Frederick Hackwood

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Frederick William Hackwood

Born18 April 1851
Wednesbury, West Midlands, UK
Died4 December 1926 (aged 75)
Balham, London, UK
OccupationHeadmaster, writer
EducationSt. Peter's Teachers Training College, Saltley
SpouseSarah Phoebe Simkin

Frederick William Hackwood FRHS (18 April 1851 – 4 December 1926) was a teacher, antiquarian, journalist, and prolific non-fiction writer who produced more than 30 books. He was born in Wednesbury in the West Midlands of England and served that town as a justice of the peace, historian, and councillor. He wrote for the Wednesbury Herald for twenty years.

Early life[edit]

Frederick Hackwood was born on 18 April 1851 at 69 High Street East, Wednesbury, to Enoch and Sarah Hackwood. His father was a tailor and the family had moved to Wednesbury from Stoke-on-Trent in the mid-18th century.[1] The family's origins in Staffordshire were said in Hackwood's obituary to date back to the 13th-century.[2] An ancestor, William Hackwood, worked with John Flaxman in producing designs for Josiah Wedgwood.[2][3]

In 1868, Hackwood gained admission to St. Peter's Teachers Training College, Saltley.[1]

Career[edit]

Dudley Road Board School, Birmingham

Hackwood was appointed headmaster of the Wednesbury parish church schools in 1872.[4] Subsequently, he became headmaster in 1878 of the Dudley Road Board School, Birmingham, and then of Soho Road Board School in 1888. He retired from this final post in 1916.[1]

His first book was Notes of Lessons on Moral Subjects, a Handbook for Teachers in Elementary Schools (Nelson, 1883) that he explained in the preface was necessitated by the Department of Education's guidance in 1878 to School Inspectors that they should pay special attention to moral teaching and not hesitate to recommend a reduction in the government grant if schools were found lacking in that respect. Accordingly, the book included lessons on Honesty, Obedience to Parents, Temperance etc.[5] It received a wide circulation, including in the United States and Australia.[2]

Hackwood wrote over 30 non-fiction books, most numerously on the history of the Black Country and West Midlands of England, some of which were produced in editions as small as 25 copies.[6] He was a fellow of the Royal Historical Society[4] and a member of the William Salt Archaeological Society.[6] Towards the end of his life he wrote a number of popular history books for T. Fisher Unwin such as Old English Sports (1907), Inns, Ales, and Drinking Customs of Old England (1909), and The Good Old Times. The Romance of Humble Life in England (1910). He wrote for the Wednesbury Herald for twenty years[4] and for many other journals. Two of his pseudonym's were "Old Woden" and "Muz".[2]

Frederick Hackwood, c.1897[4]

He co-founded the Wednesbury Institute in 1884,[7] founded the Horticultural Society, and in the early 1870s set up the town's first football club, Wednesbury F.C., later known as Wednesbury Strollers F.C.[8] He was a player himself but lost interest in the game after it became professional.[2]

He was a justice of the peace,[1] a freemason,[8] and served on Wednesbury Borough Council as an independent radical[9] from 1887 to 1893.[4]

Personal[edit]

In 1874, Hackwood married Sarah Phoebe Simkin and they had a son, Harold, and a daughter, Louisa. They lived at Comberford Lodge, Bridge Street, Wednesbury, until a fire at a nearby colliery resulted in a move to Handsworth.[1]

Death and legacy[edit]

In his later years, Hackwood lived near his son at 2 Veronica Road, Balham, south London, where he died on 4 December 1926 at the age of 75.[1] His funeral was at Streatham Cemetery.[2] An oil painting of Hackwood by T. Murray Bernard Bladon is in the collection of Sandwell Museums.[1]

Selected publications[edit]

The publications of Frederick Hackwood include:[10]

Educational[edit]

  • Notes of Lessons on Moral Subjects, a Handbook for Teachers in Elementary Schools. Nelson, 1883. (Nelson's School Series)
  • The Practical Method of Class Management. A ready guide of useful hints to young class teachers. G. Philip & Son, London, 1896.
  • Natural History Reference Notes to accompany Philips' “Typical” Series of Natural History Pictures, etc. Philip & Son, London, 1897.
  • Notes of Lessons on the Church Service: A handbook for teachers, etc. Sonnenschein & Co., London, 1897.
  • New Object Lessons. Animal Life. Pearson (C. A.) Pearson's Teachers' Series. [1898]
  • Chatty Object Lessons in Nature Knowledge &c. Longmans, Green & Co., London, 1900.

