plans by the Central Electricity Generating Board to construct an electricity generating station in the Vale.[17]

The vanishing folklore and customs of Monmouthshire were of particular interest to Hando.[lower-alpha 4] More than one article covered the Mari Lwyd, a horse's skull covered by a sheet and borne aloft on a pole, which formed part of Christmas celebrations in the county.[19][20] In a number of articles, including one on The Skirrid in Monmouthshire Sketch Book, he wrote of the legends of Jack o' Kent, who was said to have caused the cleft in the Skirrid's summit by jumping to it from the Sugar Loaf, some four miles distant.[21]

Monmouthshire's pubs were another topic of abiding interest. Hando wrote of, and drank and smoked in, a large number of the country's hostelries, the Robin Hood Inn, Monmouth being a particular favourite. In his Monmouth Town Sketch Book, he recalls a visit in 1947, when he encountered "the last of the Monmouth 'cards'".[lower-alpha 5][23]

Hando's Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Forest of Dean is the only one of his books which took the form of a conventional travel guide, as opposed to a collection of articles.[24]

Legacy

After his death the Monmouthshire Local History Council set up several "Hando seats" at viewpoints in the county that he had considered to be particularly fine.[25] Funded by public subscription, the seats were located in Dixton churchyard; at Llandegfedd Reservoir; on Lawrence Hill, Newport; at the top of the Wyndcliff, St. Arvans; and near Keeper's Pond on the Blorenge near Blaenavon.[26][27] Nearly 50 years after his death, Hando and his work are still cited in 21st century controversies. His detailed chronicling of the county's history was referenced in the debate on the construction of an extension of the M4 motorway[28] across the Gwent Levels;[29] and the late Paul Flynn, former member of parliament for Newport West, recalled the "halcyon days" of Hando's columns in a discussion about declining journalistic standards at the South Wales Argus.[30]

From November 2017, the South Wales Argus re-published his weekly "Rambles in Gwent" column, giving readers an opportunity to read Hando's descriptions of what the Argus editor Kenneth Loveland called; "the shy beauty of this delectable county".[31]

Family

His daughter, Margaret, was born in April 1916. She graduated from St Anne's College, Oxford, and later married Charles Smith, later Delacourt-Smith, in 1939. Her husband became a Labour MP in 1945 and later a Government minister, and was ennobled in 1967. She was a councillor and Justice of the Peace in Windsor in the 1960s.[32] After her husband's death, she was herself raised to the peerage in 1974 as Baroness Delacourt-Smith of Alteryn. She remarried in 1978[32] and died in 2010 at the age of 94.[33] Margaret's brother, from Hando's first marriage, to Alice, was John.

Hando also had a son, Robert, from his second marriage.[1]

Bibliography

Books by Fred Hando

(all published by R. H. Johns, Newport)

  • Rambles in Gwent (1924)[34]
  • The Pleasant Land of Gwent (1944) With an introduction by Arthur Machen.[35] (including limited Deluxe Edition of 220 copies, signed by the author)
  • Journeys in Gwent (1951)[36] (including limited Deluxe Edition of 350 copies, signed by the author), OCLC 754992827[37]
  • Pictorial Guide to the Wye Valley and the Royal Forest of Dean (1952), (Edited by W. A. Stoker)[38]
  • Monmouthshire Sketch Book (1954)[39]
  • Out and About in Monmouthshire (1958)[40]
  • Monmouth Town (1964)[41]
  • Here and There in Monmouthshire (1964)[42]

Collections and appreciations

Collections of Hando's articles, edited by Chris Barber:[43]

  • Hando's Gwent (1987) ISBN 978-0951044452
  • Hando's Gwent Volume 2 (1989) ISBN 978-0951044490

An appreciation of Hando's work, Fred J Hando, A Proud Son of Gwent (ISBN 9781904192626), including some of his writings and drawings, was published by his relative David Hando in 2014.[44]

Footnotes

  1. Monmouthshire's Welsh status was ambiguous at this time.
  2. The Hando family came from North Curry in Somerset. In the 18th century part of the family emigrated to Australia. The parents died en route, however, and their two five-year-old sons arrived in Australia as orphans. There are hundreds of their descendants in Australia today.[1]
  3. The house was restored by the Spitalfields Historic Buildings Trust between 2001-2006.[15]
  4. Christine Anne Watkins, the author of Gwent Folk Tales, records her debt to Hando in the Acknowledgements to the book; "To the work of Fred Hando, whose wonderful books and sketches (are) always inspiring".[18]
  5. A 'card' was a "'character', an 'original'; a 'clever, audacious, person'".[22]

References

  1. Barber 1987, pp. 7–11.
  2. Collins 1945, pp. 118–120.
  3. Wade, Martin (12 August 2016). "Fred Hando – The Argus writer and teacher who revealed hidden Gwent". South Wales Argus.
  4. Barber 1987, pp. 189–193.
  5. Stout 2009, p. 211.
  6. Hando 1958, pp. 115–117.
  7. Hando 1944, p. 15.
  8. Hando 1961, p. unknown.
  9. Hando 1954, pp. 66–67.
  10. Watkins 2019, Acknowledgments.
  11. Hando 1944, p. 101.
  12. Hando 1951, pp. 22–28.
  13. Hando 1952, Frontispiece.
  14. Pearson, Jane (Autumn 1982). "Fred Hando Seat". Gwent Local History (53). Gwent Local History Council: 2. ISSN 0308-0374. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
  15. Gwent Federation of Women's Institutes (1994). "Llandegvedd, Llanddewi & Coedypaen". The Gwent Village Book. Countryside Books. ISBN 978-1853063121. Retrieved 16 April 2016.
  16. Morris, Steven (18 November 2018). "Rich soup of life in Gwent wetlands at risk from motorway". The Guardian.
  17. Flynn, Paul (18 June 2012). "My life with the South Wales Argus". Institute for Welsh Affairs.
  18. Hando, Frederick James (3 May 2019). Rambles in Gwent. R.H. Johns. OCLC 771405583.
  19. Hando, Fred; Machen, Arthur (3 May 2019). The pleasant land of Gwent. R.H. Johns. OCLC 2534151.
  20. Hando, Fred (3 May 2019). Journeys in Gwent. Johns. OCLC 30202753.
  21. Hando, Fred J (3 May 2019). Journeys in Gwent. R.H. Johns. OCLC 754992827.
  22. Hando, Fred (3 May 2019). W. A. Stoker (ed.). Pictorial guide to the Wye Valley and Royal Forest of Dean. Newport: Ernest Joyce & Co. OCLC 30164265.
  23. Hando, Fred (3 May 2019). Monmouthshire Sketch Book. R.H. Johns. OCLC 30166792.
  24. Hando, Fred (3 May 2019). Out and about in Monmouthshire. Johns. OCLC 30235598.
  25. Hando, Fred James (3 May 1964). Monmouth Town sketch book. Johns. OCLC 30295655.
  26. Hando, Fred (3 May 1964). Here and there in Monmouthshire. Johns. OCLC 30295639.
  27. "The Writers of Wales Database – BARBER, CHRIS". Literature Wales. Archived from the original on 4 March 2013. Retrieved 30 January 2013.

Sources


Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Fred_Hando, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.