Robert Hope Moncrieff[note 1] (1846–1927) was a prolific Scottish author of children's fiction and of Black's Guides.
Early life
Robert Hope Moncrieff was born on 26 February 1846, the lawful son[1] of George Moncrieff (11 May 1917 – 16 May 1865), a solicitor and his first wife Angela Birch (19 September 1820 – 25 December 1848). The couple had married the previous year in St Brides Church in Liverpool on 2 June 1845.[2] Robert was quickly followed by a brother, John Forbes (5 July 1847 – 7 March 1927), and a sister, Angela Mary (27 November 1848 – 8 March 1864).
Moncrieff's mother, Angela, died of childbed fever[3] four weeks after the birth of Angela Mary. Moncrieff was under three. His father married a second time on 27 June 1854 to Maria Wilks Williamson Rodgers (1830 – 30 March 1859) in Kilkenny, Ireland.[note 2] The family now lived at No 7, Atholl Crescent[note 3] in Perth. Maria gave George three more children: George Henry (2 November 1855 – 23 February 1947); Francis Edward (24 March 1857 – 7 January 1884); and Henrietta (14 June 1858 – 30 April 1859), who died in infancy.[note 4]
Moncrieff's step-mother, Maria, died[note 5] when he was just 13, and his father married again before he was 15. His third wife was Isabella Roy (29 October 1828 – 18 January 1879)[4][5] whom he married on 16 January 1861 in 2, Atholl Crescent.[note 6]Perth, Scotland. Her father was not a soldier, but the Captain of a ship trading in Asia[6] with the permission of the East India Company.[7]
Moncrieff and his brother were in boarding school by the time their father married for the third time. The 1861 Census shows both Moncrieff (15) and his brother John (13) boarding at the Circus Place School in Edinburgh. This was a highly regarded school[8] which prepared pupils for the Edinburgh Academy. Moncrieff went on to attend the Edinburgh Academy and then the University of Edinburgh.[9]
Moncrieff's father died in 1865,[note 7] four years after his third marriage.[10] when Moncrieff was 19. Moncrieff wrote nearly fifty years later that his mother had died before he knew her and that: my father also was taken too soon, leaving me precociously independent.[11] Not one of his father's three marriages lasted five years, all ending prematurely with the death of either wife or husband. Moncrieff himself never married.
Writing
Before he was out of his teens, Moncrieff had written and made money by a real book.[12][note 8] While he attended the University of Edinburgh he wrote A book about Dominies (1867), Dominies being a term used for schoolmasters in Scotland. This was taken by a publisher, who published it at his own expense with a promise of profit to the author, which proved rather a mirage in the cold light of publishing accounts.[12][note 9] It was published anonymously with no author's name given. The book was well reviewed and went into several editions. Moncrieff followed this up with A Book About Boys, (1868) adopting his pseudonym Ascott R. Hope for the first time.[13] Moncrieff was ashamed of some of his early books and went to some expense to withdraw them from circulation.[14]
Moncrieff says that he had have made awkward attempts at more than one handicraft, with the view of gathering straw for literary bricks.[15] He was said to have taken up teaching briefly more with the purpose of studying schoolboys and their ways than to making it a profession.[16]
Moncrieff travelled extensively. Even his census returns in the UK show how much he bounced around:
1851 – Living with his widowed father and two siblings in Perth. 5 years old.
1861 – At the Circus Place School in Edinburgh with his brother John.
1881 – Boarding at 8, Victoria Grove, in Kensington, London. Profession now is Author.
1891 – Boarding at Hillside Boarding Lodge in Ventnor on the Isle of Wight. Profession is Author. The 13th edition of Black's Guide to the Isle of Wight, edited by Moncrieff, was published in 1895.[17]
1901 – Now 55 years old. Moncrieff was no longer boarding, but was at the head of his own establishment at 85 Munster Road in Fulham, London. No relatives in the house, but the house also holds his 60-year-old housekeeper and her adult daughter. The electoral register show that he was still there in 1907.
1911 – Only occupant of 5 Chandos Road, Cricklewood, London, apart from a 52-year-old housekeeper.
1927 – On his death at 81 years-of-age he was living at 16a Addison Gardens, Kensington, London.