West Midlands and the Black Country[edit]

  • The Wednesbury Papers. R. Ryder, Wednesbury, 1884. (Reprinted from the Wednesbury Herald and the Midland Advertiser]
  • A History of Darlaston, Near Wednesbury. Horton Brothers, 1887.
  • Wednesbury Workshops; or, Some Account of the Industries of a Black Country Town. Horton Brothers, The Woden Press, Wednesbury, 1889.
  • History of Tipton in Staffordshire. 1891.
  • A History of West Bromwich. Birmingham News' & Printing Co, Birmingham, 1895. (Reprinted from the Midland Sun)
  • Some Records of Smethwick. Telephone Printing Co., Smethwick, 1896. (Reprinted from the Smethwick Telephone)
  • Wednesbury Faces, Places, and Industries. Robert Ryder, Wednesbury, 1897. (contributed most of the text)
  • Olden Wednesbury: Its Whims and Ways ... Reprinted from the "Wednesbury Herald" etc.. Ryder & Son, Wednesbury, 1899.
  • Religious Wednesbury: Its Creeds, Churches, & Chapels. 'Herald' Press, Dudley, 1900. (Reprinted from the Dudley Herald)
  • Wednesbury Ancient and Modern: Being Mainly its Memorial and Municipal History. Ryder & Son, Wednesbury, 1902. (Reprinted from the Wednesbury Herald)
  • The Chronicles of Cannock Chase. Mercury: Lichfield & Elliot Stock, London, 1903. (Reprinted from the Lichfield Mercury)
  • The Story of the Black Country. Whitehead Brothers, Wolverhampton, [1902].
  • Staffordshire Curiosities & Antiquities. Birmingham, 1905. (Reprinted from the Staffordshire Chronicle)
  • Handsworth: Old & New. A History. Frederick Hackwood, Handsworth, 1908. (Reprinted from The Handsworth Herald)
  • The Annals of Willenhall. Whitehead Brothers, Wolverhampton, 1908.
  • Staffordshire Worthies. Chronicle Press, Stafford & [Frederick Hackwood], Birmingham, 1911. (Reprinted from the Staffordshire Chronicle)
  • Oldbury and round about in the Worcestershire corner of the black country. Whitehead Bros, Wolverhampton; Cornish Bros, Birmingham, 1915.
  • Staffordshire Customs, Superstitions & Folklore. Mercury Press, Lichfield, 1924. (Reprinted from the Lichfield Mercury)
  • Glimpses of Bygone Staffordshire. Mercury Press, Lichfield, 1925. (Reprinted from The Lichfield Mercury)

Other[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Frederick William Hackwood. Black Country History. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "A Wednesbury Historian: Death of Mr F. W. Hackwood", Midland Advertiser, 1926. Reproduced at Losing my Fred. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  3. ^ "Wedgwood, Josiah", Dictionary of National Biography, 1885–1900, Vol. 60.
  4. ^ a b c d e Faces Part Two. Wednesbury Faces, Places, and Industries. Bev Parker. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  5. ^ Hackwood, Frederick. (1906) Notes of Lessons on Moral Subjects, a Handbook for Teachers in Elementary Schools. London: T. Nelson. pp. iii & contents
  6. ^ a b Important collection of Black Country author F.W. Hackwood’s books up for auction. Cuttlestones, 2018. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  7. ^ Parker, Bev. "A History of Wednesbury". www.historywebsite.co.uk. Retrieved 28 January 2019.
  8. ^ a b Bradbury, Mike (2013). Lost Teams of the Midlands. Xlibris Corporation. p. 43. ISBN 9781483695310.
  9. ^ Fantom, Paul Adrian (October 2015). Community, Patriotism And The Working Class In The First World War: The Home Front In Wednesbury, 1914–1918, A thesis submitted to The University of Birmingham for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (PDF). The University of Birmingham. p. 80.
  10. ^ British Library catalogue search 28 January 2019.
  11. ^ "Review of William Hone: his Life and Times by Frederick William Hackwood". The Athenaeum (4434): 441. 19 October 1912.

External links[edit]