Friday, 27 December 2019

Review of the Book on Tredegar House Weekend Parties: 1934-1938 : Fun and Frolics



Review of the Book on "Tredegar House Weekend Parties Frolics and Fun" 

House  Guests 1934-1938" by William Cross, FSA Scot

A Monument of Depravity

Book review from  Michael Keyton  : Author of " The Gift"


I think the camera has been a great leveller. A case in point is the interwar years, the thirties especially. Whereas in earlier centuries anyone with money could accord great artists to immortalise them on canvas, the 1930’s saw kings and princes, politicians and minor nobility recorded by amateurs on camera.  They make for a great and evocative record, but it’s the working classes that really shine in this medium. The aristocracy come across as slightly sinister, wooden puppets with their grave expressions, plus fours and tweeds—the women especially, many of them dour and looking like elderly men in drag.

This why Will Cross’s latest book  is such a joy to read for any obsessed with this period.
The cover has a childlike simplicity. It hides, though, a myriad of sins. The book is awash with vintage photographs of the great and the good, pictures that force the eye to linger—especially with the waspish comments that accompany them, which is partly the value of the book.

How many of us have cardboard boxes filled with old black and whites of long dead relatives about whom we know nothing? Will Cross breathes life into these pictures. In some cases, unless you have a strong stomach, you almost wish he hadn’t.

In its heyday, the interwar years, the country house weekend was a ritual of frivolity and class privilege in a grey and socially deprived world. Looking back it brings to mind the butterfly as winter approaches—in this case world war, death duties and a working class with expanding horizons. By examining the notorious parties of Tredegar House, Will Cross has focused on a small but fascinating niche in local history.

The death of Courtney Morgan, Evan Morgan leapt from his father’s oppressive shadow into a world of sunshine and excess, and in doing so helped bankrupt an ancient and vastly wealthy estate. His house parties were legendary, attracting Russian princesses, Greek royalty, and . . . H G Wells, lecherous and unashamedly parasitic. Guests mingled amongst rent boys and spies—which makes for wonderful gossip—and there is plenty of that in the book.

What gives this slim volume its heft is the meticulous research gleaned from what records there are of actual guests, their names and significance and, most importantly, when they attended. It’s a historical record, meaningless to many, but fascinating to the historian.

Amongst the names that crop up were two I found of particular interest: Evan Morgan’s factotum, Captain Henry (Harry) Ware, and the Marchesa Luisa Casati.

If I were to rewrite ‘The Gift’ I’d incorporate Captain Ware as the satanic familiar acceding to his master’s lubricious desires—for a price. Ware was Evan Morgan’s procurer-in-chief, haunting docksides and pubs for rent-boys that his master went through like  tissues Evan Morgan’s infatuations were brutally brief, usually ending with cash or a present and a warning to disappear—or else. And with Captain Ware the warning was real. Several disappeared never to be seen again.

Of another guest the Marchesa Luisa Casati, who was neither dour or dowdy. The Marchesa brought much more joy to the world—unless you shared Evan Morgan’s proclivities. She gate-crashed several of his house parties, and as one prone to ‘parading with a pair of leashed cheetahs and wearing live snakes as jewellery,’ she invariably made her presence known.. Not for the prudish perhaps, one contemporary referring to her as ‘that international monument of depravity.’ 

Rent boys or an ‘international monument of depravity’ A choice I’ve yet to encounter and perhaps never will—certainly not in Tredegar House, currently owned by the National Trust.


MICHAEL KEYTON


Enquires about the book, please e-mail the Author William Cross

williecross@aol.com




" Oh, my dear, after being at Evan Morgan's Weekend Party our names will just  be mud, mud, mud"

“ TREDEGAR HOUSE :WEEKEND PARTIES, FROLICS AND FUN” : EVAN MORGAN’S HOUSE GUESTS 1934-1938


“ TREDEGAR HOUSE :WEEKEND PARTIES, FROLICS AND FUN” :  EVAN MORGAN’S HOUSE GUESTS 1934-1938
 From William Cross, FSA Scot






