Friday, 31 May 2019

Quote of the Day

Jaime Batalha Reis.png
"every child knows how to apply the words mountain, plain, valley, river, lake to the objects they have constantly seen designated by such words.
 The difficulty only begins when we have to impress on the children's intelligences the notion of how all the relations those entities have between themselves, make up a locality; how this locality is part of country, the latter part of a vaster region; and how the Earth is composed of such large regions".

Paper to the International Geographical Congress in 1895

Quoted in Jay, 1965

I guess he was after some sort of schema to help organise the knowledge...


Reference: JAY, L. J. “A. J. Herbertson : His Services to School Geography.” Geography, vol. 50, no. 4, 1965, pp. 350–361. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40565960.

Thursday, 30 May 2019

1915: The death of A.J. Herbertson

A J HerbertsonThis entry describes someone who was never the President but, had he lived to the age of many other Presidents, would have certainly taken up that position at some point.

Last updated October 2023

Andrew John Herbertson was the Honorary Secretary of the GA from 1900-1915 and oversaw many changes and developments in the early years of the association.

Balchin, in his centenary history, describes the impact of the death of A.J Herbertson, and his wife on the Association, which came as a great shock to all. 
He died at the tragically young age of 49.

He was born in Galashiels in Scotland. In 1892 he went to Dundee to teach botany. in 1892 he was made a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. He then moved in 1892 to Fort William, Scotland to work on a meteorological observatory on Ben Nevis. In 1894 he moved to Manchester to become a lecturer in political and commercial geography in the University of Manchester.

In 1985, he showed his interest in the teaching of geography in schools with a paper titled "The importance of geography in secondary education and the training of teachers therein." This was read at the 6th International Geographical Congress under the chair of Clements Markham, who was impressed by what Herbertson had to say on the matter.

The Bryce Commission reported in the same year. 

From 1896 to 1899 he lectured in industrial and commercial geography at Heriot-Watt College, Edinburgh. In 1896 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Peter Guthrie Tait, Sir John Murray, Ralph Copeland and Alexander Buchan. he was also acting editor of the Scottish Geographical Magazine at this time.

In 1898 he received a doctorate (PhD) from University of Freiburg-im-Breisgau. In 1899 he moved to the University of Oxford to become a reader of geography; then became the first Oxford Professor of Geography in 1905.
He would become head of the geography department at Oxford in 1910, but while teaching there he also took over the role of Honorary Secretary of the GA in 1900. He solicited support from various organisations and made an effort to ensure that Geography's position was strengthened.
In 1908 he was made a Fellow of the Royal Meteorological Society.

One of the contributions that Herbertson has left is his work on the natural regions of the world. Even in the run up to the GCSE examinations, I used a diagram very similar to the one that Herbertson developed. It is shown in the paper that he gave on his work in this area, showing global biomes.


L. Dudley Stamp (a GA President himself at a later date) wrote a paper, in which he described this moment in 1904, when Herbertson introduced his work on natural regions.

Herbertson sadly died of a heart attack on 15 July 1915 in Radnage, Buckinghamshire. He is buried with his wife Frances Dorothy (who died two weeks later) in Holywell Cemetery nearby.

Halford Mackinder wrote at length about his legacy and his work. Mackinder will receive his own entry on the blog in time.
His entry in the Autumn Issue of 'The Geographical Teacher' for 1915 was outlined in black.


In 1965, fifty years after his death, L.J Jay also wrote a long piece on his services to school geography, which was published in 'Geography'. Mr. Jay was the Honorary Librarian of the GA, and a lecturer at the University of Sheffield.
Jay described his huge influence on the GA.
He apparently didn't possess the magnetism of Mackinder, but impressed students by amongst other things, "he had the ability to make a map of Central Europe come to life under his hand as he drew from memory on the blackboard'.

He was also an author whose books had enviable sales. His 'Junior Geography' apparently sold more than a third of a million copies - I wish the textbooks I've written had a 10th of those sales figures! He wrote a book called 'Man and his Work' with his wife which went into its 8th edition in 1946, almost 50 years after it was written and first published, and with only minor changes to the text and some new photographs. Read it here on the Internet Archive. I think it would new a few revision now though, having browsed through the first few chapters.

Herbertson joined the Council of the GA, and in 1900 a motion was carried which he had proposed which was that membership should be open to all teachers of geography and not just those in public or endowed secondary schools. When Dickinson resigned he was elected Honorary Secretary. He travelled from Oxford to visit the inaugural meetings of new branches in cities such as Sheffield.

When the GA launched its journal in 1901, Herbertson had to reassure the RGS that this was not a threat to their journals, which were more of an expeditionary nature.

As a teacher, he "urged the prime importance of studying the home district, and encouraged teachers to conduct their pupils on local field excursions using the relevant one-inch sheet of the Ordnance Survey Map" - at the time this was a novel idea.

