The History of Welsh Hill Lists – Part 10
The Early Years
1950-1962
1952 – Ted Moss
By
this time the small disperse community of Welsh hill list compilers only
numbered seven – Corbett, Carr and Lister, Parker, Moss, Walsh and, most
recently, Rowland. Two of these, Walsh
and Moss, were now in correspondence with one another swapping information and
ideas. This, in time, had a direct
result on the next instalment of our story.
The
year is now 1952. Ted Moss had recently become the first person to complete his and Simpson’s
combined lists to the Two-thousands of England and Wales. But further studies of the maps proved that
certain qualifying tops to his 1940 list had been missed. I will let the father of the 2,000 foot
published hill list take up the story; “My object is to tidy up the published
lists of two-thousands. In going over
the whole of the ground I have found F.H.F. Simpson’s list for the Lake
District to be extremely accurate and there appears to be only one omission
from it. My own lists for the Rest of
England and Wales are somewhat less complete and several tops, mostly small,
but all conforming to the 50 foot contour ring definition have come to light”.
The
update was published in the 1952 edition of the Rucksack Club Journal. It
consisted of a four page article entitled ‘All Those Two-Thousands’ – although the main purpose of the article is to list the
newly found tops, it is much more than just an update to an existing list and
is more of an introductory text to Moss’s thoughts on the two-thousands, and
proved by far the most expansive text Moss wrote in conjunction with his hill
lists. For this reason it is worthwhile
quoting in detail from it:
Front cover to the 1952 Rucksack Club Journal |
“It
can be argued that to every man there are as many Snowdons as he has made
ascents, but the fastnesses of the Black Mountains or the shy secrets of Radnor
Forest can give him something more that Snowdon can never give, however many
ways he climbs it. It is true that the
pursuit of the unknown becomes a habit and one has to beware of a tendency to
reject even the finest peak with a curt ‘Not likely, I’ve done it’, or ‘Going
up Cross Fell?’ – ‘No, I did it in 1933’; or ‘What about including Moel
Meirch?’ – ‘No, it’s not in the list (thank God for two odd feet!)”.
“It
must be admitted that some two-thousands are dull. Many of the Pennine tops are likely to
satisfy only those who have acquired a taste for that type of country. It is a taste worth cultivating, if only for
the solitude. To some two-thousands one
would not wish to return. But in this
game, and it is only a game, one must take the rough with the smooth, the great
with the small, and the obvious with the obscure. The Rhinogs nowhere reach
2,500 feet but they provide the roughest and toughest walking in Wales, and the
rarely visited tops round the Hirnant Valley near Bala are a close second. The two thousands are of that middle height
from which the distant views look their best”.
Walsh
had instigated the correspondence between himself and Moss of which Ted Moss
states: “I am indebted to A. St. G. Walsh for drawing my attention to two of
the additional tops in Wales. He is a
mine of information on two-thousands and has recently published an account of
his researches”. After this public thank
you, Moss comments on Walsh’s article : “Unfortunately Walsh gives only a
specimen list and does not indicate to what extent he depends on objective
measurement or on subjective judgement in deciding whether the drop is more or
less than 50 ft”. This is the first of
only two published comments made between the only people to have compiled a
comprehensive list to the Welsh 2,000 ft mountains.
The first page to Ted's article in the 1952 Rucksack Club Journal; page 67 |
The last page to Ted's article in the 1952 Rucksack Club Journal; page 70 |
The
update to Moss’s list appears on the last page of his article. Nine new two-thousands are listed, two being
in England with the remaining seven being in Wales. The combined total of English and Welsh
two-thousands now stood at 621, with Wales’s total being 244. None of the seven new Welsh two-thousands had
appeared in a hill list before. Moss was
correct when he described them as “mostly small”, as none are significant.
Perhaps
because of this, Moss explains his and Simpson’s use of the single ring contour
criterion:
Simpson’s
and my own lists are all based on the 50 ft contour ring definition, which is
admittedly arbitrary; but they include also a number of tops without a contour
ring, tops which were included originally for sentimental, local or other
reasons. The collector who wishes to be
arbitrary in a consistent manner will exclude these tops and reduce the number
to 216 for the Lakes, 150 for the Rest of England, and 243 for Wales. On the other hand there are a number of
worthy tops over 2,000 ft with very distinct rises all round which nevertheless
do not figure in the lists because their rises occur between adjacent 50 ft map
contours. Examples are Tewit How, Crag
Hill, and Craig Ysgafn (all contours are missing on the map hereabouts). The identification of all the ringless tops
in and out of the lists is left to the initiative of the collector”.
Next instalment due on
the 30th September 2015
For the Preface please
click {here}
For Part 1 please click
{here}
For Part 2 please click
{here}
For Part 3 please click
{here}
For Part 4 please click
{here}
For Part 5 please click
{here}
For Part 6 please click
{here}
For Part 7 please click
{here}
For Part 8 please click
{here}
For Part 9 please click
{here}
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