Fred J Speakman

Fred J Speakman (born in Essex) was an English naturalist and author. He was one of Britain's best known naturalist-authors in the 1960s.[1]

Life

Speakman grew up and lived in Epping Forest and became a teacher at Woodside School, Walthamstow.[2] He spent his later years running a field centre at Roseville, High Beach between 1959-1979. A well known popular writer of illustrated guides to the English forests, in the mid 1950s with the support of Walthamstow's Education Office he began to convert Jubilee Retreat, Chingford into a classroom able to take 20 pupils for day visits to the forest. In 1959 he acquired Roseville, High Beach and converted it into a nature study centre. The Borough became a pioneer in childhood environmental education, sending primary school children who often lived in working class urban areas on fortnightly visits to be taught by Speakman at Roseville and Ernie Douse and later Ken Hoy at the Jubilee Retreat.[3] As demand for trips to the forest increased, the new London Borough of Waltham Forest purchased the Suntrap Centre in 1967, sending all final year primary classes to make eight visits a year to the Centre.

After retiring he went on to live in Barbados with his second wife Kit and died there in 1982.[4]

Bibliography

A Keeper's Tale (1962)

References

  1. British Council; National Book League (Great Britain), National Book Council (Great Britain) (1965). British book news. London: British Council. p. 830. Retrieved 18 March 2009. Cite uses deprecated parameter |coauthors= (help)
  2. Suntrap history Retrieved 20 March. 2009
  3. "Waltham Forest environmental education centres". Retrieved 27 November 2013.
  4. Friends of Epping Forest p7 Retrieved 30 May 2013

External links

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