Kenneth O. Morgan
192 pages
English

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192 pages
English

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Description

This is the story of the life, professional achievements and personal background, challenges and achievements of Wales’s leading historian. During his long career, Kenneth O. Morgan has been a prolific writer and, through his pioneering work, has become a leading authority on Welsh History, British History and Labour History. This autobiography also details Morgan’s often entertaining and unconventional personal experiences, and the eminent people he has met along the way – from his work in television, radio and the press as election commentator and book reviewer, to his involvement in the Labour Party from the late 1950s onwards and the close relations he developed with such Labour leaders as James Callaghan, Michael Foot, Douglas Jay and Neil Kinnock. In addition to being a respected author, Morgan has held the position of University Vice-Chancellor in Wales, is an active Labour peer, and continues to lecture at universities around the world – all achieved while juggling his life as a husband and father.


In this revealing memoir, published in the year of his eightieth birthday, Morgan reflects on marriage and bereavement, on re-marriage, parenthood, friendship, religion and morality, his reactions to the historical changes he has witnessed, from attending a village school in rural Wales and wartime air-raids, through school in Hampstead and study in Oxford University and in Wales, down to entry into the House of Lords. Despite past traumas, this memoir still conveys invigoratingly a senior scholar’s idealism, abiding sense of optimism and belief in progress.


Contents
List of Illustrations
Foreword
Chapter 1 A Divided Consciousness
Chapter 2 Education, Education, Education
Chapter 3 History-Making: A Welsh Historian
Chapter 4 History-Making: A British Historian
Chapter 5 History-Making; A Labour Historian
Chapter 6 History-Making: A Contemporary Historian
Chapter 7: History-Making: A Biographer
Chapter 8: Experiences: The House of Lords
Chapter 9: Experiences: Travelling
Chapter 10: Experiences: Old and New Labour
Chapter 11 My History

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 11 août 2015
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781783163250
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0450€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Kenneth O. Morgan
Kenneth O. Morgan

