Richard Ollard

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Richard Ollard (19232007) was an English historian and biographer. He is best known for his work on the English Restoration period.

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[edit] Life

Richard Laurence Ollard was born in Yorkshire on 9 November 1923, the son of Rev Dr S L Ollard, an Anglican clergyman. He was educated at Eton College where he was a King's Scholar. He joined the Navy during the Second World War and won a scholarship to New College, Oxford at its conclusion. For twelve years from 1948 to 1959 Ollard taught history at the Royal Naval College, Greenwich in London. In 1960 he joined the publisher Collins as a senior editor, where he worked until his retirement in 1983. After his retirement from Collins he continued to research and publish widely and lived in Morecombelake, Dorset. He died of leukaemia on 21 July 2007.

[edit] Interests and achievements

[edit] Selected publications

  • Pepys: A Biography, about Samuel Pepys
  • Clarendon and His Friends, about Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon
  • Cromwell's Earl, a biography of Edward Montagu, 1st Earl of Sandwich
  • The Escape of Charles II, which combines historical rigour with a lively account of the period and the immediate aftermath of the Battle of Worcester
  • This War without an Enemy: A History of the English Civil Wars
  • The Image of the King: Charles I and Charles II
  • Man of War: Sir Robert Holmes and the Restoration Navy
  • An English Education: A perspective of Eton, about his school Eton College
  • Dorset, a historical guide to the county of Dorset in England
  • Fisher and Cunningham: A Study of the Personalities of the Churchill Era
  • Man of Contradictions: A Life of A. L. Rowse, Penguin, 1999.

The book about Rowse sparked some controversy in literary circles. A negative review published by the London Review of Books (27 April 2000) prompted this reply by Ollard.

I am sorry that so interesting and well-written an article as Mary Beard's should convey so bitterly one-sided an impression of my book on A.L. Rowse. His encouragement of fellow writers, his practical kindness and hospitality towards them, certainly bulked larger in my mind when I was writing it than the splenetic egocentricity that led him into all too well publicised excesses.
It is humiliating for any author to have failed so signally in what he set out to do. I am reminded of Congreve's witticism that bad portraitists are obliged to write the name of their sitters at the bottom. So may I, likewise, ask LRB readers to accept that my view of Rowse is emphatically not that presented by Mary Beard.
Richard Ollard

[edit] External links

[edit] References