Moncrieff not only travelled the whole of Great Britain, but he also travelled internationally. He wrote: It has been by lot to be a good deal about the world from an early age. After a boyish visit to Paris, my travels began with a cruise in the Mediterranean and a stay in Italy, still heaving from Garibaldi's exploits. Moncrieff travelled, and visited four continents. He even tried his hand at farming in Canada, but soon abandoned it.[15] All of his travels contributed not only to the background for his books, but also supported his books on geography and history. Moncrieff suffered from short-sightedness and this led him to favour occupations such as walking and riding. And these leisurely pursuits allowed him to make observations that he made use of when writing on topographical topics.[18]
His study of the geography of the world, The world of to-day : a survey of the lands and peoples of the globe as seen in travel and commerce (1905) took him five years, and was updated every two years or so. Moncrieff wrote every word of the six volumes, bar a single page.[19]
Moncrieff was a member of first the Savile and later of the Athenaeum. He was of a kindly nature and always ready to do good to others, but in a discreet way.[9] He wrote that his work seldom brought him into contact with fellow authors, and that still less had he cultivated what is called smart society.[15] His view of the world's affairs was mainly that of a looker-on.[15] He wrote: I have lived my life in my own way, and that his writing was the sum of his accomplishments.
Death
Moncrieff died at Eltham, London, England, on 10 August 1927. He was living at 16a Addison Gardens in Kensington, London at the time. He left an estate valued at £11,482 14s 6d. His half-brother George survived him by 20 years.
Short stories and serials
Moncrieff contributed stories to numerous Boy's Papers and Magazines. He has stories in the first issues of the Boy's Own Paper and Union Jack. The following is a very incomplete list, drawn from Steve Holland's British Juvenile Story Papers and Pocket Libraries Index.[20] Some of the stories, like Dick's Dog, later reappeared in books of stories by Moncrieff.
Serials and short stories in Boy's Papers by Moncrieff
No.
Order
Year
Title
Journal
Pt
Illustrator
Vol.
Iss.
Page
Length
1
1
1879
18 Jan
The Bogle
The Boy’s Own Paper
1
1
1
7
2
2
25 Jan
2
1
2
27
1
3
2
1879
01 Feb
The Black Book
The Boy’s Own Paper
1
1
3
34
3
4
08 Feb
2
1
4
54
3
5
3
1879
05 Apr
At the Masthead
The Boy’s Own Paper
1
1
12
185
2
6
12 Apr
2
1
13
201
2
7
19 Apr
3
1
14
214
3
8
4
1879
19 Jul
Caught Out
The Boy’s Own Paper
1
1
28
433
2
9
26 Jul
2
1
29
455
2
10
5
1880
01 Jan
The Magician’s Apprentice; An Old Tale Retold
The Union Jack
1
1
1
14
2
11
6
1880
08 Jan
The Great Unknown; Or, The Adventures of Robbin, Bobbin, Watkin, And Pippin
In the semi-autobiographical A Book About Authors (1914) Moncrieff wrote that: For more than forty years I have been an author of all work, what the contemptuous call a hack...[19] His range was very broad and included:
School stories for boys
Serial stories in boy's papers
Translations of works in other languages. Moncrieff says he spent his time when travelling learning other languages and translating works in them.[18]
Books about religion – including martyrdom and religious persecution
Entertaining essays – about being a teacher, about school boys, etc.
Encyclopedic and instructional works – about animals, history, or geography, etc.
Black's Guides for tourists
This following section lists the guides that Moncrieff worked on, while this section lists books other than the guides.
Famous historical scenes from three centuries : Pictures of celebrated events from the Reformation to the end of the French Revolution. Selected from the works of standard authors.
Stories of Wild Beasts and their curious traits ... With illustrations
304 pages ; (8º)
London
Gall & Inglis
1912
Romance and legend of chivalry
xii, 439 p. : ill., plates (some col.) ; 22 cm.
London
Gresham Pub. Co
1912
Classic myth and legend
xvi, 443 p., 48 p. of plates (some col.) : ill. ; 22 cm.
London
Gresham Pub. Co
1913
Heroes of the European Nations. [Another edition of “Heroes of European History.” With illustrations.]
vii, 194 p.
1913
Leaders & Landmarks in European History, from early to modern times. By A. R. Hope Moncrieff ... & the Rev. H. J. Chaytor, etc. [With plates and maps.]
4 volumes ; (8º)
London
Gresham Pub. Co
1913
Half and Half Tragedy. Scenes in black and white
vi, 340 pages ; (8º)
London
A. & C. Black
1914
A book about authors : reflections and recollections of a book
vii, 308 p. ; 21 cm.
London
A. & C. Black
1915
The School of Arms: stories of boy soldiers and sailors
viii, 335 pages ; (8º)
London
G. Routledge & Sons
1916
The home story book: with George Manville Fenn
107 p. ; 4to.
London
1918
Holiday Adventures ... New edition [of “An Album of Adventures”], etc.
332 pages ; (8º)
London
A. & C. Black
1918
The adventures of two runaways
T. M. R. Whitwell
352 p., [8] leaves of plates : ill. ; 20 cm.