Keltie had referred to this practice that he had observed in Germany, where it was called "Heimatskunde"

We owe Herbertson another debt, as he was successful in persuading the Director General of the Ordnance Survey to let teachers have OS maps at preferential rates. He didn't like the separation of the subject into human and physical, and also the large range of political and other subdivisions that students had to learn. This led to him developing his idea of natural regions shown earlier in this post. This was influential in further work by J. F Unstead and P. M. Roxby.

A generation of children in Britain were taught using the framework Herbertson developed, perhaps making him the Waugh and Bushell of his time :)
For those attending school between the two world wars, his influence persisted, through the work of L Dudely Stamp and others.

Jay also put me onto a book which will have its own separate blogpost to itself: Herbertson's chapter in a book edited by J W Adamson in 1907. This is called 'The practice of instruction'.

Herbertson includes a list which predates Hirsch by many decades, where he outlines what might be the 'minimum geographical knowledge' he expected of a 12 year old. He is also clear on the need for a properly trained teacher:



The Oxford University Geography Department also shared some further information on the role of Herbertson during his time at Oxford University in a special webpage:
  • His passion for teaching geography brought Herbertson to Oxford in the first place: In 1895, he gave a paper on geographical education and teacher training to the Sixth International Geographical Congress in London. Halford Mackinder was so impressed by it that he hired Herbertson as his assistant. (Scargill, 1976)
  • Herbertson and Mackinder initiated biennial summer schools at Oxford at which distinguished university teachers from Britain and abroad taught schoolteachers in the class and in the field. More than 850 teachers attended the five Vacation Courses organised by Herbertson between 1902 and 1914 and the influence he thus exerted on British school geography was immense.
  • Herbertson and his wife were prolific authors of school textbooks: more than 1.4 million copies of their textbooks were used in the specialist secondary school teaching required under the 1902 Education Act.
  • He produced a new series of wall maps (published 1914-15).
  • Between 1900 until his untimely death he acted as secretary of the Geographical Association (the professional society for geography teachers) and was founding editor of its journal, Geographical Teacher, from 1901 to 1915. 
  • Herbertson used both roles to argue for more and better geographical education in schools, particularly through field classes and practical work.
This has been updated.

References

Wikipedia page:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_John_Herbertson

50 years on, L. J Jay's article:
JAY, L. J. “A. J. Herbertson : His Services to School Geography.” Geography, vol. 50, no. 4, 1965, pp. 350–361. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40565960.

He was remembered in 2015, by the Oxford University Geography Department in this special webpage.
E. W Gilbert also gave an appreciation of his work at the GA Conference in 1965.

Halford Mackinder also made an emotional tribute to his work at the time of his death.

Work of Mackinder: STAMP, L. DUDLEY. “Major Natural Regions: Herbertson after Fifty Years.” Geography, vol. 42, no. 4, 1957, pp. 201–216. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40564139.

An essay in Systematic Geography: https://www.people.iup.edu/rhoch/ClassPages/Thought%20and%20Philosophy/Readings/Week2/Herbertson.pdf

As always, if you know of any further information that would improve this post, or suggestions for additions and edits, please get in touch.

Update (May 2019)
It's always good to see that people are reading the blog. Thanks to Brendan Conway for his thoughts in this tweet


Update 2 (May 2019)
In the Spring 2016 issue of 'The Geographical Teacher', there was also a statement in memory of Mrs. Florence Herbertson.
She had done a great deal for the GA as well, and written a great deal in her own name.


Updated September 2019

Herbertson was also referenced by Joseph Acton Morris in his Presidential Address in 1966. He was a teacher and said that Herbertson's work was all based on the need to "improve the standard of geographical teaching".


Update early October 2019

From my personal collection... a good little book... co-written with his wife.


Updated October 2019
Mentioned in Darby's review of Academic Geography of the period.



Darby, H. C. “Academic Geography in Britain: 1918-1946.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, vol. 8, no. 1, 1983, pp. 14–26. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/622271

Update: December 2019

https://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/2966 - a reference in a journal by Hugh Clout

Updated February 2020

As I got to the 1960s, I came across a Herbertson Memorial lecture by E. W. Gilbert, where he provides further information on Herbertson, as seen below.




GILBERT, E. W. “The Idea of the Region: Herbertson Memorial Lecture.” Geography, vol. 45, no. 3, 1960, pp. 157–175. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40565156

Update April 2020

In 1965, a special article on A. J. Herbertson was published, the transcript of a lecture by E. W. Gilbert marking the centenary of his birth.



This is well worth reading for a much fuller picture of Herbertson's life and contributions to the GA.

It also makes the connection with another remarkable man: Patrick Geddes.

There's also an excellent anecdote of how Mackinder persuaded Herbertson to work with him rather than accept a job in New York.


