Gwendolen
Howard (1894 - 5 January 1973) was a British naturalist and musician. She is
known for the unique amateur bird studies that were published in various
periodicals and two books under her pseudonym, Len Howard.
Gwendolen
Howard was the last of four children born to Henry Newman Howard (1861–1929),
the British poet and dramatist, and Florence Howard, née Warman. Born in the
town of Wallington, Howard lived with her family in various homes throughout
England and Wales before beginning a music career in London, where she gave
music lessons, organized concerts for children of the poor, and played viola in
an orchestra under Malcolm Sargent. In 1938, Howard purchased a plot of land
outside the village of Ditchling and arranged for construction of the home she
later called "Bird Cottage."
Once
resident in Bird Cottage, Howard developed an intimate, cohabitational
relationship with the wild birds in the area, providing food (including her own
war rations), chasing away predators, tending to damaged nests, and allowing
the birds to fly and roost throughout her home. Around 1949, Howard began
publishing her field notes and "bird biographies" in British natural
history periodicals, and in 1950 her first book was published by Collins Press.
Howard continued to write and publish about her birds until at least 1957.
Believing that fear is the primary motivating factor in much of avian behaviour
as observed by humans, and wanting to combat the scientific conclusions that
had been drawn from such observations, Howard strove to effect great control
over her and her birds' environment so as to maximize her birds' sense of
security, and to encourage an uninhibited relationship with them. To this end,
Howard was reclusive and gave strict instructions to those who ventured to
visit her or contact her at Bird Cottage. Howard also undertook a public
campaign in 1960 to prevent development on the land surrounding her property.
In her
writings, Howard argued that individual intelligence, and not mere instinct, is
a factor in much of bird behaviour. Howard paid especial attention to great
tits in her studies, although she also wrote about other tits, robins,
sparrows, blackbirds, thrushes, and finches, among others, and singled out
particularly striking individuals for her biographies. Howard's musical
training gave her unique insight into birdsong, and the final section of her
first book is devoted to an in-depth analysis of this topic.
Gwendolen
Howard died on 5 January 1973, at Bird Cottage, at the age of 79.
In 2016 a
novel based on Len Howard's life and work, 'Het Vogelhuis', written by the
Dutch author Eva Meijer, was published in the Netherlands, where it became a
best-seller. It has subsequently been translated into several languages. The
English translation by Antoinette Fawcett, 'Bird Cottage', was published
world-wide by the Pushkin Press on 30 August 2018. Eva Meijer was interviewed
about the book by Jenni Murray on the BBC Radio Four programme 'Woman's Hour'
at 10.32, and by Sean Rafferty on the BBC Radio Three programme 'In Tune' at
17.23, on Friday 31 August 2018.
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