London
A. & C. Black
1919
The McKickshaws at School ... With ... illustrations, etc. (First published as “Half-Text History.”)
Robert Hope Moncrieff: a memorial volume, etc. [Papers intended for a projected book “Romances of America.” With a portrait.]
xx, 156 pages ; (8º); portrait frontispiece
London
Printed for private circulation
1929
Are ministerial missionaries needed?
25 p. ; 18 cm.
Shanghai
Presbyterian Mission Press
Black's Guides
Adam and Charles Black published an extensive series of guides known as Black's Guides, as well as illustrated books describing different localities. Although Moncrieff is usually credited as the editor, the work was more involved than the term editor would suggest. Moncrieff said: I have edited, that is mainly written, or re-written, some dozens of guide-books, most of them appearing in successive editions.[18] The list of those which could be found in searches on the JiscLibrary Hub Discover, which aggregates catalogues for academic libraries, and libraries of record in the UK and Ireland.[21] The differences between the editions were not trivial, and sometimes involved a complete rewrite. The more popular books were revised more often than the less popular books, as changes in railways, towns and cities, and in hotels and attractions brought the need for new editions. The table below is not exhaustive as not all of the different editions are held in the libraries.
The guides fall into two broad categories:
Books with a great deal of colour illustration with notes, such as Bonnie Scotland (1904), later republished as Scotland (1922). This had 75 leaves of colour illustrations from paintings by Harold Sutton Palmer. The notes did not so much describe the views painted, but put them in a historical and literary context, together with railway directions.
The Guides proper: Books that serve as tour guides, with maps, and accounts of places of interest, and journeys, be they on foot along the coast, or by rail or road.
Guide books written or edited by Robert Hope Moncrieff for Adam and Charles Black Limited
Year
Title
Edition
Illustrator
Pages
1892
Where shall we go? A guide to the watering-places and health resorts of England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales.
12th ed.
pp. xxv, 348: plates; maps. ; 17 cm.
1893
Where to go Abroad. A guide to the watering-places and health resorts of Europe, the Mediterranean, etc. [With map.]
xxii. 466 pages ; (8º)
1895
Black's Guide to the Isle of Wight including sailing directions for the Solent
13th ed.
Maps by Walker and Boutall
viii, 122p. maps ; sm.8vo.
1895
Black's guide to Devonshire
15th ed.
232 p., [10] leaves & [2] folded leaves of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1895
Black's guide to Cornwall
16th ed.
x, 186 p., [8] leaves of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1896
Black's guide to Bournemouth and the New Forest
71 p., [3] folded leaves : maps ; 17 cm.
1896
Black's guide to Leamington, Warwick, Stratford-on-Avon, Kenilworth & Coventry
8th ed.
82, 128, [2] p., [5] leaves of plates (some folded) : ill., maps ; 17 cm.
1896
Black's guide to the county of Sussex and its watering places
10th ed.
200,128p, [10]leaves of plates(6 fold) : ill, maps, plans ; 17 cm.
1896
Black's guide to the English Lakes
22nd ed.
x, 223 p., [11] leaves & [8] folded leaves of plates : ill., maps ; 17 cm.
1896
Black's guide to Edinburgh
24th ed.
[8],110,[2],128p, 3 (fold)plates : illus, maps, plans ; 17.2 cm.
1897
Black's guide to Bath and Bristol, Clifton, Wells, Glastonbury etc.
6th ed.
87 p., [4] leaves & [1] folded leaf of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1897
Black's guide to Dorset, Salisbury, Stonehenge, etc.
14th ed.
vi, 132 p., [1] leaf & [1] folded leaf of plates : map, plan ; 17 cm.
1897
Black's guide to Hampshire
13th ed.
xii, 184 p. ; 17 cm.
1898
Black's guide to Matlock, Dovedale and central Derbyshire
76 p., [4] leaves & [2] folded leaves of plates : ill., maps ; 17 cm.
1898
Black's guide to Bournemouth and the New Forest
2nd ed.
iv, 71 p., [3] folded leaves : maps ; 17 cm.
1898
Black's Guide to Surrey
5th ed.
vi, 184 p., [4] folded leaves : maps ; 17 cm.
1898
Black's guide to Buxton and the peak country of Derbyshire
9th ed.
87 p., [2] leaves & [3] folded leaves of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1898
Black's shilling guide to Scotland
10th ed.
143 p., [2] leaves & [1] folded leaf of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1898
Black's guide to Sussex and its watering-places
11th ed.
200 p., [7] folded leaves : maps ; 17 cm.
1898
Black's guide to the county of Sussex and its watering places
11th ed.
200,132p, [9]leaves of plates(7 fold) : ill, maps, plans ; 17 cm.
