Sunday, 17 December 2017

Tredegar House, Newport, South Wales: New Book on Evan Morgan



“ Sketches of Evan, Viscount Tredegar, ‘Lord of the Lies’”

Evan Morgan (1893-1949) was the 4th Lord Tredegar and  the last Viscount Tredegar.

He was a  predatory homosexual,  and fantasist,  born with  too much money and not enough good health.  Evan  spent his life hunting 'rough trade' in the shape of boys, and youths, something described in detail in the book ' Not behind Lace Curtains: The Hidden World of Evan, Viscount Tredegar', published in 2013 by William Cross, FSA Scot.  

The new book is  also written  by  Evan  Morgan’s  biographer, William Cross.  With an Introduction from Newport historian, Jim Dyer.

The book  is a compilation of  reminiscences and impressions   of  how  the last Viscount Tredegar  is   recalled by  regular inhabitants of the Morgan family seat at  Tredegar House in the 1930s and 1940s.,

The testimonies  come from those who knew Evan Morgan,  his friends, foes and  lovers.  Contributors include   historian  Cyril Hughes Hartmann, novelist  Inez Holden,  travel writer  Robin Bryans,  poet and journalist Charles Graves, Evan’s godson   Desmond Leslie,  the Irish  diplomat  Shane Leslie,  literary editor,  Alan Pryce-Jones and  barrister  Henry Maxwell.

Contact William Cross, FSA Scot by e-mail for further information about the book




The book was published on 4 December 2017, it is available direct from the author and on Amazon.




Sketches of Evan, Viscount Tredegar


The  Morgan  family Coat of Arms ( in wood) at the home  in France  of John Morgan, the 6th & last Lord Tredegar, who died in 1962. Below is a curious  wooden plank with the details of David Morgan, a  Welsh Jacobite who was executed in 1746, suggested as a kinsman of the Morgans of Tredegar. The Morgan family  motto is  " Si Deus Nobiscum quis contra nos" =  If God is with us, then who is against us.




NEW BOOK ON

EVAN MORGAN

    Sketches of  Evan, Viscount Tredegar
‘Lord of the Lies’
As  seen  by  friends, foes and  lovers
William  Cross, FSA Scot

A  new  book  about  Evan Morgan,


Contact the Author William Cross for further information or about any queries regarding the book.williecross@aol.com Book Details   ISBN 9781905914463Published by Book Midden Publishing ( 2017)A further title in the series will appear in 2018.



Sunday, 5 November 2017

Lord of the Lies: A new book about the eccentric Evan, Viscount Tredegar


Sketches of  Evan, Viscount Tredegar.  ‘Lord of the Lies’As  seen  by  friends, foes and  lovers:  A new  book  William  Cross






A new book about Evan Morgan, Viscount Tredegar  is published in December 2017  by   Newport  writer  William Cross,  FSA Scot,  Evan’s biographer, and the author of seven  other books featuring that notably eccentric Welsh peer and early sex tourist.

“ Sketches of Evan, Viscount Tredegar” subtitled ‘Lord of the Lies’ is a compilation of  reminiscences and impressions   of  how  the last Viscount Tredegar  is   recalled by  regular habitats of the Morgan family seat at  Tredegar House in the 1930s and 1940s, 

The testimonies  come from those who knew Evan Morgan,  his friends, foes and  lovers.  Contributors include   historian  Cyril Hughes Hartmann, novelist  Inez Holden,  travel writer  Robin Bryans,  poet and journalist Charles Graves, Evan’s godson   Desmond Leslie,  the Irish  diplomat  Shane Leslie,  literary editor,  Alan Pryce-Jones and  barrister  Henry Maxwell. 

Cross explains    : "There are many tall stories about Evan Morgan. So called facts  have been  invented around him, in some  cases these  are no better than lies.  Often the  lies are mischievous and deliberately contrived, with Evan himself  being one of the principal  liars. By presenting  these testimonies from Evan's contemporaries  the truth is attempted  at  long last."

