- Maurice Ashley (historian)
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Maurice Percy Ashley Born September 4, 1907 Died September 26, 1994 Education St Paul's School and New College, Oxford Occupation Historian, Journalist & Editor Maurice Percy Ashley CBE (4 September 1907 - 26 September 1994) was a noted historian of the 17th Century and a former editor of The Listener. Ashley published over thirty books on history. His Financial and Commercial Policy Under the Commonwealth Protectorate (1934) achieved wide academic influence and his biographies Cromwell (1937) and General Monck (1976) were also praised.[1]
Biography
Ashley was educated at St Paul's School and New College, Oxford, where he won the Stanhope Essay Prize and the Gladstone Memorial, and took a first-class degree in Modern History. He went on to take a DPhil, studying under David Ogg, and it was his doctoral thesis that became Financial and Commercial Policy Under the Commonwealth Protectorate.[1][2]
In 1929 he was appointed literary assistant to Winston Churchill, who had just commenced his biography Marlborough: His Life and Times. Ashley would later write Churchill as Historian (1968), a perceptive analysis of Churchill's methods.[1]
Ashley's career as a journalist began when he joined the staff of the Manchester Guardian as a leader writer in 1933, moving to The Times in 1937 as a foreign sub-editor.[1] He continued to write, publishing Oliver Cromwell: the Conservative Dictator in 1937 and his own short book on Marlborough in 1939. He was briefly editor of Britain Today in 1939-40 but in 1940 enlisted into the Grenadier Guards, later being transferred to the Intelligence Corps. By 1945 he had achieved the rank of major.[1][2]
After World War II, he joined the BBC's weekly publication, The Listener, as Deputy Editor and was appointed Editor in 1958, in which job he remained until retiring in 1967.[1] He broadened the range of the journal, which had been a vehicle for the text of selected broadcasts and criticism of radio and then television programmes. Under Ashley, The Listener's book reviews played a leading role in killing off the 19th-century tradition of anonymous reviewing.[2]
Among a number of books, Ashley's publications in this period included his The Greatness of Oliver Cromwell (1957), a substantial revision of his earlier views on Oliver Cromwell, and The Glorious Revolution of 1688 (1966). After retiring from The Listener, the rate of his publications increased, helped by a two-year research fellowship at Loughborough University. This period saw the publication of his studies of Charles II, James II, Prince Rupert, and his General Monck (1977), regarded as one of his best books. His last book, The Battle of Naseby and the Fall of King Charles I (1992), appeared when he was 85.[2]
Ashley was awarded a CBE in 1978 and a DLitt from Oxford in 1979. He was President of the Cromwell Association from 1961 to 1977. He married twice, first to Phyllis Griffiths, with whom he had a son and a daughter, and second to Patricia Entract.[2]
References
Categories:- British writers
- 1994 deaths
- 1907 births
- Academics of Loughborough University
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