Maurice Ash
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Maurice Anthony Ash (born 31 October 1917; died 27 January 2003 was an environmentalist, writer, and planner. He was chairman of the Town and Country Planning Association and of the Dartington Trust.
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[edit] Education and early life
Born at Hazaribagh, India, Ash was educated at Gresham's School, Holt, the London School of Economics (where he read economics) and at Yale. At LSE, he met Michael Young, later Lord Young of Dartington, who became a lifelong friend.
Ash's grandfather, Gilbert Ash, was a property developer who left him a large fortune.
[edit] War service
During the Second World War, Ash served in the British 23rd Armoured Brigade in North Africa, Italy and Greece. In 1944, he was mentioned in dispatches. He later wrote a history of his regiment.
[edit] Career
After the war, his friend Young introduced him to the Dartington Hall Trust. The rundown 1,000-acre (4 kmĀ²) estate of Dartington, near Totnes in Devon, had been bought by Leonard and Dorothy Elmhirst in the 1920s. With ideas from the philosopher Rabindranath Tagore and money Dorothy Elmhirst inherited from her family (the American Whitneys) the Elmhirsts rescued a medieval hall and developed the estate, creating craft workshops and founding a famous design school. Ash met the Elmhirsts' daughter Ruth and in 1947 they were married. They had a son and two daughters.
After farming in Essex, Ash was interested in the postwar plans for new towns such as Welwyn Garden City and joined the Town and Country Planning Association, becoming its chairman and later its vice-president. The TCPA published the influential magazine Bulletin of Environmental Education. Ash promoted enlightened development.
In 1962, the Ashes bought Sharpham House in Devon, a large Palladian house designed by Robert Taylor. A hundred-acre farm there was run on Rudolf Steiner principles, and also vineyards, a Buddhist community and college, and the Robert Owen Foundation, a charity which provided agricultural experience for people with mental disabilities.
Ash also became chairman of the Dartington Trust. While some Dartington activities were given up, others started. Dartington glass and the Schumacher College continued. Ash also backed a magazine called The Vole.
In writing about the great private estates which followed the dissolution of the English monasteries, Ash argued that they had been failures in any civilising sense. Monasteries had been centres of learning and innovation. He argued for re-establishing such communities. Broadly, his philosophy followed Wittgenstein and rejected Descartes.
[edit] Books by Maurice Ash
His published books include -
- Regions of Tomorrow: Towards the Open City (1969) ISBN 0-238-78935-7
- A Guide To The Structure of London (1972)
- New Renaissance: Essays in Search of Wholeness (Green Books, 1986) ISBN 1-870098-00-5
- Journey Into the Eye of a Needle (1991) ISBN 1-870098-35-8
- The Fabric of the World: Towards a Philosophy of Environment (Green Books, 1992) ISBN 1-870098-42-0
- Sharpham Miscellany: Essays in Spirituality and Ecology by John Crook, Maurice Ash, and Stephen Batchelor (1992) ISBN 0-9518298-0-7
- Beyond the Age of Metaphysics: and the Restoration of Local Life (Green Books, 1998)
- Where Division Ends: On Feeling at Home in Chaos (Green Books, Totnes, 2001) ISBN 1-903998-06-9
[edit] Other appointments
- Chairman of the Town and Country Planning Association Executive 1969 to 1983
- Chairman of the Dartington Trust 1972 to 1984
- Chairman of the Green Alliance (an all-party environmental lobby group) 1978 to 1983