GILBERT, E. W. “Andrew John Herbertson 1865-1915: An Appreciation of His Life and Work.” Geography, vol. 50, no. 4, 1965, pp. 313–331. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40565956

To finish, a rather nice quote:




Update April 2020

While researching someone else, I came across Robert Neal Rudmose Brown's Herbertson Memorial Lecture of 1948 which is well worth reading.

Source:
Brown, R. N. Rudmose. “SCOTLAND AND SOME TRENDS IN GEOGRAPHY: JOHN MURRAY, PATRICK GEDDES and ANDREW HERBERTSON.” Geography, vol. 33, no. 3, 1948, pp. 107–120. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40564415. Accessed 29 Apr. 2020.

Updated July 2022

Herbertson's influence was featured in a collection of essays which was co-edited by Emrys Bowen and also featured H J Fleure and a mention of H J Mackinder. It was published to coincide with the centenary of Aberystwyth University's Geography department.


It describes Herbertson's immense contribution between 1900 and 1915.

Fleure took over as Honorary Secretary in 1917, after being asked by Halford Mackinder.

Updated October 2023





Scargill, D. I. “The RGS and the Foundations of Geography at Oxford.” The Geographical Journal, vol. 142, no. 3, 1976, pp. 438–61. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/1795296. Accessed 4 Oct. 2023.



How can you help with the blog?

Image result for help beatles
As I post the biographies of each person in turn, there will inevitably be some partiality in the information I have about that person, as I haven't completed all the biographical research that would be required to truly tell each person's life - these are pen portraits with some additional geographical detail, drawn from a limited range of sources.

I have carried out research on each person, and used mostly online sources, plus relevant archive searches on journals and other books which reference their career as it pertains to geography, and key achievements during their time associated with the GA (and related organisations such as RGS-IBG). This has led me to other resources, research papers and books which are available on the Internet Archive.

It's possible you are aware of some other information about particular people. If so, please feel free to let me know more about them. Images are always welcome - it's been hard to find anything other than a few official photos of some of these people from the first part of the 20th Century, particularly those that are in the public domain.

If it's a person whose biography has already been added, please comment on the post itself, or get in touch.

If you have further information on someone who is yet to appear on the blog, but you know they served as a President of the GA, please e-mail them to me at: a DOT parkinson AT gmail DOT com or add a comment again.

I shall be contacting more recent Presidents nearer the time of their appearance with a specially written questionnaire, but not for at least a year in most cases as this is a long term project, planned to end in September 2021.

Tuesday, 28 May 2019

About the Presidency


The GA President's role has changed over time, and has evolved in recent years.

When the Association was first formed in 1893, there was a committee structure with a Chair, and Secretary. Douglas Freshfield was elected as the first President in 1897, and he held the post for 14 years.

In 1910 (ish) the constitution of the Association changed, so that the Presidency was an annual position, and was elected by members.
There have been a few times when the GA President has served more than one year, but these were both during the Second World War - a time of great upheaval generally.

What does the President do?
Some recent Presidents have shared aspects of the work on social media using the hashtag #howtheGAworks

Roles of the President
The President, who is the Chair of the Governing Body, is appointed two years before the twelve months term of office begins and serves the first of these years as Junior Vice President and the second as Senior Vice President, becoming President in their third year. They then serve for one further year as Past President.
The four Presidents, together with the Honorary Treasurer, form the Presidents’ Group, a sub-group of Governing Body, which:
  • provides a mechanism for Presidents to gain experience and responsibility over their four-year cycle of office, and to ensure continuity within the Presidents’ Group 
  • supports the President in preparing the Governing Body agenda, and prepares items for full discussion at Governing Body meetings, for example by providing a sounding board for the Honorary Treasurer and Chief Executive.
  • makes recommendations on some matters for approval by the full Governing Body e.g. awards and routine premises and staffing matters, to free the Governing Body to exercise its strategic role. 
The President has a number of additional responsibilities mainly in relation to the GA Annual Conference and Exhibition, including chairing the Conference Planning Board, setting its theme and delivering the Presidential Lecture.

The above information is taken from the GA Website

Saturday, 25 May 2019

Quote of the Day

"In geography, as in other subjects, we want to change from the teaching by words to the teaching by the things the words are supposed to describe. 
Geographical teaching, to be worth anything, must be real and practical. It is not enough to appeal to the ear alone. The eye must be trained as well, first of all by seeing the actual land surface from which the first lessons in geography must be taken."

(Herbertson, A.J. (1896) Geographical education. The Scottish Geographical Magazine: 597

Sunday, 19 May 2019

1915: Hilaire Belloc

Last updated August 2023
Image result for never get off at woking hilaire belloc

Hilaire Belloc would perhaps count as one of the better known (and more unlikely) of the GA Presidents. I come across his books now and again in second hand bookshops and they are always rather pricey. His legacy persists.


