Literary remains of the writer Arthur Eaglestone a.k.a. Roger Dataller
Scope and Contents
Papers from the life and works of Arthur Eaglestone (1892-1980), worker in the Yorkshire steel and mining industries, Oxford scholarship student, author, and adult educator with the WEA and the University of Sheffield’s Department of Extramural Studies. The material includes both manuscript and printed works, scripts for radio broadcasts, correspondence, and personal and family papers.
For further details of this collection please see the finding aid in the External Documents section below.
Dates
- Creation: 1920 - 1999
Creator
Conditions Governing Access
Available to all researchers, by appointment.
Copyright
According to document.
Biographical / Historical
Arthur Eaglestone was born in Parkgate, Rotherham, South Yorkshire, in 1892. His father had a soft drinks business, which the young Arthur worked in after he left school at the age of 13. After a short while in the family business, Arthur spent 12 years employed in a steel works, followed by several years as a timekeeper in the underground office of New Stubbin Colliery. While he was working there, he wrote “From a pitman’s notebook”, which was published in 1925 under the pseudonym Roger Dataller. On the strength of this, Arthur Eaglestone won a Miners’ Welfare Scholarship to New College, Oxford, which he attended as a student from 1928-1931.
After leaving Oxford with a BLitt degree, Eaglestone returned to South Yorkshire to work first of all for the WEA as a lecturer in English literature, and then as a staff tutor for the Extramural Department of the University of Sheffield. During this time he pursued a writing career, producing works of fiction, drama, literary criticism and history, as well as two further autobiographical works. He wrote many short stories and articles for newspapers, and some scripts for radio broadcasts. For a number of years he served as President of the Association of Yorkshire Bookmen.
After retirement in 1957, Arthur Eaglestone published a book on the history of Rockingham pottery, co-written with his son-in-law. He also worked on a further autobiography called “A Yorkshire Lad”, but this was never published. He died in 1980.
Extent
10 Box(es)
19 Volume(s)
Language of Materials
English
Arrangement
By category as loosely arranged by Andrew Lockett; material from Ruth Hunt incorporated into the same scheme.
Custodial History
From two family donors in 2011, and accrual in 2016.
Geographic
Topical
- Description rules
- International Standard for Archival Description - General
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Special Collections and Archives Repository
Western Bank Library
University of Sheffield
Western Bank
Sheffield South Yorkshire S10 2TN United Kingdom
+44 (0) 114 222 7299
lib-special@sheffield.ac.uk