1898
Black's guide to Brighton and its environs
12th ed.
95 p., [1] leaf & [1] folded leaf of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1898
Black's guide to Devonshire
16th ed.
232 p., [10] leaves & [2] folded leaves of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1898
Black's guide to Cornwall
17th ed.
x, 186 p., [9] leaves of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1899
Black's guide to Hastings & Eastbourne, St Leonards, Bexhill, Rye, Winchelsea, etc.
88 p., [2] leaves & [4] folded leaves of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1899
Black's guide to Harrogate
11th ed.
88 p., [4] folded leaves : maps, plans ; 17 cm.
1899
Black's guide to the Isle of Wight : including sailing directions for the Solent
14th ed.
vi, 122, 132 p., [8] leaves of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1899
Black's guide to Scarborough & Whitby, Filey, Bridlington, Saltburn, Eskdale, etc.
19th ed.
88 p., [5] leaves & [3] folded leaves of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1899
Black's guide to Edinburgh
25th ed.
110 p., [1] leaf & [2] folded leaves of plates : ill., maps, plans ; 17 cm.
1899
Blacks guide to Somerset
15th ed.
xvi, 231, [1], 132 p. : maps (fold., col.) ; 8vo.
1900
Black's guide to the Wye
120 p., [3] leaves of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1900
Black's guide to Manchester
11th ed.
84 p., [2] folded leaves of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1900
Black's guide to the English Lakes
23rd ed.
x, 223 p., [11] leaves & [8] folded leaves of plates : ill., maps ; 17 cm.
1901
Black's guide to West Kent : Tunbridge Wells, Maidstone, Rochester, etc
viii, 120 p., [8] leaves of plates, [5] folded leaves : ill., maps ; 17 cm.
1901
Black's guide around London
vi, 88 p., [5] leaves & [1] folded leaf of plates : maps ; 17 cm.
1901
Black's guide to Surrey
6th ed.
vii, 184,128p : maps(col, fold)
1901
Black's guide to Cornwall
18th ed.
x, 132 p. : ill., maps (1 folded), plans, plates ; 17 cm.
1901
Black's guide to the Trossachs, Loch Katrine, Loch Lomond, etc.
vii, [1], 239 p. col. front., illus. (map) col. plates. 21 cm
Notes
^Ascott was never part of his name, but was adopted by him as part of his pseudonym. It may have been a punning reference to his origin A Scot. He used the name A. R. Hope Moncrieff for some of his books for adults, including the semi-autobiographical A Book About Authors.
^The census shows that Maria Rodgers was born in Scotland. Her father was a staff officer, and presumably was posted to Ireland at the time.
^The cause of death was given as hydrocephalus on the register of deaths.
^The death register gives the cause as consumption (this usually means what is now called Tuberculosis) of some twelve months duration.
^This house was occupied by Jane Hope Oliphant (31 July 1773 – 24 January 1861), the widow of a former officer of the East India Company. Mrs. Oliphant was rich, judging by the large number of servants she kept (housekeeper, cook, plus two female and two male servants), and generous, judging by her frequent subscriptions to good causes. Isabella's sisters, Margaret Isabel (14 October 1826 – 17 July 1879), and Mary Euphemia (5 April 1830 – 10 October 1866) were also married from this house. The house was sold for £3,225 in March 1861.
^The death register says that he died of consumption which he had suffered from for several years
^Moncrieff turned 20 in February 1866, so this book must have been published in 1864 or 1865. Oudendale: A story of schoolboy life is the most likely candidate, as the two other works dated for these years are a 24 page pamphlet for the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge in 1864 and a book on school life in France in 1865. The Oxford Companion to Children's Literature (1991, p.259) describes the plot as follows: Charlie Campion, a pupil at Oudendale College, shows 'pluckiness' in standing up to bullies, but gets into bad company; he drinks and smokes, and causes grave anxiety to Dr. Eden the head master. He is rescued by the good effects of Confirmation – whereupon he falls off a cliff and dies a holy death.Oudendale: A story of schoolboy life at the HathiTrust Digital Library
^Moncrieff never placed another book with that publisher.
^Given as Westminster in the catalogue, but examination of the original on Google Books shows that the name is Whitminster.
^In A Book About Authors Moncrieff says that a fiction of his describing from materials supplied me the life of an Argentine settler, passed hardly doubted for fact (p.11)
^Liverpool Record Office (2 June 1845). "Reference 283 BRI/3/3". Liverpool, England, Church of England Marriages and Banns, 1754-1932. Liverpool: Liverpool Records Office. p. 208.
^Parish of Kinnoull. "(Old Parish Registers: Deaths 369/50 538 Kinnoull)". Register of Deaths. National Records of Scotland. p. 538.