Record

LevelFonds
Finding Number (Click this to view full catalogue structure)RHM
TitleThe R. H. Mottram Letters
Extent72 items
Date1928-1946
DescriptionSigned autograph letters from Ralph Hale Mottram to Gilbert H. Fabes relating mainly to Fabes' bibliography of the works of Mottram.
ArrangementThe letters are arranged chronologically.
Access ConditionsAccess to all registered researchers
LanguageEnglish
Finding AidsA catalogue of this collection is available on the online archive catalogue. Click on the Finding Number to display the summary contents list of the catalogue and to view the full catalogue, or view the catalogue as a PDF file by clicking in the document field below. A paper copy is also available in the Cadbury Research Library: Special Collections Department.
DocumentRHM letters.pdf
Access StatusOpen
Administrative HistoryRalph Hale Mottram, 1883-1971, writer, educated in Norwich and France. In 1899 Mottram entered Gurney's bank house where he stayed with the exception of the war, until 1927, indulging in his passion for writing in his spare time. Mottram was encouraged in his writing by Mrs John Galsworthy and her husband, and in 1907 and 1909, two volumes of verse were produced under the pen name of J. Marjoram. During the First World War, Mottram served with a territorial battalion of the Norfolk Regiment in Flanders. He was withdrawn from the trenches because of his fluency in French and worked with the inhabitants of the Franco-Belgian border, collecting and investigating the claims of damage done to crops and property by the British troops and presenting them to the Complaints Commission. Mottram's first book, The Spanish Farm, published in 1924 was based on these experiences. The book eventually became a bestseller and was filmed under the title of Roses of Picardy, 1927, and televised in 1968. The sale of the film rights enabled Mottram to retire from the bank and devote his life to writing.

Mottram was in great demand as a lecturer, a staunch supporter of the Octagon chapel in Norwich,and the Unitarian foundation at Oxford, a founder member of the Norwich Society and its secretary for 20 years. He took an active interest in the lives and community of Norwich and Norfolk. In 1932 he became a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, and in 1953 he was elected Lord Mayor of Norwich. He had been an active promoter of the new University of East Anglia, which in 1966 conferred on him an honorary D.Litt. Mottram was married with two children.

Publications include: Sixty-Four, Ninety-Four, 1925; The Crime at Vanderlynden's, 1926; Our Mr Dormer, 1927; John Crome of Norwich, 1931.

Reference: Lord Blake and C.S. Nicholls, Editors, The Dictionary of National Biography, 1971-1980 (Oxford University Press, Oxford, New York, 1986).
AcquisitionThis collection was purchased in 1968.