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Henry Canova Vollam ("H. V.") Morton (26 July 1892–18 June 1979) was a journalist and pioneering travel writer from Birmingham, England, best known for his prolific and popular books on Britain and the Holy Land. He first achieved fame in 1923 when, while working for the Daily Express, he scooped the official Times correspondent during the coverage of the opening of the Tomb of Tutankhamon in Egypt.
[edit] Private lifeMorton was born at Ashton Under Lyne, Lancashire, the son of Joseph Morton, editor of the Birmingham Mail, and of Margaret Maclain Ewart, a philanthropist. He was educated at King Edward's School in Birmingham. He firstly married Dorothy Vaughton (born c. 1886/7) on 14 September 1915; they divorced and he then married Violet Mary Muskett, née Greig (born c. 1900/01), herself a divorcee, on 4 January 1934: she survived him. In the late 1940s he moved to South Africa, settling near Cape Town and became a South African citizen. [edit] JournalismAfter leaving school, Morton entered journalism on the staff of the newspaper edited by his father, the Birmingham Gazette and Express. After two years, he became its assistant editor in 1912. He then moved to London, and spent most of the rest of his British career there, on various national newspapers and magazines. His first job in the capital was as a freelance, lineage reporter for the Evening Standard. He served in the Warwickshire Yeomanry during World War I, but saw no action. After the war, he returned to London and journalism, from 1919 on the Evening Standard, and from 1921 on the Daily Express. His columns on London life in the latter became very popular. In 1923 he achieved worldwide fame for his reports on the opening of the tomb of Tutankhamun, as he successfully out-manoeuvered the official Times journalist who had been given exclusive rights to the story. From 1931 - 1942, he was "special writer" at the Daily Herald. [edit] Travel writingMorton's first book, The Heart of London, appeared in 1925, and was a development of his popular Daily Express columns. In 1926, as motoring was becoming established in the UK, he set off to drive around England in a bull-nosed Morris, an early mass-produced motor-car. His account of these travels and of the England of the 1920s was published in 1927 as In Search of England, a best-seller that established him as one of the leading travel-writers of the age. A number of similar books dealing with different regions of the UK followed. Even greater acclaim greeted Morton's first foreign travel book, In the Steps of the Master (1934), which sold over half a million copies. The Master was Jesus, and the book an account of Morton's travels in the Holy Land. This was soon followed by In the Steps of St. Paul (1936), which presents a picture of Ataturk's Turkey. This was followed by Through Lands of the Bible (1938) in which he visits Egypt, Palestine, Syria and Iraq, and gives a marvellous picture of this now vanished scene. Extracts from all three books were combined and published as Middle East during World War II for the servicemen stationed there. After the war, Morton turned his attention to South Africa, publishing In Search of South Africa in 1948. In the late 1950s and early 1960s he wrote a number of books dealing with Italy. A Traveller in Italy deals with North Italy. A biography, by Michael Bartholomew, based on Morton's private papers, titled In search of H.V.Morton was published by Methuen in 2004. [edit] HonoursHe became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature (FRSL). Greece made him a Commander of the Order of the Phoenix in 1937 and he was awarded the Italian Cavaliere, Order of Merit in 1965. [edit] Bibliography
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