Hilaire Belloc photograph

Hilaire Belloc

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Death70 years ago
Date of birth July 27,1870
Zodiac sign Leo
Born La Celle-Saint-Cloud
France
Date of died July 16,1953
DiedGuildford
United Kingdom
Spouse Elodie Hogan
Job Poet
Politician
Journalist
Education Balliol College
The Oratory School
University of Oxford
Party Liberal Party
Children Capt. Peter Gilbert Marie Sebastian Belloc
Eleanor Belloc
2nd Lieut. Louis Belloc
NationalityBritish
French
Place of burialShrine of Our Lady of Consolation West Grinstead, West Grinstead, United Kingdom
Grandchildren Julian Jebb
Philip Jebb
Anthony Jebb
Marianne Jebb
Grandparents Joseph Parkes
Louise Swanton Belloc
Jean-Hilaire Belloc
Elizabeth Rayner Priestley
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID468003

Cautionary Tales for Children
The path to Rome
Great Heresies
The Bad Child's Book of Beasts
Europe and the Faith
The Four Men: A Farrago
Characters of the Reformation
Hills and the Sea
How the Reformation happened
Survivals and New Arrivals
Essays of a Catholic
Complete Verse: Including Sonnets and Verse, Cautionary Verses, The Modern Traveller, Etc
cruise of the Nona
A Moral Alphabet
Economics for Helen
Matilda, who Told Lies, and was Burned to Death
crisis of our civilization
The Elements of the Great War . . .
Jim, who Ran Away from His Nurse, and was Eaten by a Lion: A Cautionary Tale
A conversation with a cat
Hilaire Belloc
The Last Rally: A Story of Charles II
Essays - Hilaire Belloc
The Crusades
Matilda Who Told Such Dreadful Lies
The Best of Hilaire Belloc
The Stane Street: A Monograph
Charles the First, King of England
At the Sign of the Lion, and Other Essays from the Books of Hilaire Belloc
A Change in the Cabinet - Scholar's Choice Edition
On
The Footpath Way: An Anthology for Walkers
The Great and Enduring Heresy of Mohammed
Malplaquet: Special Edition
Religion and Civil Liberty
On Translation
Essays in Liberalism - Scholar's Choice Edition
The Modern Traveler (1898)
The Catholic Church and History
Verses
Wolsey
First and Last
An Essay on the Nature of Contemporary England
The Battleground: Syria and Palestine : the Seedplot of Religion
On Something
William the Conqueror
Essays on the Poetry of the French Renaissance
The Servile State
Matilda who Told Lies and was Burned to Death
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Hilaire Belloc Life story


Joseph Hilaire Pierre René Belloc was a Franco-English writer and historian of the early 20th century. Belloc was also an orator, poet, sailor, satirist, writer of letters, soldier, and political activist. His Catholic faith had a strong effect on his works.

Citizen scientists join fight to clean up rivers

Dec 30,2022 9:01 pm

By Helen BriggsEnvironment correspondent

The Past year has seen public anger over pollution in rivers and waterways.

According to the environmental charity Earthwatch, people are increasingly taking pollution monitoring into their own hands.

John Pratt used to go fishing on the Evenlode which flows through the Cotswold Hills. Now he takes a chemistry set.

A local resident for 33 years, The River has become part of his life.

So when One Summer the crystalline waters resembled soup, he was determined to take action.

Some might join a protest or post images of polluted rivers on Social Media , but John became a citizen scientist. He's one of many up and down the country hoping their data will help in the effort to clean up rivers.

During the year, thousands of people have taken part in protests over sewage spills in rivers and on beaches from Essex to Edinburgh. And at the same time, there's been a boom in citizen scientists turning their attention to the health of The Nation 's waterways.

The UK has seen a long tradition of The Public getting involved in scientific research, including tracking the numbers of plants, birds and insects.

But as more people spend Time Out on the water paddle-boarding or wild swimming, there's growing interest in sounding The Alarm on pollution, from plastic to chemicals.

Earthwatch, which trains citizen scientists, says The Number of community groups carrying out monitoring for chemical pollutants has doubled in The Past year alone. And on this stretch of the Evenlode, there are now more samples taken by citizen scientists than anyone else.

Earthwatch trains volunteers like John Pratt to test for nitrates and phosphates - chemicals found in fertiliser, sewage and farm slurry.

These are naturally present in small quantities but in excess can cause vast blooms of algae and kill fish and invertebrates.

The data John collects on the Evenlode helps scientists and regulators Build Up a better picture of how pollution levels change over time.

" I'm just one of many citizen scientists who are concerned with the health of The River , " John explains, looking out over this area of outstanding natural beauty near Charlbury.

" We hope through dialogue and through action by the water utility it will be possible to restore the Evenlode to the health it had before the year 2000. "

The Evenlode meanders to join the Thames through picture-perfect towns. The early 20Th Century poet Hilaire Belloc wrote of the " lovely" Evenlode and how it bound his heart to English ground.

Yet today The River is plagued with pollution, causing weed growth, declining fish and insect numbers, and cloudiness for much of the year. It is not alone.

According to a report by Environmental Audit Committee MPs, England's rivers are " in a mess" contaminated by " a chemical cocktail" of sewage, agricultural waste and pollution.

Monitoring regimes were described as " outdated, underfunded and inadequate".

Dr Heather Moorhouse of Earthwatch says citizen scientists can't replace The Work of regulators but they can put pressure on polluters to clean up their act.

" Citizen science is plugging an information gap and helping our understanding of water quality in our rivers, " she says.

" But this data needs to be used to hold polluters to account and to invest in improvements to The Way our rivers are managed. "

The main problem for the Evenlode, like many rural rivers, is pollution from sewage and agricultural waste, says Dr Izzy Bishop, a lecturer in ecology at UCL in London.

And the " huge boom" in people collecting data through citizen science is helping to keep The Problem of river pollution on the political agenda.

" The visibility and transparency of data that is being collected by The Public is one of the big drivers for pushing this up the political agenda, " she says.

As for John, he hopes that One Day he'll be able to relive his childhood memories.

" We all share childhood memories in the summer time of taking our shoes and socks off and paddling in streams and rivers and being able to see our toes when we're waded up to our knees, " he says.

" It is possible on some of our tributaries, it's possible on some of the burns up in Scotland, it's possible on some of the streams in Wales but in our poor river Evenlode that is no longer possible. "

Follow Helen on Twitter

Source of news: bbc.com

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