UKHillwalking
Article
The UKHillwalking website
recently published an article on the publication of Eric Yeaman's book; Ups and Downs - The Story of Handbook of the Scottish Hills. The original article and a link
to it on the UKHillwalking website appear below.
Ups and Downs – The Story of Handbook of the
Scottish Hills
Eric
Yeaman's Handbook of the Scottish Hills was one of the most influential hill
lists ever produced, says Myrddyn Phillips - but today few people seem to have
heard of it. A new e-book, free to download, tells the story of the Yeamans.
Hill
classification has been with us for nearly 130 years, ever since Sir Hugh Munro
first compiled his list to the Scottish 3,000ft mountains. Over subsequent
years many other lists have come onto the scene. Some have become well
established, such as the Corbetts, Hewitts and Nuttalls, whilst others have
appeared and just as quickly been forgotten. It seems that those that become
well established are the listings that rely on simple, straightforward
criteria, as over-complication doesn't appeal to the general lay hill walker.
Many listings evolve from those that precede them, and because of
this there is an underlying historical element to them. This evolutionary
process seldom results in dramatic change, and most such changes go unnoticed
by the greater majority who just go out to enjoy what the hills have to offer.
But once in a while something more dramatic happens. In the world of hill
listings a revolution occurred in 1989 with the publication of the Handbook
of the Scottish Hills. Almost unnoticed at the time, it was only in
hindsight that its importance was fully understood.
The Handbook contained nearly 2500 Scottish hills and retailed at £4.95, a mere snip of a price considering the revolutionary content within. Its author was a Scottish teacher named Eric Yeaman, and the revolutionary element that he used was to ignore one of the essentials of qualification. Before dealing with this it may be prudent to consider how one hill is differentiated from another for listing purposes.
The author © Eric Yeaman... |
... and the book that changed the hill classification game |
The Handbook contained nearly 2500 Scottish hills and retailed at £4.95, a mere snip of a price considering the revolutionary content within. Its author was a Scottish teacher named Eric Yeaman, and the revolutionary element that he used was to ignore one of the essentials of qualification. Before dealing with this it may be prudent to consider how one hill is differentiated from another for listing purposes.
Hill
Classification
Making a list of hills is a relatively simple affair. The hill
name is a necessity, as indeed is its height and its grid reference and the
number of the map it can be found on (to be on the safe side both Ordnance
Survey 1:50,000 Landranger and 1:25,000 Explorer map numbers can be included).
Over recent years the hill's drop is also usually given. This 'drop' figure has
become one of the two mainstays of how to differentiate one hill from another,
and comprises the vertical height gain between the summit of said hill and its
connecting col to the next higher summit along the watershed. 'Drop' is also
known as re-ascent or prominence. The other mainstay is that of minimum height.
Once a minimum height and a minimum drop are decided upon a hill list compiler
can have a productive time scrutinising maps and compiling their list.
These two elements form the basis of many established listings.
Prime examples include: Corbetts which use 2,500ft minimum height and 500ft
minimum drop (Scottish hills below 3,000ft); Hewitts, which use 2,000ft and 30m
minimum drop (English and Welsh hills); and Nuttalls which use 2,000ft and 15m
minimum drop (English and Welsh hills).
Without such objective criteria the hill list would plough the
path of subjectivity and there, some may say, lies madness. A subjective list
is no more than a personal list that cannot be amended, unless of course by its
author. I hear a mass choir of Wainwright and Birkett baggers screaming, and to
be fair, subjective listings have their place, as their popularity shows. But
still...
Yeamans come in all sizes, locations and characters, from the remote drama of peaks like Beinn Dearg Mor |
Relative Height
Although the two mainstays of minimum height and drop have formed
the backbone of the more objective hill lists in Britain, and have a proven
record of working well in combination, what would happen if one was removed? If
you'd asked me this question a number of years ago I would probably have
reacted with doubt, partly based on acceptance of what was then the norm, and
partly based on a lack of understanding. But this simple move, which is rather
elegant in its premise and dramatic in its purpose is what Eric Yeaman did - he
completely threw out the concept of the double mainstay criteria and opted for
one simple criterion based on 100m. Simply put, he revolutionised how to
differentiate one hill from another and the niche world of hill listings hasn't
been quite the same since.
Yeaman's use of what we now refer to as Relative Height consisted
of Scottish hills that have a minimum of 100m of 'dip' from their adjoining
col. Minimum height is thus dispensed with, except of course for the stipulated
100m, and minimum drop is also dispensed with as it forms a part of the one set
criterion. A 100m high Scottish island would also qualify as a 'Yeaman'.
Although the use of 100m is simple in its concept Yeaman also uses distance as
a part of the criterion. This complicates matters but also emphasises the
unique nature of this list.
Over subsequent years the concept of Relative Height has been used
by Alan Dawson in the Marilyns (150m, all Britain), Mark Jackson in the Humps
(100m, all Britain) and the Tumps (30m, all Britain), and my own Twmpau (30m,
Wales). These are now the mainstays of this Relative Height concept and as
their predecessors using minimum height and drop had done before, they have
evolved from the first use of what is now known as Relative Height - and that
first use was conceived by Eric Yeaman in his Handbook of the Scottish
Hills.
The Handbook
When first published the Handbook of the Scottish Hills was
met with favourable critique amongst the people who indulged their passions for
such things. Many people subsequently communicated with the book's author, but
one in particular was E D 'Clem' Clements. Clem had a skill for concentrating
on repetitive detail that flourished during his years working in the Meridian
Department at the Royal Greenwich Observatory at Herstmonceux. This skill
manifested itself during the cataloguing of over 6,000 badger sets for the
Badger Trust, and it also set Clem apart from many hill list compilers as he
scrutinised maps to an order seldom seen before or since, and incorporated a
card system to document his findings. The correspondence between Clem and Eric
resulted in a decision to jointly compile and publish a Handbook to the English
and Welsh Hills following the criterion used by Eric in his Scottish Handbook.
Unfortunately the joint list was not published, but Clem went on to produce his
list to the English and Welsh 'Yeamans' that many now refer to as the 'Clem
Yeamans'.
The Handbook of the Scottish Hills has
sold over 1000 copies and for those in the know it is up there with the likes
of the Munros in hill list importance and its author kept testing his criteria
by diligently bagging the hills until, with over 1000 done, he considered he
had proved his point. But what comes after the many hours of exhaustive map
study that resulted in a book that revolutionised the concept of how to
differentiate one hill from another? Well Eric Yeaman has put pen to paper, and
written Ups and Downs – The Story of Handbook of the Scottish Hills.
Ups and Downs –
The Story of Handbook of the Scottish Hills
This sister volume to the Handbook is not another hill list, but a
book explaining the thought processes at work behind the original venture. It
details every aspect to do with the original book and explains how it was
conceptualised and what has happened to it over the years since its 1989
publication. Importantly the book details the world of self-publishing and will
prove an asset for any enthusiastic budding author who wants to see their work
in published format. It is a work that has taken thirty-one years to
materialise and is a rightful cousin to the Handbook that revolutionised the
concept of how to categorise a hill.
About
Eric Yeaman
Eric Yeaman lives in
Arbroath, on the east coast of Scotland. He enjoyed bagging hills until an
arthritic knee made beach walking a more attractive option. He has produced a
number of books including the Handbook of the Scottish Hills and the Ups and
Downs – The Story of Handbook of the Scottish Hills.
- Ups and Downs
– The Story of Handbook of the Scottish Hills is available free of charge
as an e-book from Mapping Mountains Publications and Smashwords.
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