Fund Raising dinner at the Savoy Hotel in February 1990 and informal photographs recording special events at the Arvon Foundation, including prize giving, judging, dinners, the opening of disabled person's unit at Lumb Bank, launch of Arvon's National Literature Initiative.
Arvon Foundation, photographs
This material is held atUniversity of Exeter Archives
- Reference
- GB 29 EUL MS 343
- Dates of Creation
- late 20th century
- Name of Creator
- Language of Material
- English
- Physical Description
- 110 items approx
Scope and Content
Administrative / Biographical History
The Arvon Foundation was founded in Devon in 1968 by two poets, John Fairfax and John Moat, prompted by their own struggles as writers and the discovery that there was nowhere in formal education that would offer the genuinely creative guidance they sought. In his memoir, 'The Founding of Arvon', John Moat writes:
'I came to see that the only person who can teach the technique of writing reliably is an experienced writer. That is because the teaching is proved by experience that is wholehearted and profoundly relevant.'
Early on the pair made contact with Ted Hughes whose jaded view of formal English education matched theirs. Hughes, who was persuaded to read to the first group of school children attending a course at the Beaford Arts Centre in North Devon, became a passionate supporter and involved himself in the project from the start. He was active on various committees in the 1970s and 1980s, becoming the Foundation's President. Carol Hughes, who married Hughes in 1970, was Chairman of Arvon 1986-1991 and the two were closely engaged with the growth of the organization and prime movers for many years on Arvon's creative fundraising body, then called the 'National Literature Initiative Committee'.
In 1972, Arvon began to run residential courses from an ancient Devon longhouse, Totleigh Barton, near Sheepwash. In 1975 Ted Hughes offered the Foundation the use of Lumb Bank, an eighteenth-century mill owner's house in Yorkshire that had once been Hughes' home and which was eventually acquired by Arvon in 1989. A third centre, Moniack Mhor opened in 2000 in Scotland and then a fourth, John Osborne's former house, the Hurst, in Shropshire, in 2003.
Arrangement
In original order, grouped by event.
Access Information
Usual EUL arrangements apply.
Acquisition Information
Donated by Carol Hughes
Other Finding Aids
Not listed
Archivist's Note
Catalogued by Christine Faunch, Archivst, 8 Aug 2008 with description supplied by Jane Feaver and modified by Christine Faunch.
Conditions Governing Use
Restrictions may apply, please consult the Archivist