Robert Woof (scholar)

For other people named Robert Woof, see Robert Woof (disambiguation).
Dr
Robert Woof
OBE
Born Robert Samuel Woof
(1931-04-20)20 April 1931
Lancaster
Died 7 November 2005(2005-11-07) (aged 74)
Newcastle upon Tyne
Nationality British
Occupation Scholar
Children Emily Woof

Dr. Robert Samuel Woof (20 April 1931 in Lancaster – 7 November 2005 in Newcastle upon Tyne) was an English scholar, most famous for having been the first Director of the Wordsworth Trust and Museums Director of the Wordsworth Museum at Dove Cottage in Grasmere, Lake District, Cumbria. Dove Cottage is known as the centre for British Romanticism movement, having been the home of William Wordsworth from 1799–1808.

The actress Emily Woof is his daughter.

Biography

Robert Samuel Woof was the youngest of three children; their father was bailiff of Home Farm, part of the Royal Albert Institution, Lancaster

Early years: attended Scotforth School and Lancaster Royal Grammar School

1949 on a cycling tour: first visit to Dove Cottage

1953: graduation from Pembroke College, Oxford, where he had studied with a scholarship

1958: married Pamela Moore (two sons, two daughters)

1958–1961: doctorate with Goldsmith Travelling Fellowship as a lecturer at University of Toronto, PhD thesis on 'The Literary Relations of Wordsworth and Coleridge 1795–1803'

1961–1962: Lord Adams of Ennerdale Fellow

1962–1971: University of Newcastle upon Tyne Lecturer

1971–1992: Reader in English Literature at University of Newcastle upon Tyne

1983–1984: Leverhulme Fellow

1974–1989: Honorary Keeper of collections of books, manuscripts and paintings at Dove Cottage

1978–1995: Honorary Secretary and Treasurer of Dove Cottage

1982–1988: Vice-Chairman, Drama Panel, Arts Council

1985–1986: Acting chairman, Drama Panel, Arts Council

1983–1984: Vice-Chairman, Literature Panel

1984–1988: Chairman, Literature Panel

1989–2005: Director, Wordsworth Trust and Wordsworth museum

1993–2000: Chairman, English Touring Theatre

1998: awarded an Order of the British Empire: CBE (Commander of the British Empire)

2000: fellow of the Royal Society of Literature

Books

External links

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