Belloc wouldn't make an obvious candidate for President of the Association, but he was in fact a great traveller as well as a famous author and commentator. He was also involved at a time when the Association appointed some high profile people as President. This was a time to fight for the subject's recognition. He was what Chris Kington in 2002 called "an outsider President".

Belloc was born in France in 1870, and his travel writing showed his ability to describe landscapes, as well as some of his poetry.

From the Wikipedia page for Belloc:

His best travel writing has secured a permanent following. The Path to Rome (1902), an account of a walking pilgrimage he made from central France across the Alps and down to Rome, has remained continuously in print. 
More than a mere travelogue, The Path to Rome contains descriptions of the people and places he encountered, his drawings in pencil and in ink of the route, humour, poesy, and the reflections of a large mind turned to the events of his time as he marches along his solitary way. 
His book The Pyrenees, published in 1909, shows a depth of detailed knowledge of that region such as would only be gained from personal experience. At every turn, Belloc shows himself to be profoundly in love with Europe and with the Faith that he claims has produced it.

Although he was born in France, he was brought up in England and lived most of his life here. After school, and time spent serving his French national service, he went to Balliol College, Oxford to study History (not Geography - several other Presidents did not begin as Geographers)

He became President of the Oxford Union and was later elected the MP for Salford.
He was a prolific author and poet for most of the early 20th Century, and many of his books are still in print.

I read a few sources to try to find out what his link was with Geography and why he should have become the President during the First World War.

This was a time of upheaval for the Association generally, as the war was inevitably disrupting many areas of society.

The membership of the Association was growing, at over 1100 members by the end of Keltie's Presidency, but many Branches stopped their activity for the duration of the war, and then there was the death of Professor A J Herbertson, one of the founders of the Association who had done so much to drive its growth. He died in July 2015, and his wife died a few weeks later. At the time, he was both Honorary Secretary and Honorary Editor of 'The Geographical Teacher' journal. The journal continued under the editorship of H O Beckit and Percy Maude Roxby (who became President in 1933, and will receive his own entry at the appropriate time)

Belloc had a Historical angle to his work, and he wrote a book on the contribution of the River Thames to England's history.
In 1904, he published a book called 'The Old Road', which described a walk along the Old Pilgrim's Way. He also wrote volumes of poetry and work for children too.

Belloc was one of the Big Four of Edwardian Letters along with H.G. Wells, George Bernard Shaw, and G.K. Chesterton, men who engaged in controversy and debate with one another for a generation or more.

There's not a great deal of information about what Belloc did while in post at the GA. This was a time when the First World War curtailed some activity and some branches closed down. He was not, according to Balchin's Centenary History of the Association 'au fait with the geographic academic world', and the Honorary Corresponding Secretary Dr. Unstead also resigned at this time. It seems that 1915 was a year for 'surviving' through to 1916, when a familiar name took over the role of Presidency, as we will see in a future post. 1915 also saw the death of A. J. Herbertson, who I will also write about in the next addition to this blog.

The Annual report for this year made the point that memberships may have lapsed as the members were on active service at the front, and perhaps had other things on their mind than renewing their GA membership. Some were Prisoners of War as well.

In 2003, an article by another former President: Jeremy Krause, explained that:

 Belloc's Presidential address, reported in Geography's predecessor The Geographical Teacher (Mackinder, 1916), was entitled 'Materialistic interpretations of geographical influences in history', but it was never written up, so we have no record of what he said.

This Notes page in the Geographical Teacher may be relevant:


“NOTES.” The Geographical Teacher, vol. 8, no. 1, 1915, pp. 15–15. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40554405.
MacKinder referred to it in his own Presidential Address where he outlined some areas he thought needed 'correction'. We will never know what they were, but it was a slightly anomalous Presidential biography compared with those who went before and after him.

Sources
Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilaire_Belloc

New World Encyclopaedia:
http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Hilaire_Belloc

1915 Report: “ANNUAL REPORT OF THE GEOGRAPHICAL ASSOCIATION FOR 1915.” The Geographical Teacher, vol. 8, no. 4, 1916, pp. 217–217. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40554493.

Image copyright:
Portrait by Emil Otto Hoppé, vintage bromide print, 1915 - shared under CC license from Wikipedia


As always, if anyone has further information relating to this former President, and his legacy as GA President or work done during his time in role,  please get in touch.

Update - Late June 2019
Spooky coincidence today. I was talking to parents at the Celebration Morning at school, and Belloc's name came up in connection with Woking. It turns out he wrote some rhyme regarding the opening of a mosque. He was not in favour of the 'rise of Islam' in the UK.

This led me to do a little more focussed search than I had done previously, and came across this website, which had a lot more on Belloc's life.

It explores a book called 'The Four Men' which sounds like it has a very geographical theme to it. It is set in Sussex.

