From
the Independent Thursday 3rd December 2009
Douglas Bassett: Geologist who became an inspirational Director
of the National Museum of Wales
One
of the most distinguished Directors of the National Museum of
Wales in recent years, Douglas Bassett was by training a geologist
and an authority on such matters as the use and conservation
of water resources. Among the public bodies which benefited
from his expertise were the Welsh Office, the Ordnance Survey
and the Nature Conservancy Council, forerunner of the Countryside
Council for Wales, which he chaired. He was also a founder member
of the National Welsh-American Foundation and its Vice-President
between 1996 and 1998.
During the 1960s he was the sole Welsh representative on the
Department of the Environment's Water Resources Board at a time
when the highly charged question of whether Welsh valleys should
be flooded to make reservoirs for English cities added to the
complexity of political discourse in Wales. The Board advised
the Government on future supplies of water for industrial and
domestic purposes, laying down guidelines which are still largely
in place.
Born the son of a miner in Llwynhendy, near Llanelli, in industrial
Carmarthenshire, where he grew up Welsh-speaking, Doug Bassett
was educated at the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth,
taking his first degree in Geology in 1952 and then his doctorate
in the same discipline. From 1952 to 1959 he taught in the Geology
Department at Glasgow University while at the same time making
geological forays into north and mid-Wales, especially in the
Bala district in collaboration with Professors Alwyn Williams
and Harry Whittington, and his pioneering surveys came to be
considered models of their kind. Having joined the National
Museum of Wales as Keeper of Geology in 1959, he was appointed
to the post of Director in 1977 and remained in it until ill-health
forced him to retire in 1985.
His years in Cathays Park, Cardiff, saw a rapid development
of the Museum's Geology Department. He encouraged colleagues
and students working in Wales to donate their specimen collections
and appointed additional staff to develop the Museum as a centre
for research, especially in the Natural Sciences. The institution
was promoted as an educational establishment of the first rank
through his strong support of what was then the Museum Schools
Service, and by the mounting of didactic exhibitions. Some of
the galleries dating from before the war were replaced by better
designed display areas. In 1960 he co-founded the South Wales
Group of the Geologists' Association which flourishes to this
day. His working-class origins, which he acknowledged with the
better part of pride, proved a breath of fresh air in the rather
stuffy milieu of the establishmentarian institution and he is
remembered there with real affection. He was the first Welsh-speaking
Director the Museum had had since receiving its charter in 1907.
Meticulous in his methods, he demonstrated particular skills
as a bibliographer and historian of science. In 1961 he published
his magisterial study, Bibliography and Index of Geology and
Allied Sciences for Wales and the Welsh Borders 1897-1958, which
made his name as a geologist. It was followed six years later
by A Source-book of Geological, Geomorphological and Soil Maps
for Wales and the Welsh Borders 1800-1966, which proved invaluable
for town and country planners. Generous in sharing his specialist
knowledge with lay people, he made substantial contributions
to the Welsh Academy's Encyclopaedia of Wales, published by
the University of Wales Press in 2008.
A friend of Iorwerth C. Peate, former Curator of the Welsh Folk
Museum, he made it his business to carry out enquiries into
that irascible man's personal background, eliciting facts which
had eluded his official biographers. For American visitors he
produced a series of pamphlets explaining the significance of
various places in Wales which had historical associations. This
aspect of his interest in the heritage of Wales and its links
with the United States was recognised by the Ivorite Award in
2008. He also edited the magazine Nature in Wales (1982-97)
and, for the Museums Association, A Manual of Curatorship.
Among the honours to come his way were the Aberconway Medal
from the Institute of Geologists and the Silver Medal of the
Czechoslovak Society for International Relations, both awarded
in 1985. He was made Officier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres
by the Ministry of Culture in Paris in recognition of the National
Museum's loan of its important collection of Impressionist paintings,
including several Renoirs, for exhibition at various venues
in France. He was also an honorary professorial fellow at the
University of Wales College of Cardiff (1977-97), a member of
the White Robe Order of the Gorsedd of Bards, said to be for
the patriotic Welshman the equivalent of the CBE, and honorary
resident fellow at the National Museum (from 1986).
His committee skills were exceptionally well-honed and he seemed
to revel in the work of the myriad committees of which he was
an active member. At the same time he retained an impish sense
of humour and enjoyed anecdotes about the great and the good,
with whom he often rubbed shoulders. Nor was he averse to recounting
episodes from his own career, beginning in Glasgow where, he
said, his landlady was so negligent she would line a drawer
with greaseproof paper and fill it with enough porridge to feed
him and his housemates for a whole term. He never figured out
why the food didn't go off and always found it delicious.
Although he was divorced from his wife Menna, whom he had married
in 1955, they remained on friendly terms for the rest of his
life.
Meic
Stephens
Douglas
Anthony Bassett, geologist and Director, National Museum of
Wales (1977-86): born Llwynhendy, Carmarthenshire 11 August
1927; married 1955 Menna Roberts (three daughters, marriage
dissolved); died Cardiff 8 November 2009.