8. 'There's a little book of her jobs'
About this video
Trish Gibson, biographer of Brenda Colvin, looks back at her first encounter with Hal Moggridge and the revelation made that day of a remarkable piece of archive. Her talk evaluates Hal's significant contribution to overcoming the book's difficult path to publication.
It started in the Spring of 2002 when, searching for a subject for her MA dissertation topic, Trish found a chapter on Brenda Colvin in ‘Reflections on Landscape’ by Sheila Harvey, the LI librarian, The chapter on Brenda Colvin was written by Hal Moggridge, she wanted to know more and they arranged to meet.
While outlining the range of Brenda’s projects such as Eggborough Power Station, South Yorkshire; Trimpley reservoir, Worcestershire; Aldershot Military Town; The Manor House, Sutton Courtenay, Hal suddenly said ‘there’s a little book of her jobs’. It was on a high shelf and turned out to be a researcher’s dream, starting with her job number 1 in 1922. The last was job number 675 in 1980.
What a treasure trove! The collaboration with Hal and development from dissertation to book took longer than expected, finally being published in 2011, but throughout Hal was ‘a biographer’s dream’.
Eventually catalogued and housed at MERL the full archive is now available to all.
About this series
Hal Moggridge was an obvious choice to continue FOLAR’s special series celebrating the life and works of UK’s renowned landscape architects. He has spent almost all of his working life in landscape architecture. Throughout this time, he has shared his knowledge and wisdom guiding multiple landscape focused organisations and professional bodies at international, national, and local levels. Hal has long provided a compass of wisdom, generosity, and diplomacy. He sees landscapes not only as cultural treasures, but also tools for reconciliation and embraces diversity as a strength. His courage, clarity, and humanistic vision continue to inspire. He continues working now as a consultant to his practice and as a volunteer advising on multiple committees, including FOLAR. Through a varied programme of speakers and topics we hoped to discover more about his work, ideas, principles, and also about him. How can such a quiet and modest man achieve so much? One of the most valuable objectives with FOLAR’s celebrations on special lives is being able to discuss, ask questions, see projects and learn and also share so much more about different aspects of peoples’ life and work, rather than guessing or making assumptions.
The archives of both Hal Moggridge and Brenda Colvin are at MERL, fully catalogued and open to all by appointment: https://merl.reading.ac.uk/collections/brenda-colvin
The Landscape Institute collection at MERL: https://merl.reading.ac.uk/collections/landscape-institute/
More information about FOLAR, and joining us https://www.folar.uk/