Here's part of the analysis of the book by Sussex historian Lucy Broadwood


As the four men talk and walk, they pass through the High Weald of eastern Sussex with “its little pointed hills”, and into the South Downs that dominate the western part of the county. We are always reminded that the landscape is ancient and rooted in the history of past generations:-
So all along the road we went under Chanctonbury, that high hill, we went as the morning broadened: along a way that is much older than anything in the world….By that way we went, by walls and trees that seemed as old as the old road itself, talking of all those things men talk of, because men were made for speech and for companionship…
The landscape is almost a fifth companion and the cause of much discussion and reflection among the four travellers. There is one memorable moment in the book, when Myselfbeholds the full moon rising over Chanctonbury on Hallowe’en. We are invited to see a mystical interaction taking place between the ancient hilltop and the ‘holy moon’ shining down on its prehistoric features. Belloc, the Catholic, often seems more like Belloc, the pagan.
This beloved landscape was indeed a home to Belloc – a spiritual as well as a physical home. As they approach the end of their journey, they stop one last time to drink and sing in a country inn. “I knew myself indeed to be still in my own county”, says Myself, “and I was glad inside my heart, like a man who hears the storm upon the window, but is himself houseled by the fire…”

This also had a link to some recording of Belloc's voice, so this is perhaps the earliest audio of a GA President.


New sources
https://belloc-broadwood.org.uk/the-four-men/
http://www.poetrybyheart.org.uk/poems/hanacker-mill/

https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/the-inexplicably-enduring-appeal-of-hilaire-bellocs-cautionary-tales

Description of Belloc from this article:
He infuriated his enemies (H. G. Wells among them) but so charmed his admirers (Gilbert Chesterton, Max Beerbohm, and George Bernard Shaw, among others) that they forgave him every excess. “He made his friends laugh until they ached,” his biographer, A. N. Wilson, writes. “He was ebulliently well-informed, spontaneously hilarious, mischievous and, at the same time, tough.” Just the man, in other words, to mock the crumbling pillars of the British Empire.

And I couldn't locate the particular poem about Woking that I was told.... I'll keep looking...

Finally for this update.
Belloc's home in London where he lived for a while has a BLUE PLAQUE: how many other GA Presidents' houses have a BLUE PLAQUE?
https://www.londonremembers.com/memorials/hilaire-belloc

Update - thanks to Jeremy Krause - late July 2019

Belloc produced a War Map in 19015 showing the Western Front. He spoke French of course, and I'm not sure how that influenced his connections.
H. Belloc. ' Land and Water ' Map of the War and how to use it. Price 2s. 6d.
https://www.jstor.org/stable/40554416


Update December 2019

Thanks to the London Review of Books taking down paywall for a month, I was able to read a review of a biography of Belloc published in 2002
https://lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v25/n04/e.s.-turner/in-praise-of-barley-brew

In 1913 his wife died, leaving him with five children. 

World War One found the ex-poilu and author of five books on famous battles a well-paid and respected military commentator in Land and Water, until his excessive optimism earned derision (a spoof entitled What I Know about the War by Blare Hilloc consisted of blank pages). 
In the 1920s he fought a six-year feud, and expended 100,000 words, in an attempt to deflate H.G. Wells’s Outline of History, which brushed aside Christianity and held that scientific progress was all.

Update September 2020
Spotted in a bookshop... A bit expensive though...

There's a blog about Belloc here.


There are lots of posts here with further details on Belloc, and his love for Sussex.

Updated July 2022



There's a few useful images on the feed which I hadn't seen before, which makes it quite useful to visit.
This quote was a good one:

"Any subject can be made interesting, and therefore any subject can be made boring."

Updated August 2023

An article on the power of his writing featuring a book written about him by a Sussex historian: Chris Hare.

"Belloc was a perpetual outsider – half French and wholly Catholic – he did not fit easily into the Edwardian world of polite society and Anglican values."

The book apparently mentions Belloc's anti-Semitism.

It would be interesting to see whether it mentions the Geographical Association at all.

Wednesday, 15 May 2019

Quote of the Day

"Whether it is taught or not taught in Schools and Universities, Geography must in the nature of things rule the territory in which the sciences relating to organic life from history down to the structure of the humblest animate thing, meet the sciences which have to do with inorganic nature.... It remains the body of knowledge which has to do with the theatre of the activity of man, and all things that have life."

Anniversary address of Sir Mountstuart Grant Duff, 1892
President of the Royal Geographical Society

1914: Dr John Scott Keltie (later Sir) FRGS FSS

'We speak of geography not as a barren catalogue of names and facts, but as a science that ought to be taught in a liberal way, with abundant appliances of maps, models and illustrations... 
We look to the Universities, not only to rescue geography from being badly taught in the schools of England, but to raise it to an even higher standard than it has yet attained'
J.S. Keltie, 1871 - RGS

Last updated November 2023

John Scott Keltie is someone whose name is well known beyond the sphere of Geography, and also had a strong connection with the Royal Geographical Society as well as being President of the Association for a year, at the start of the First World War. He was a fierce advocate for Geography.