In the years 1934 - 1949 Evan Morgan Viscount Tredegar held court at his Welsh mansion, Tredegar House, an impressive 17th century red brick building set in 100 acres of parkland near Newport. Invitations to Evan's country house weekends were highly prized. But how many house guests passed through the gates of Tredegar House in the Evan years? Who actually stayed there and when? What of the legends of Evan's séances, outrageous parlour game of charades, riotous drinking and orgies to compare with Caligula's Rome? What is the truth, and what are the myths about these crazy weekends? In this book William Cross, author of previous Morgan books reveals the identity of the scores of people who were Evan's guests. Here are the good, bad and the downright disgraceful whom Evan brought together under one roof. The historical icons of the era, male prostitutes, spivs, spies, and traitors as well as a sizable collection of stage and literary figures, politicians, Catholic luminaries and Evan's relatives including his Royal cousins. Evan was a generous host, an excessive party giver, a man whose wealth in theory could support his foibles for pleasure seeking, for indulging in a complex homosexual life style, having footmen wear powdered wigs, and running a large zoo in the Estate grounds comprising wild and exotic birds and animals. But beneath the surface of fun, folly and farce it was a dynasty in decay, the Morgan coffers were crumbling fast under the burden of death duties, heavy taxation and the changing attitude in Society to service and employment on the landed estates. Evan was also a sick man crippled with poor health, moreover he ploughed a dangerous furrow especially during the war years and was subject to surveillance from on high.”

Essential reading for those interested in Newport’s most famous family and their history  and those who want to know the truth about Evan’s hospitality and who he invited to stay under his 500 year old roof during his early years as the lord of the Manor.

The book is 150 pages long, over 55,000 words with over 400 End Notes. The main text  contains  over  100 images. There is also a  directory of over 300 guests whom Evan entertained, with biographical details, and dates when they visited Tredegar House,  some entries have photographs ”. Enquiries William Cross 58 Sutton Newport, Newport, NP 19 7JF  e-mail  williecross@aol.com

“Evan Morgan, Lord Tredegar's House Guests 1934-1938. “  Compiled by  William Cross. ISBN 9781905914531.  ( 2019) Copies of the book can be obtained direct from the Author.  Also on Amazon/ e-bay. The book will shortly revert to Print on Demand

William Cross, FSA Scot is the author /co-author of several books on the Morgans of Tredegar House, Newport
An illustrated  talk is available from Will Cross about the book




Monday, 21 October 2019

Notorious House Parties at Tredegar House: 1934-1938



Tredegar House : Weekend Parties, Frolics and Fun


 Evan Morgan, Lord Tredegar's

House Guests  1934-1938 

A NEW BOOK FROM WILLIAM CROSS




In its heyday of the 1920s and 1930s the country house weekend house party was an example in Britain of the 20th century oozing class and propping up the flagging class structure. It was a ritual full of  frivolity.   Often, as in the case of South Wales, there were hundreds of families within a stone’s throw of the large mansions houses (like Tredegar House) who were struggling in poverty. [i] Two different worlds in the same town.

Evan  Morgan, the Lord of the Manor at  Tredegar  House, Newport  was one of  those who  staged  these large, lavish and lazy  weekend parties, whilst in the nearby hamlets of  Pill and Duffryn the unemployed tried to make ends meet.  In history,  the era was dubbed  “The Marching Thirties”.    

Evan’s parties are a  legend,  a  part of  the Evan - legacy  between 1934 and 1949  when he reigned supreme  as  the  last  Viscount  Tredegar .

In this book Newport Historian William Cross reveals the hundreds of people who were guests of Evan Morgan, Viscount Tredegar.

The book is available direct from the Author and on E-BAY and AMAZON.

CONTACT THE AUTHOR BY E-MAIL

williecross@aol.com

An illustrated talk is available on the book.


  



[i] A good example of this comes from Christmas 1934  when  a concert was staged at the Olympia Cinema in Skinner Street , Newport on behalf of the Mayor of Newport’s Distress Fund for the poor in the town.

Tredegar House : Weekend Frolics and Fun - Evan Morgan's Notorious Parties


·        A new book about  Evan Morgan’s notorious weekend house parties  has been published by Book Midden Publishing.

·        The compiler is Newport writer/historian  William Cross, FSA Scot,  author of eight other books featuring members of the Morgan family.


“ You might find, among thirty guests, Mrs Rosa Lewis of the Cavendish Hotel, the King of Greece, [poet WB] Yeats, the Metropolitan of Thyatira, a Berlin hustler, Princess Arthur of Connaught,  a dog-breeding baroness from Hamburg, and so on and so on, while two distracted secretaries, Captain [Harry] Ware and ‘Mother S’ [Mrs. Emily Sutherland], somehow managed to make practical sense of what looked on the surface like another department of the Zoo.” 

