Hamish Henderson

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Hamish Scott Henderson, (11 November 1919 - March 8, 2002; Scottish Gaelic: Seamas MacEanraig (Seamas Mòr)) was a Scottish poet, songwriter, socialist, humanist, soldier, intellectual, and living contradiction.

He has been called the most important Scots poet since Burns, catalyst for the Folk revival in Scotland, discoverer of Jeannie Robertson, the man who accepted the surrender of Italy on 19 April 1945, the author of the Freedom Come-All-Ye, the anti-Nazi whose love of German culture was deep and true, one of the bairns of Adam, Seamas Mòr.

Originally from Perthshire, Hamish Henderson was a pupil at Dulwich College, London, a private school; he studied at the University of Cambridge in the years leading up to World War II, spending spare time running messages for the Quakers in Nazi Germany. He took part in the Desert War in Africa, which produced the startling Elegies For the Dead in Cyrenacia, encompassing every aspect of a soldier's experience of the sands of North Africa, and even in the midst of the struggle against Nazism reaching out to find the common ground between German foot-soldiers and the Jocks of the British 51st (Highland) Division.

Hamish's complexities make his work hard study: for example, Dick Gaughan's (a singer who knew Hamish and his work for many years) commentary on the song-poem The 51st Highland Division's Farewell to Sicily, while insightful, doesn't take into account the traditional divide between pipers and drummers in the Scots regiments, the essential key to one reading of the text.

Hamish threw himself into the work of the folk revival after the war, discovering and bringing to public attention the astonishing Jeannie Robertson, whose singing and artistry utterly destroys any criticism of folk music as a "lesser art".

He collected widely in the Borders and the north-east of Scotland, creating links between the travellers, the bothy singers of Aberdeenshire, the Border shepherds, and the young men and women who in Edinburgh were discovering a whole new lens through which to view their country and their people.

From 1955 to 1987 he was on the staff of the University of Edinburgh's School of Scottish Studies where he contributed to the sound archives which are now available on-line.

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