He was another person involved in this period of change in the Association when the plan was to bring in distinguished outsiders with geographic interests to strengthen the standing of the Association.

Keltie was the author of the Keltie Report on education. This was a 150 page report which Keltie had been asked to produce 30 years earlier.
This explored the education system: assessment, curriculum and other aspects, and was influential in bringing about some changes. It was complimentary of the work being done at elementary level, but not as much about the work of secondary geographers. Keltie visited schools in a number of European countries as well as a range of schools across the UK when compiling his report, which Rex Walford's book provides more detail on.

This document from a Times obituary provides more details on the impact of the report:

His comprehensive report, the result in large part of personal investigation in many European counties and the United States, was the basis of that continuous action on the part of the society which has produced such valuable results. Geography, no longer despised among us, has now a sure footing in the schools at Oxford and Cambridge, where the diplomas are coveted, and the subject has a place in the degree examinations. 
Even the Colonial Office now requires from its officials in remote regions a knowledge of map-making. There are lectures in nearly all the English and Scottish universities. In the elementary schools the subject has made vast process from the repellent and useless geography taught some 40 years ago, while it is now a recognised place in many of the secondary schools. Text-books, maps and appliances of all kinds have been improved, and practical work in the field is common in many schools. 
In this movement Keltie played a constant and prominent part, as also in the gradual introduction into this country from Germany of the modern conception of geography, which no longer confined to an arid knowledge of the position of towns, rivers, and capes, has become a science dealing with the earth's surace as the physical basis of all human activity. In "Applied Geography," first published in 1890, he dealt usefully with this subject of anthropogeography, which he had urged and expounded in magazine articles for many previous years.

Keltie was born in 1840 in Dundee, and went to school in Perth, before studying at the Universities of St Andrews and Edinburgh, and completing some studies.
In the 1870s he became the editor of 'Nature': which remains an influential journal today.

In 1883, he joined the RGS, and became heavily involved in its activities. When he became GA President, he was also the Secretary of the RGS.

Malcolm Wise delivered an address to the GA and RGS in 1986, when he talked about the legacy of Keltie. There is a link below to the full text of what he had to say about Keltie's time in position (and before)

During Keltie's Presidency, membership grew to over 1100, despite the start of the First World War. The impacts of the War became more pronounced the longer it lasted, and the next few entries on the blog will mention some of these impacts. The GA during Wartime would be a suitable subject for a blog of its own I'm sure.

From the Archives hub page, I learned that Keltie was also at the start of the GA's Journal offerings, which remain so important today:
The new monthly Geographical Journal appeared in 1893 and was under Keltie's editorship until 1915, and joint editorship until 1917.
He resigned as secretary of the Royal Geographical Society in 1915, was elected to the council in 1917 and became vice-president of the society in 1921. He was knighted in 1918 and died in London in 1927.

His Presidential address was called 'Thirty years' progress in Geographical education' and reflected on the work since the 1880s, partly improved by the impact of his own report.



This piece makes interesting reading. Keltie starts by saying that now that the GA is in it's 21st year, it has perhaps come of age. He mentions a Mr. Rooper (who I need to find out more about) who apparently suggested the creation of the journal 'The Geographical Teacher' and helped to fund it.

He paid tribute to Douglas Freshfield, Halford Mackinder and Professor Garwood (who all get their own entries), and described the thousands of pounds the RGS had paid to help subsidise the new Geography courses that were appearing in part due to the influence of the GA and its officers. He talked about the rise of textbooks and other media to help teachers improve their practice over the previous thirty years. There was still work to do at this point, as not all universities recognised Geography as an honours subject.

He also provided some useful comments for those entering the 2019 Young Geographer of the Year competition, to a degree. I think I would add the word NOT to the sentence below... ie. 'NOT of value':

"Geography has a much greater commercial value now than it had thirty years ago. Most young men and many young women, have got their living to make, and there are a limited number of posts in which a sound knowledge of geography is of value, and these not merely in the teaching profession..."

He describes the decision made in 1905, when the Board of Education issued the Regulations for the Teaching of Geography in Secondary Schools, and said that "not less than two periods of school work and one of home work" were to be allotted to geography. It had to be taught for four years, including "the geography of the whole world" rather than just sticking to 'one or two particular continents for examination purposes: an early example of 'teaching to the test'.

I am particularly interested in the next phrase that Keltie uses.
Geography, he said, had changed "from being classed as memory work which could be put into the hands of any teacher, geography became a reasoning subject requiring individual work by the student and sound knowledge by the teacher..." The scientific method was vital to the teaching of geography he said. "Geographical material is being used to stimulate intelligent enquiry and as means of mental discipline rather than as information to be committed to memory"- think about today's knowledge rich curriculum 'focus' by many...

