Robert Walling
Robert Victor Walling (1895–1976) was a Cornish soldier, journalist, and poet.
Early life
He was born in Plymouth on 5 March 1895, the son of Robert Alfred John Walling and his wife, Florence Victoria, née Greet. He was educated at Plymouth Grammar School, was a junior reporter on the Western Daily Mercury, 1912-1914. A Captain in the Territorial branch of the Royal Garrison Artillery, he served in France during the First World War and was wounded at the Battle of Passchendaele in 1917.
He was editor of the Cunard Daily Bulletin and Magazine in Liverpool in 1919, moved to Calcutta as the sub-editor of The Statesman from 1921–1924 and then moved to Manchester as sub-editor of the Manchester Evening News. In 1926 he was appointed secretary of the Institute of Journalists and editor of its journal. He was resident in Chipstead, Surrey in 1926.[1]
Interest in the Cornish language
It was during spells in military hospitals that he produced his illustrated manuscript magazine An Houlsedhas ('The West') in the Cornish language. In peacetime he worked as a journalist with a special interest in maritime affairs. He was a member of Gorseth Kernow under the Bardic name of Scryfer an Mor ('Writer of the Sea').
Works
- An Houlsedhas, 1916-1917.
- Gorseth Byrth Kernow: Bards of the Gorsedd of Cornwall 1928-1967, Penzance, 1967
Walling features as one of the main characters in the 2009 play Surfing Tommies by Cornish playwright, Alan M. Kent.
References
External links
- Richard Alfred John Walling (1869-1949) – The Encyclopaedia of Plymouth History
- The National Archives - letters and correspondence of R V Walling and his father.