Alan Pryce- Jones

Essential reading for those interested in Newport’s most famous family and their history  and those who want to know the truth about Evan’s hospitality and who he invited to stay under his 500 year old roof during his early years as the lord of the Manor.


The book is 150 pages long, over 55,000 words with over 400 End Notes. The main text  contains  over  100 images. There is also a  directory of over 300 guests whom Evan entertained, with biographical details, and dates when they visited Tredegar House,  some entries have photographs .

Further Enquiries about the book etc please contact

William Cross
58 Sutton Newport, Newport, NP 19 7JF

e-mail 

williecross@aol.com

THE BOOK IS AVAILABLE DIRECT FROM THE AUTHOR AND ON E-BAY AND AMAZON

21 October 2019  





Weekend House Parties at Tredegar House 1934-1938


Tredegar House : Weekend Parties, Frolics and Fun

 Evan Morgan, Lord Tredegar's

House Guests  1934-1938


By William Cross, FSA Scot






“  a succession of people – members of what is called a week-end house-party; men and women who come and go calling themselves “friends,” who are nevertheless infuriated if they don’t have the best of everything, and are bored to tears if it doesn’t overflow all over them all the time..” Anon.



 A NEW BOOK FROM WILLIAM CROSS
NEWPORT HISTORIAN

The book is 150 pages long, over 55,000 words with over 400 End Notes. The main text  contains  over  100 images. There is also a  directory of over 300 guests whom Evan entertained, with biographical details, and dates when they visited Tredegar House,  some entries have photographs .


AVAILABLE DIRECT FROM THE AUTHOR AND ON E-BAY AND AMAZON - LIMITED SUPPLY

AN ILLUSTRATED  TALK IS AVAILABLE FROM WILLIAM CROSS ABOUT THE BOOK


NEXT TALK

NEWPORT U3A  7 NOVEMBER 2019 

http://lecturelist.org/content/view_lecture/16498

Further Enquiries about the book etc please contact by e-mail/ post.

williecross@aol.com


William Cross
58 Sutton Newport, Newport,
NP 19 7JF

21 October 2019




Wednesday, 29 August 2018

Review of " Myths About The Morgans" by William Cross, FSA Scot


MYTHS ABOUT THE MORGANS OF TREDEGAR HOUSE
BUSTING THE HISTORY FRAUDSTERS



A REVIEW BY MICHAEL KEYTON

Zombie Barnacles

We live in an era of fake news, though it may be more accurately termed ‘Pick-and-Mix’ news. Facts are omitted, others given undue prominence, but all interpreted and glossed to appeal to our separate and vociferous tribes.

In this beautifully produced book, William Cross does a scholarly hatchet job on the National Trust, the present guardians of Tredegar House. He is concerned with facts and demolishing the myths that have encrusted themselves around the now defunct Morgan dynasty like barnacles—Zombie barnacles—for they have an unholy life of their own. It’s part and parcel of human nature, I suppose, for it is also fake news that truth is stranger than fiction. Fiction often trumps truth. 

We love a good story, and sometimes truth just gets in the way. In this respect, Will Cross has done an heroic job. Time will see if the zombie barnacles are truly dead.

For the curious, these are just some of the myths explored and demolished.

The Morgans were descended from Welsh princes

Tredegar House has 365 windows, one for every day of the year. (It has seventy-three)

Henry Morgan the pirate was an ancestor of the Morgans of Tredegar House.

In 1758, Charles Gould married Jane Morgan for love.  Few married for love in that day and age. We have a contemporary account of the union:

“I have,” answered he (Mr Thomas Morgan of Ruperra) “two girls. One is handsome; the other, not so well endowed by nature. In order to repair that deficiency, I mean to give her fifteen hundred pounds as a marriage portion. To her sister I shall only give one thousands. Which of them would you wish to have?”
Gould replied: “Allow me to enquire, which is the eldest?”
“The plain girl,” Morgan replied.
“Then if you please, sir, I’ll have her.”
Both sides were satisfied, especially when Charles changed his name from Gould to Morgan in order to preserve the family line.

A tale that is not a myth but an interesting story nevertheless concerns the two sons of Charles and Jane—John Morgan and Charles Morgan. Both fought in the American revolutionary wars, John killed in action at sea, and Charles captured by the Americans at York Town. Before the surrender, an American soldier, Captain Huddy was captured and executed without trial. Hardly surprising. As Captain in the Monmouth militia he murdered those who remained loyal to the Crown. Even so, it was a bad call by a Captain Lippincott.  It is, though, worth bearing in mind that Huddy had murdered several of Lippincott's relatives.