Geography "provides not only the intellectual discipline of a science rightly studied, but also the human interest and sympathy of the most inspiring literature".

He describes Geography as "a department of investigation which deals with a field untouched by any other department - the Earth as the Home of Humanity'.

(All quotes above from Keltie, 1914)

Keltie continued to be active in the field of Geography for many years after his term as President, as can be seen from these entries. The Keltie archive is held at the Scott Polar Research Institute, so I may make a visit there at some point.

I don't feel I've quite done Keltie's contribution justice yet, so will continue to work on this entry, as with the others.

References

The Geographical Journal
http://www.leedugatkin.com/files/2314/0655/4787/wise.pdf  - source of image above 

Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Scott_Keltie

Wikipedia entry edited to add mention of the GA Presidency role, as I do with all the Past Presidents.

Wise, M. J. “The Scott Keltie Report 1885 and the Teaching of Geography in Great Britain.” The Geographical Journal, vol. 152, no. 3, 1986, pp. 367–382. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/632810.

Presidential Address: KELTIE, J. SCOTT. “THIRTY YEARS' PROGRESS IN GEOGRAPHICAL EDUCATION.” The Geographical Teacher, vol. 7, no. 4, 1914, pp. 215–227. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40555979.

Walford, R (2001) - pp.59-63

Keltie, John Scott, 'Report to the Council of the Royal Geographical Society of Geographical Education', Supplementary Papers of the Royal Geographical Society, 1.4 (1886) pp. 439-554
GILBERT, E. W. “Andrew John Herbertson 1865-1915: An Appreciation of His Life and Work.” Geography, vol. 50, no. 4, 1965, pp. 313–331. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40565956.

Scargill, D. I. “The RGS and the Foundations of Geography at Oxford.” The Geographical Journal, vol. 142, no. 3, 1976, pp. 438–461. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/1795296.

As with all posts on this blog, if you have further information to add, please get in touch.

UPDATE May 2019
Good to see such an active North London branch in 1914 - some very interesting sounding sessions and excursions...
Update July 2019
Added the memorandum at the top of the entry, taken from Cambridge University Alumni page
https://www.geog.cam.ac.uk/alumni/earlyyears/

Further research opportunities:
RGS Archives:
https://rgs.koha-ptfs.co.uk/cgi-bin/koha/opac-search.pl?idx=kw&q=john&op=and&idx=kw&q=scott&op=and&idx=kw&q=keltie&do=Search&sort_by=pubdate_dsc&limit=

Updated July 2022

Connections with Shackleton.

And welcoming Amundsen:


Updated August 2023

I've been exploring the BAAS Section E influence at the start of the 20th century and uncovering the work of many Presidents, including Keltie.

From the Withers et. al. article:


Charles W. J. Withers, et al. “Geography’s Other Histories? Geography and Science in the British Association for the Advancement of Science, 1831-c.1933.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, vol. 31, no. 4, 2006, pp. 433–51. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/4639988. Accessed 24 Aug. 2023.

Updated November 2023

The Times Obituary - apparently he enjoyed playing golf.


Correspondence:
https://collections.lib.uwm.edu/digital/collection/agsny/id/24565/ 

He also appeared on a cigar label - I'm not sure whether any other GA President had that honour...



https://www.valleyviewcoinsandcollectibles.com/sir-john-scott-keltie-cigar-label-p/426.htm

Friday, 10 May 2019

Presidential Quote of the Day

"...the true geographer is the lover of the earth. He should feel to the earth something of that exquisite and strong feeling which the son begins to feel towards his mother as he grows up and passes out of the age of careless, unintelligent, even though strong, emotion towards her, into the stage of intelligent and sympathetic comprehension of all that he has owed her from the beginning of his life to the present moment. The emotion is even stronger than before, but it is now guided by knowledge."
Sir William M Ramsay, President 1918

Friday, 3 May 2019

1913: Professor Edmund Johnston Garwood

Last updated August 2023

Edmund Johnston Garwood was another person involved as part of the drive to bring in distinguished outsiders with geographic interests to strengthen the standing of the Association in its early years.

Garwood was born in 1864 in Bridlington, and educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he took his degree in 1886.

Between 1887 and 1892, he served as director of the Jarrow Chemical Company and as lecturer at the Cambridge University Extension Lecture Syndicate between 1891 and 1898.

In 1896, he accompanied the British Exploring Expedition (led by Sir William Conway) to Spitzbergen where he studied glaciological phenomena and geology. For this work, he was awarded the Gill Memorial Fund by the Royal Geographical Society and the Wollaston Fund by the Geological Society of London. This provided his entry into the sphere of geography.

