Showing posts with label Scandal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scandal. Show all posts

Wednesday, 11 June 2025

Remembering Robin Bryans / Robert Harbinson : 1928-2005

 Remembering Robin Bryans / Robert Harbinson : 1928-2005



Robin Bryans : Ulsterman and Author

A kindly thought today, twenty years since the passing of this controversial author, on the 11 June 2005.

He was an Ulsterman, a poet, travel writer and a thorn in the Establishment’s side.

The extraordinary legacy of this complex and often sadly twisted man, the creator of four scandal ringing volumes of autobiography, often referred to as the 'Conspiracy Theorists Bible', although rambling, is quite a marvel.

Despite the repeated tirades of “ I Accuse” his writings offer a mostly coherent account of his often bohemian life and times and ranks as a compelling black monument to the upper crust, and the seedier side of many well known politicians, publishers, judges, and lawyers of the mid late 20th century.

Fantasist, maybe, but I more than just fancy there are grains of wheat to be found within the chaff, my many years of researches into Bryans various claims proved a perpetual minefield.

Bryans published as Robin Bryans four  remarkable memoirs under the Honeyford Press imprint: The dust has never settled (1992); Let the petals fall (1993), resembling a sequel to a book called  The protégé  from the 1960s, with many digressions. There was also Checkmate: the memories of a political prisoner (1994); and Blackmail and whitewash (1996).

I am indebted to Bryans without whom I could not have written my biographies of Evan Morgan, Viscount Tredegar, in particular " Not Behind Lace Curtains" : The Hidden World of Evan, Viscount Tredegar " ( 2013).

A well written, considerate, and longer narrative on Bryans can be found in the Dictionary of Irish Biography



Friday, 10 December 2021

Highclere Castle Insider : Rev. H. David Sox “The Man Who Knew Too Much”

 

Highclere Castle Insider : Rev. H. David Sox
“The Man Who Knew Too Much”


The Carnarvons of Highclere (Downton Abbey) know a thing or two about raising revenue to pay for fixing dry rot, damp patches and mending the proverbial leak in the roof.

The exposure of the Herbert family’s Highclere Castle as the back drop to the well known TV/ film epics  Downton Abbey has increased its coffers on a grand scale.

In the late 1980s Highclere first opened its doors to the public with a flurry of excitement and neat timing about previously unknown Tutankhamun artefacts. The 5th Earl was of course co-discoverer with Howard Carter of the tomb of the boy King.

Later in the 1990s Highclere’s then incumbents, the 7th Earl of Carnarvon, better known as Lord Porchester, the Queen’s Racing Manager, together with his American Countess wife, Jeanie Wallop, were keen to attract American visitors, with American dollars, to their Berkshire Estate.

With a reputation for forking out mega bucks to hear all about the English gentry’s life style, past and present, it was a sure money spinner to seek and aim at Americans craving oldy world history and offer them lavish pampering, supreme hospitality and the high life's hunting, shooting and fishing. So grabbing the huge American tourist market became part of Highclere’s business plan.

What better sweetener for the would be visitors from New York, Los Angeles and Wyoming than for a fellow American to act as the house guide to receive them. The guide had to be someone who stood out as suave, articulate, personable, witty, equally attractive to the eye and ear. It all made perfect business sense.

Enter Rev. H. David Sox as Highclere’s resident history expert in the 1990s.

The idea worked, the Americans came and for several years this man Sox continued as one of Highclere’s most popular insider figures above and below the Castle’s hierarchy, respected by the 7th Earl and Countess, adored by visitors and liked if not more often revered by other Highclere staff.

Sox was a part-time clergyman, author of books on the Shroud of Turin, and an art aficionado. He oozed self- importance and had an inherent ruthlessness that made him reach out for any opportunity to raise his own reputation and notoriety.

That opportunity came when Sox approached the 7th Earl about writing a biography of Almina, Countess of Carnarvon, the Earl’s beloved ‘granny’ – the widow of the 5th Earl of Old King Tut fame.

The idea of Sox’s biography received the green light. He was given unfettered access to Highclere Archives, and although Almina had died aged 93, in 1969, there were many people still alive who knew her and numerous sources to tap into about her extraordinary life and times.

Sox’s work was exhaustive and thorough. Then a bomb dropped upon him when he made an startling discovery in the Archives about a family scandal that, if true, could have monumental consequences to undermine the Herbert family’s succession.