In consequence George Washington ordered thirteen British officers to draw lots for who would be executed in retaliation for Captain Huddy’s death. They were each handed a folded paper—twelve blank and one with one just one word, Unfortunate.Charles Morgan was fortunate. Captain Asgill of the Coldstream Guards less so, opening up his death sentence. All ended well however when he was reprieved after an intervention by the Queen of France. A different age.

But back to the myths:

Sir Briggs was buried standing up. To explain, Sir Briggs was a Morgan horse that survived the Crimean war and the Charge of the Light Brigade. Named after a servant of that name ‘Briggs’ the horse was unofficially knighted and was buried standing up. There is no evidence at all for those last two claims. 

A golden gondola on Tredegar Park lake

Evan Morgan’s parrot bit Herman Goering’s nose.

After Evan’s death, a  black box of secrets was buried in the grounds of Tredegar House

The myths are first class and you want them to be true, but all are beautifully debunked in this readable and lavishly produced book.




Myths About the Morgans of Tredegar House, Newport, South Wales: Busting the History Fraudsters Paperback – 30 Apr 2018  


ISBN 9781905914425




Wednesday, 18 July 2018

NEW BOOK ON TREDEGAR HOUSE, NEWPORT





NEW BOOK ON TREDEGAR HOUSE

“MYTHS ABOUT THE MORGANS OF TREDEGAR HOUSE
BUSTING THE HISTORY FRAUDSTERS”




FROM  NEWPORT HISTORIAN :  WILLIAM CROSS

·        A  controversial new book about The Morgans of Tredegar House was  published in  2018.

·        The book is compiled by  Newport writer  and historian William Cross, FSA Scot, author of seven other books featuring members of the Morgan family.

·        The Fake News and Horrible History about the Morgans :

     The book has been written because of  :


  •      Concern  over   fake  news,  myths,  and  bad history and coverage in articles and newspapers  about  the Morgans  in  the  public  domain.

·      Highlights of the Book:

Among the myths about the Morgans of Tredegar House is that they are descended from the Welsh Princes. Some also claim they have a family link to the notorious Captain Henry Morgan, the blood thirsty pirate of the Caribbean. Whilst at least one Lord Tredegar is dubbed ‘Cardinal Morgan’, the Pope’s right hand man in Wales’. Such myths are often romantic notions substituted for fact.  Others are inventions. So what is the truth?

Essential reading for those interested in Newport’s most famous family and their history  and offers  sourced material relating to the Morgans of Tredegar House.

William Cross adds: “In recent years standards of integrity have fallen.  For instance Tredegar House’s website and job advertisements  have carried unworthy aspersions upon one Lady Tredegar’s hobby of making bird’s nests, and pitched  inaccurate  claims  of Godfrey Morgan’s famous war horse “Sir Briggs” being knighted and buried standing upright. Even in recent weeks Tredegar House has been described as the ancestral home of the pirate Captain Henry Morgan of  rum fame.”

There are plenty of wonderful, established and true stories about the Morgans and their collaterals without adorning the tales told to the visitors to Tredegar House  with myths, inaccuracies and fake stories.

Cross adds “ The book is 160 pages long, over 70,000 words with over 400 End Notes and contains  over  100 images, with several unique   pictures of  members of the Morgan family that have never been seen before”.

* Further Enquiries about the book etc please contact

William Cross

58 Sutton NewportNewport, NP 19 7JF

Telephone: 01633 779731


FOR EDITORS

“Myths About The Morgans of Tredegar House, Newport. Busting the History Fraudsters” by William Cross. Book Midden Publishing  ( 2018) ISBN 13 9781905914425 : Published 30 April 2018: Released 17 June 2018.

Lady Katharine Carnegie, Viscountess Tredegar appears on the front cover,  as painted by the Welsh artist Augustus John, with permission to use from David Carnegie, His Grace, the Duke of Fife, who owns the portrait.

Copies of the book  can be obtained direct from the Author at £12.00 including UK post and packing. Higher priced  on Amazon/ e-bay,  Nielsen listing/ currently £15.00-£25.00.

Contact the Author for any current discount.


A PDF copy of the Introduction “FAKE NEWS” and a Contents Summary may be requested from the Author ( gratis).

Enquiries please e-mail  williecross@aol.com

18 July 2018