My Histories
Kenneth O. Morgan, 2015 Cover design: Olwen Fowler
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any material form (including photocopying or storing it in any medium by electronic means and whether or not transiently or incidentally to some other use of this publication) without the written permission of the copyright owner. Applications for the copyright owner s written permission to reproduce any part of this publication should be addressed to the University of Wales Press, 10 Columbus Walk, Brigantine Place, Cardiff CF10 4UP.
www.uwp.co.uk
British Library CIP Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978-1-78316-323-6 eISBN 978-1-78316-325-0
The right of Kenneth O. Morgan to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 79 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
The University of Wales Press acknowledges the financial support of the Welsh Books Council.
In memory of my beloved parents, DAVID JAMES MORGAN (1894-1978) and MARGARET MORGAN, n e Owen (1902-1989). Diolch o galon!
Contents
Foreword
List of illustrations
1 A Divided Consciousness
2 Education, Education, Education
3 History-Making: A Welsh Historian
4 History-Making: A British Historian
5 History-Making: A Labour Historian
6 History-Making: A Contemporary Historian
7 History-Making: A Biographer
8 Experiences: The House of Lords
9 Experiences: Travelling
10 Experiences: Old and New Labour
11 My History
Appendix
Foreword
E VERY HISTORIAN SHOULD WRITE an autobiography. So wrote my old mentor Alan Taylor in the foreword to his own. He argued that it would be educative in showing the fallibility of all historical sources, especially one s own memory. It is, therefore, a salutary experience for the author even if he or she gives thanks that the vast bulk of historians have not followed Alan s advice. I had for long tended to resist the suggestion of my family and some friends that I should try to compose my memoirs. It seemed at best a routine exercise to provide grist for the mill of possible obituarists, at worst the product of self-indulgence or vanity. I have, however, changed my mind. It seemed to me of wider interest to learn how a working, writing historian went about his task at a time of sweeping historical change. In this endeavour, I have followed the guidance offered in his Memoirs from the greatest of all historians , Edward Gibbon, that I must be conscious that no one is so well qualified as myself to describe the series of my thoughts and actions , and that one should aim at Truth, naked, unblushing truth . Only the author himself can truthfully convey the intellectual, emotional and psychological factors that lay behind his efforts, the importance of the varied forms of evidence he chose to use, the fascinating people he met and the influence of the family, friends, colleagues and lovers he encountered along the way. In my case, I felt it was important also to spell out the ambiguities, mixed identities and divided consciousness from which I approached historical issues, a division resulting from a sense of being both Welsh and British, a commitment to radical change alongside an attachment to order and a life of peace. Like all historians, I am a hybrid within whom a variety of often conflicting impulses contend. I hope that this has given me the more sympathy as a human being in examining the characters and contexts about which I have written. At the end, I remain totally convinced that the issues on which I have worked as a teacher and a writer are of fundamental value for society, even if my judgements on them, like those of all my profession, are necessarily transient, interim statements due to be corrected in the light of subsequent knowledge. But it has given me a rich and full life, which has always been hugely enjoyable. I can only offer heartfelt thanks to those who made it so, my wonderfully loyal friends and colleagues, my wider family on both sides of Offa s Dyke and of the Channel, my extraordinary children, David and Katherine, my lovely grandchildren and my two brilliant and beautiful wives. They gave me comfort and warmth in the middle and later passages of a long life. But every story needs a strong beginning, and my awareness here is recorded in my dedication. To the generations of Morgans and Owens in my life story, I owe the greatest debt of all.
My daughter Katherine has read through my text to my very great advantage. Additionally, I am deeply grateful to Sarah, Dafydd, Si n, Catrin and their colleagues at the University of Wales Press for their help with this book. At the third time of asking, Alan Taylor wrote that he ended up with the almost perfect wife . After fifty-two years with our national university press, I know I am with the almost perfect publishers.
Long Hanborough, West Oxon.
16 May 2015
K.O.M.
List of illustrations
1 Tadcu and Mamgu from Dolybont.
2 Nain and Taid from Aberdyfi.
3 My father, left, in 1916 at Bedford Camp during the First World War, with his great friend Ivor Morgan.
4 My parents wedding day, 21 August 1930. From left to right: Owen Owen (Taid); my mother; Mary Owen (Nain); my father; Elizabeth Jane Morgan (Mamgu); Thomas Morgan (Tadcu); the officiating minister.
5 My parents at the time of their wedding in 1930.
6 The author aged eight months in January 1935.
7 With my father on the beach at Borth, Ceredigion, c. 1938.
8 Our family home at 219 Alexandra Park Road, London.
9 Our former home at 11 Bodfor Terrace, Aberdyfi (photographed in 2005).
10 With my parents on the beach at Aberdyfi, c. 1947.
11 The Alexandra Park cricket Colts, 1949; I am seated fourth from the left in the front row.
12 The History Sixth, UCS, in 1951. From left to right: (back row) C. Cowland; Roy Humphrey; David Macmillan; Mr Rands; Peter Roscoe; David Drown; (front row) Geoff Brown; Mr Darlaston; the author.
13 With Philip Allen (and a cat) at Christ Church meadows, Oxford, in 1953.
14 Cymdeithas Dafydd ap Gwilym at Jesus College, Oxford, in 1957.
15 A publicity shoot, teaching at Neuadd Gilbertson, Swansea, in 1961 (where gowns were never worn for teaching!).
16 Staff and students of the History department at Swansea in May 1964. From left to right: (front row) Neville Masterman; Dr Muriel Chamberlain; Professor Alun Davies; Peter Stead; Professor Glanmor Williams; Mrs Thomas (departmental secretary); Dr Walter Minchinton; Revd Dr David Walker. I am in the middle row, on the extreme right.
17 The BBC General Election programme at Lime Grove studios, 31 March 1966.
18 Telling the Queen about Edwardian socialism at Stationers Hall, 26 November 1981. Jane, fourth from the left, looks very nervous in the background! Professor R. H. C. Davis is on the right.
19 With David and Katherine, lunching with Neil and Glenys Kinnock at the Campo, Siena, in 1988.
20 Jane and me at Aberystwyth in March 1989.
21 Presenting Colin Jackson for an Honorary Fellowship at Aberystwyth in July 1994.
22 With Lord Callaghan at Plas Penglais, Aberystwyth, on the University degree day in July 1990.
23 The Oxford Labour Club reunion, London, in June 1996. From left to right: (back row) Elsa Tranter; Virginia Shapiro; the author; David Marquand; Trevor Lloyd; Revan Tranter; David Shapiro; (front row) Leslie Stone; Judith Marquand; Michael Armstrong; Freda Stone.
24 Talking to EC Commissioner Bruce Millan, Brussels, in March 1994.
25 At the National library of Wales, Aberystwyth, in 1994. The Librarian, Professor Brynley Roberts, is on the right.
26 Speaking at the University of Bordeaux in 1999, with Peter Shore and Anne-Marie Motard.
27 My introduction in the House of Lords, 12 July 2000, with Lord Merlyn-Rees.
28 Celebrating my peerage with David and Katherine.
29 With Prince Charles, Katherine, Sir John Meurig Thomas and Clive Jones-Davies at Clarence House in 2001.
30 With Lord Callaghan to celebrate his ninetieth birthday at 10 Downing Street, 27 March 2002. Sir Patrick Cormack MP is on the right.
31 Speaking at the University of Bordeaux on The Special Relationship , 24 January 2003. I met Elizabeth for the first time after my lecture, and another special relationship was born!
32 Celebrating my seventieth birthday at home, 16 May 2004, singing The Red Flag with Michael Foot.
33 With my children and cousins and their spouses, celebrating my seventieth birthday.
34 My final meeting with Lord Callaghan, at Upper Clayhill Farm, 13 February 2005. Left to right: (back row) Michael Callaghan; Lord Merlyn-Rees; Lord Healey; the author; Baroness Margaret Jay; Professor Michael Adler; (front row) Lady Merlyn-Rees; Lord Callaghan; Lady Healey.
35 At a gaudy (dinner), Queen s, c. 2005.
36 On 11 July 2005 with the FA Cup, after Arsenal s victory in the May final held in Cardiff.
37 Katherine and me on the Yangtze in August 2006.
38 Interview at Michael Foot s home in Pilgrims Lane for the Today programme, with Michael and James Naughtie, 14 March 2007.
39 Launching Michael Foot: A Life at the University of Texas, Austin, in May 2007.
40 With Ffion and William Hague at the launch of Michael Foot: A Life in March 2007.
41 Speaking at an exhibition of socialist classics in the House of Lords, with Lord Sawyer, in 2008.
42 My entry into the Gorsedd of Bards at Cardiff in August 2008.
43 With Elizabeth at Fatehpur Sikri, India, in April 2010.
44 With Elizabeth at Biarritz, after lecturing at the University of Pau, 8 November 2011.
45 With David and my grandson Joseph when Wales took on New Zealand at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff, 22 November 2014.
46 Receiving my lifetime achievement award from Hywel Francis MP, joined by Elizabeth, at the House of Commons, 18 June 2014.
47 With my grandchildren - Joseph, Clara, Thomas and Samuel - New Year s Day 2015.
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