24 Church St, Falmouth : 01326 319461
The Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society
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Author & Playwright
Came to Cornwall to live in Mylor to become a full-time writer in 1939.
Moved to Falmouth in 1947 – The White Cottage, Fenwick Road.
Joined RCPS soon after coming to Cornwall in 1939.
Served 3 terms as President RCPS 1954 to 1962.
Marion Howard Spring wrote in her memoir "Howard":
"When we moved to Falmouth, Howard became very much interested in the doings of the Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society. It was housed in an old building which became a centre of the arts - drama, opera, ballet, painting, etc., and money was much needed for the upkeep of the place. .....the Polly, as it was always affectionately termed."
Read more here:Howard Spring: The Plays
“It is to be recorded that in November the Society received “A Legacy of Lions”
This unique gift came from the pen of our President in the form of a stage play. Described by the author as “a nonsense play” it truly filled the bill, though the audience had one disappointment in that the lions did not appear to take their bow, but only roared mightily in the wings.
When Howard Spring joined the RCPS in 1940, it was a Society of 217 members. The Church Street building was owned by the Society, but parts of it were sub-let. There was a Library and the Falmouth Museum was housed in the gallery above the Large Hall and in the Chellew Room. A caretaker was employed.
Elsewhere in Falmouth the Society ran a Meteorological Observatory. The focus of the Society as reflected in the Annual Reports of the 1940's was Cornwall wide, not only Falmouth, with lectures, visits, an essay competition, weather reporting, a library and museum.
Read about Howard Spring's involvement with The Poly here.