The book will be available on Amazon, ebay and direct from the Author

 ISBN 9781905914463            

Limited Edition signed by the Author







Thursday, 9 February 2017

Viscount Tredegar : Letters and Prose From His Biographer, William Cross

                               BOOKS ON EVAN MORGAN, VISCOUNT TREDEGAR

Evan’s Letters and Prose.  Two  compilations of the  letters and prose of the charismatic Welsh peer Evan Morgan, Viscount Tredegar,  have recently  been edited by Newport’s William  Cross, FSA Scot who is also Evan’s biographer.

Evan, Lord Tredegar, Selected Letters, Prose and Quotations: The Mystic Muse of Evan Frederic Morgan ISBN 9781905914241 Book Midden Publishing (2015)

This book offers a  wonderful  selection of letters and prose including  Evan’s intimate correspondence to his beloved  friend  ‘Krylie’  ( Cyril Hartmann) culled from the Tredegar House Archive. In addition  are Evan’s letters to the composer Cecil Gray and to literary giants George Bernard Shaw and  G K Chesterton from the British Library Manuscripts Department, published for the first time in ninety years. The letters reveal a surprisingly whimsical, witty, whilst occasionally warped side to Evan thoughts, relationships and deeds.

In addition  the compilation combines a broad base of  prose articles by Evan contributed to  magazines and newspapers offering his own personal memoir of time spent  in Algiers ( 1918); Paris ( 1919); Rome ( for the visit to the Pope at the  Vatican of  King George V and Queen Mary in 1923); and his view of Limehouse as its prospective Member of Parliament in 1929.  Evan’s vision on Catholic matters  is confronted in a serious article, but there is a lighter note  with a lyrical piece about how the Victorians are remembered. The sizable collection of quotations about  Evan will amuse and provoke.

Evan, Lord Tredegar : Further Letters and Prose Pieces: With Anecdotes About Evan  978-1905914388 Book Midden Publishing ( 2016)

Among the letters included are those to the Welsh artist Augustus John, to The Archbishop of Cardiff, Francis Mostyn and to Marie Stopes who was involved with Evan and others in the campaign to try to secure a pension for Lord ' Bosie' Douglas. Other nuggets include two odd-ball letters featuring Evan from Aldous Huxley - his friend from the tragically insecure days spent at Lady Ottoline Morrell's Garsington Manor during the Great War. Here too are the letters from Evan to Frances Stevenson, David Lloyd George's private secretary and mistress; Frances later dubbed Evan " a hopeless liar and thoroughly degenerate". The new prose pieces include Evan's essay on " Youth", his personal views of what men and women of the 1920s would have made the ideal Prime Minister's inner Cabinet, and a curiously vain piece about " This Age of Vulgarity" as well as an equally heady essay entitled " I Believe in the Roman Catholic Church".

These books  are rare,  limited numbers,   the results of  Will Cross’s ten years of research. The work  fills a gap as very little of Evan’s written words ( except his poems and verse) are  readily available  in the public domain.


Copies can be obtained direct from William Cross at 58, Sutton Road, Newport, NP19 7JF.  Cheques/ POs payable to “ William Cross”.   Cost is £7.00 per title plus £2.25 post and packing. If you buy both titles the postage is free. The books are also available on AMAZON.

Thursday, 24 November 2016

PRESS RELEASE BY AUTHOR WILLIAM CROSS, FSA SCOT





BRITISH  SOCIETY AUTHOR REVEALS SHOCKING FACTS ABOUT  ITV’S TUTANKHAMUN CHARACTERS CARNARVON AND CARTER

Shocking Facts In New Book On Lord Carnarvon And Howard Carter who featured in a recent  British Television Drama Series  “ New Tutankhamun “

The book features untold facts about  Lord Carnarvon, and his side kick Howard Carter, the discoverers of the tomb of Boy King, Tutankhamun.

The Book strips away the conventional story to look at their disturbed childhood.

British Society Author William Cross, FSA Scot    offers a new book "Carnarvon, Carter and Tutankhamun Revisited :The hidden truths and doomed relationships" .

The book  reveals new, touching facts about the early life of the men behind Tutankhamun's discovery. The book also advances to the great find itself and the ultimate fate of the two discoverers.