Sox realised he was the man who knew too much. What was he to do with his secret?

The nature of what David Sox found in the Archives and what he did with the information has lain festering in the long grass for 25 years. Now in the run up to the Tutankhamun centenary it is time to reopen this other tomb with an examination of Rev. H. David Sox, his life’s work, research and legacy and revisit and update the facts with reflections on the circumstances that forced him to abandon the Almina project – that led to Highclere burying the proposed biography.

In the long aftermath of David Sox’s study and discovery in Highclere Archives, the unpublished biography of Almina has tantalised and teased  various researchers, journalists and even TV companies, and Sox frequently pursued for enquiry, comment and the hidden truth.

Only the Society author William Cross, FSA Scot has revealed in past publications, the nature of Sox’s find and Highclere’s quandary. Sox died in 2016, leaving behind fears of a wider disclosure. He has left behind much confusion but still unanswered questions about his original discovery. Who knows the truth? Who is willing to tell what they know? Who is too scared ?

It is time to settle this part of Highclere’s history once and for all.


E-MAIL ALL ENQUIRIES ABOUT THIS POSTING

 

williecross@aol.com

 

 

Sunday, 16 September 2018

An album of sexually explicit verses and jokes: A New Book from William Cross, FSA Scot



LAST COPIES 

An album of sexually explicit verses and jokes

From the Collection of  Lois Ina Sturt and Reggie Pembroke

A NEW BOOK FROM WILLIAM CROSS, FSA SCOT

Published 18 September 2018. ISBN 9781905914401

£10.00 inc p&p direct from the Author

Or on Amazon / ebay

Book Midden Publishing

A  dirty  little  book,   humorous and rude

From the Bright Young Things Era

This is a dirty little book.  It reproduces a selection of erotic, tasteless,  sexually charged  and downright filthy rhymes, jokes and limericks, from the 1920s.

The  material  comes  from the collection of Lois Sturt and Reggie Pembroke, two  minor aristocrats and sometime lovers.   The ditties  are what these two central characters  laughed and sniggered about before, during and after making love.

The  lovers read  them out to each other in bed whilst they drew breath, enjoying an accompanying cigarette and a  glass of bubbly before returning to love-making.

The book contains numerous extras including unique photographs and biographical sketches of Lois Sturt and Reggie Pembroke.

Contact the compiler William Cross, FSA Scot by e-mail for more details.



Sunday, 15 April 2018

Charles Rodney Morgan : Heir of Tredegar House : A New Book

Charles Rodney Morgan :  1828-1854
The heir apparent of Tredegar House, Newport 
A New Book
 By William Cross, FSA Scot





Charles Rodney Morgan ( 1828-1854)  was  the first born son  of  the wealthy Charles  Morgan Robinson Morgan and  Rosamond Mundy   later  Lord and Lady Tredegar of Tredegar House, Newport, South Wales
A foppish,  romantic  figure,  described as “diminutive and of delicate features” he was a popular  huntsman and heir to the Morgan family titles.  In  1849  his coming of age was marked with wide spread celebrations in Newport and surrounds, huge bonfires were lit for miles around. He had everything to live for and become the next Sir Charles Morgan, a landowner of thousands of acres and numerous property interests.                       
Educated at Eton,  Charles saw  service as an officer  in the Coldstream Guards,  later he was elected  Member of  Parliament for  Brecon.  Then scandal and tragedy struck.  Charles had a  taste for the bohemian life and chose bad company in the underbelly of London Society.  At the age of just 25 he died  in Marseilles,  France in 1854 after contracting a debilitating  disease.
Charles’  brother Godfrey was at his sibling’s bed side to offer hope and comfort. It was soon afterwards that Godfrey famously went out to the Crimea to fight for his  Queen and country and return a hero of Balaclava, and  the Morgan  heir.
This is a touching  story of ‘what might have been’ of how Charles Morgan’s first choice of a wife  was dismissed by his parents, how he fell under the spell of a French woman, who bore him a son,  slipped fast into debauchery and  under pressure from creditors  and his angry parents fled in disgrace abroad.    
ISBN 13 978-1-905914-50-0
Published by William P. Cross Book Midden Publishing
58 Sutton Road Newport GwentNP19 7JF,   United Kingdom
 Publication Date : 2023 or later
Enquiries : Please e-mail William Cross, FSA Scot 
williecross@aol.com