The following year he returned to Spitzbergen. At the end of July, Garwood and the assistant Nielsen ascended Nielsenfjellet to survey the scene inland, later setting off inland up the Kongsvegen glacier. They ascended the glacier to the vicinity of Kongsfjella, then turned back to examine the vicinity of Tre Kroner before finally returning to Kongsfjorden. Conway named the region of this exploration King James Land (now James I Land).

Read their journals from this expedition here. They are beautifully illustrated and well worth reading.

Here's a comment on Garwood's involvement in the party:



In 1899, Garwood accompanied Douglas Freshfield (a previous President of the GA) on an expedition to Kangchenjunga and was responsible for the accounts of the geological structure and physical features of Sikkim. 

In 1901, he was appointed Professor of geology and mineralogy at University College, London, a chair he held until his retirement in 1931. Another link with UCL for GA Presidents.

He produced a series of maps during this time - one of which can be seen here. This is a wonderful piece of cartography from the days before GIS and StoryMaps.

In 1913, Garwood was proposed and seconded into the post (these were the days before a ballot of members was held to decide between those who were proposed and named). This article describes the AGM where this took place, and Garwood's contribution to it, as he took the Chair.

Garwood's Presidential Address was on 'Arctic Glaciers and British Ice Sheets' and can be read on JSTOR by 'Geography' subscribers.

Presidential Address: Garwood, Edmund J. “ARCTIC GLACIERS AND BRITISH ICE SHEETS.” The Geographical Teacher, vol. 7, no. 2, 1913, pp. 73–89. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40554273.

Between 1930 and 1932, Garwood served as President of the Geological Society of London as well as other posts of responsibility. He published a number of articles in the Society's journals during this period, and also in the period before he took up the post. 
He was also succeeded in that post by another former GA President, Thomas Henry Holland.


From 'The Geographical Teacher' 1921

His published work includes:

The first crossing of Spitsbergen by (Sir) Martin Conway, J W Gregory, Aubyn Trevor-Battye and E J Garwood, J M Dent & Co. London (1897) SPRI Library Shelf (32)91(08)[1896 Conway
A northern highway of the Tsar by Aubyn Trevor-Battye, Constable London (1898) SPRI Library Shelf (50)91(08)[1894-95

During the time of Garwood's Presidency, there was another significant change in the development of the Geographical Association. Prior to this, there wasn't the same financial strength, but now it had significant financial assets, which meant that the GA needed Trustees and a Constitution. 

The GA President is now a Trustee for the period of their Presidency, but there is a Chair of Trustees, who Chairs the Governing Body meetings.

The GA's Constitution was formally adopted on the 9th of January 1913.

At this time, life membership of the Association could be purchased for £3.50. Quite a bargain.


Garwood died on 12 June 1949 after a long and varied career of which this entry only tells a fraction.

References:
Source:
https://archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk/search/archives/4888f487-98b6-30e3-aad9-f081d053f20f

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Johnston_Garwood

I edited the Wikipedia entry to add the fact that he was the President of the Geographical Association. I shall do that for each President, as hardly any of their entries mentioned that before I started the blog.

“THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE GEOGRAPHICAL ASSOCIATION.” The Geographical Teacher, vol. 7, no. 1, 1913, pp. 40–41. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40554231
Some details from Balchin's centenary History of the Association were used in this post.

Presidential Address: Garwood, Edmund J. “ARCTIC GLACIERS AND BRITISH ICE SHEETS.” The Geographical Teacher, vol. 7, no. 2, 1913, pp. 73–89. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40554273.

Spitzbergen Journals at SPRI: https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/N13920016

Image copyright details:

Edmund Johnston Garwood
by Walter Stoneman
bromide print, 3 March 1926
NPG x162525
© National Portrait Gallery, London

As with each post, if you know more about E J Garwood, please get in touch. This is a relatively brief entry, and I'd love to know more.

Updated May 2019

1913 was the year when the RGS admitted women as Fellows. This brought an end to what previous GA President, Douglas Freshfield had referred to as 'the lady question' and was the reason why he wanted to start a new Association.

Read more about this in:

Bell, Morag, and Cheryl McEwan. “The Admission of Women Fellows to the Royal Geographical Society, 1892-1914; the Controversy and the Outcome.” The Geographical Journal, vol. 162, no. 3, 1996, pp. 295–312. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/3059652.


Further research opportunities:
Geological Society of London Archives

Updated May 2020
When he was teaching at UCL, he taught another former GA President: Stanley Henry Beaver.

Updated November 2020


Updated August 2023

A geology map of NW England by Garwood - follow the search for a few more items.

https://picryl.com/media/geological-map-nw-england-garwood-1912-01-9075a0 


R H Kinvig

R H Kinvig is mentioned in a few documents referenced when I was searching for information on Michael Wise. He was connected with the Unive...