Suggesting that " Everything we are is shaped in childhood", often resulting in a dysfunctional adult, the book highlights the co-incidences of major childhood trauma suffered by the central figures. At aged 9, Prince Tutankhamun found himself King of Egypt, Lord Carnarvon lost his beloved mother, who was soon replaced by a young step mother. Carter's case is the most shocking, at aged 8 he witnessed the suicide of his elder brother Horace, a promising 17 year old who killed himself by drinking cleaning fluid.

All were products of inbreeding, thus the three figures were not surprisingly born disabled, Tutankhamun had girlish hips, a club foot, he was possibly a consumptive or epileptic. Carnarvon was a sickly child with bad genes, lung disease and learning difficulties, at Eton College he was already an insatiable gambler. Carter was "a bad herniary case" who had to be "bandaged like a mummy" so frail that parts of his body fused, he was unable to go to school, do any sports or play games with other children.

Echoing the hunchback King Richard III who in his pains and woes complains at being "deformed, unfinish'd, sent before my time into this breathing world, scarce half made up" Carter uses a similar phrase for himself, that "Nature thrusts some of us into the world miserably incomplete".

As babies none tasted their mother's milk, but were fed by wet nurses. Carnarvon's wet nurses were hired as nursery maids as roughneck as the estate gardeners. Carter's wet nurse was a female cousin from Swaffham in Norfolk, a Carter family stronghold. In the case of Prince Tutankhamun archaeologists have traced wall paintings of his wet nurse Maia feeding him, she is thought to be his sister.


 Wet nurses were employed when the mother was unable or chose not to nurse the child herself. Lady Evelyn Herbert of Highclere Castle ( backdrop to TV's Downton Abbey) was a political hostess for her Cabinet Minister husband, hers and Martha Carter's lives ( as the wife of a Royal Society Artist) were too full of social activity to breast feed; Tutankhamun's feeding was set by ancient Royal custom.

The author concludes that Howard Carter suffered a form of autism, his mother Martha was a classic 'refrigerator mother' ( one of the early recognised causes of autism, although it is now thought the condition is more genetically driven). Autism accounts for Carter's mood swings, furious temper and tantrums famously after the affray with French tourists at Sakkarah in 1905 after he lock up Tutankhamun's Tomb in 1924 and refused everyone entry.

The Author makes a number of controversial assertions. Based on information from correspondents, including Tony Leadbetter, the godson of Lady Almina, Carnarvon's wife, ( who lived with the Countess of Carnarvon for 30 years ) he revisits the facts about the famous death of Lord Carnarvon in 1923. The evidence suggests that the Earl was suffering from a terminal illness, there was no mosquito bite. Almina, Lady Carnarvon ( a nurse in the Great War) rushed to the Earl's bedside ( from England, with a mysterious doctor) and almost certainly assisted a peaceful end.

The book examines the development years and private world of Lord Carnarvon and Howard Carter closely scrutinising their relationship. In revisiting the story of the discovery of the Tomb and the aftermath the Author challenges the conventional claims of how and why Lord Carnarvon first turned his attention to Egyptology, to Carter's years in the wilderness after resigning as an Inspector in the Antiquities Service and why Howard was blocked for a knighthood by King George V.

William Cross comments on the ITV's Tutankhamun : " ITV have rattled the history and chronology of Howard Carter and George Carnarvon. It is not about artistic licence or an interpretation of the story as this series is largely FICTION based on using the historical figures and underlying narrative of whose who discovered Tutankhamun's tomb. In such fiction no one can hear the historians scream because someone, somewhere perhaps for a school exam puts down the fiction from TV over the facts from a history book If this series wishes to be judged as history it is a non-starter, it fails as an historical account. So close to the centenary of the discovery of the Tomb it is a missed chance and telling the story without embellishments."
  
“Carnarvon, Carter and Tutankhamun Revisited :The hidden truths and doomed relationships” by William Cross ( published on 20 October 2016 by Book Midden Publishing, Newport, Gwent), ISBN 978 1905914364

Further Enquiries: Contact William Cross by e-mail. 

Google " William Cross FSA Scot"