John Bainbridge (author)

John Bainbridge
Born 1953
West Bromwich
Nationality British
Education Hamstead Primary School, Grove Vale School and Dartmouth Comprehensive
Alma mater University of East Anglia
Genre Topography

John Bainbridge (born 1953) is an English author and campaigner for countryside preservation and access. He read Literature and Social History at the University of East Anglia.

Born in West Bromwich, Staffordshire, Bainbridge spent his childhood at 15 Ray Hall Lane, Great Barr, and was educated at Hamstead Primary School, Grove Vale School and Dartmouth Comprehensive. It was from there that he began exploring the British countryside, often taking walking tours that lasted for months at a time. He moved to Devon as a teenager and became very knowledgeable about Dartmoor.

Bainbridge served as chief executive of the Dartmoor Preservation Association from 1996–2005,[1] and led the victorious campaign to save the archaeologically important Shaugh Moor from waste tipping by the china clay industry. He led the campaign for right to roam in Devon, which culminated in the Countryside and Rights of Way Act. He has opposed the military presence on Dartmoor,[2] for which he was praised by Anthony Steen MP in the House of Commons in 2003.[3]

An unapologetic trespasser Bainbridge remains a steadfast campaigner for countryside access. He has dealt with the matter of trespassing in his controversial book "The Compleat Trespasser" (2013) and more briefly in his book on walking "Rambling - the Beginner's Bible". He has also written an eBook about the Victorian writer George Borrow.

He has also written a walking autobiography "Wayfarer's Dole".

In 2012 he was given an award by the Ramblers Association to mark a 40-year contribution to the outdoors movement.

As a writer he has contributed to most outdoor magazines and is the author of some thirty books about British topography, including Dorset Coast, South Devon Coast and Newton Abbot, Around Torbay, The Cotswolds, Worcestershire.

In 2009 Bainbridge created the Teignmouth and Dawlish Way long distance footpath, writing the guidebook of the same name.

Having retired from active campaigning, Bainbridge has found time to publish four crime novels "The Shadow Of William Quest", "A Seaside Mourning", "A Christmas Malice" and "The Seafront Corpse",which have been well received.

More recently he has written "Balmoral Kill" - a thriller set in 1937 based on the involvement of the Establishment in appeasing Hitler.

Bainbridge has also written two novels based on the old ballads of Robin Hood, "Loxley" and "Wolfshead" as part of a tetralogy of historical fiction.

References

Block around the Rock, The Guardian, 15 March 2005 Hansard 15 October 2003

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