Michael Shanks - Three Landscapes
One - Hafod?
A House, Three Figures and a Landscape
Cliff
McLucas - research notes
First, we always need a wide shot.
A view from far enough away to get some background in the frame and close enough
to see the figures, their separate outlines and their sex, but not so close
that we are embarrassed or shocked. So here it is.
In 1779, Thomas Johnes - of a wealthy family with properties in Wales and England
- marries his first wife. He is 31 years old, and he has studied in Edinburgh,
has travelled Europe and has begun to be regarded by his family as something
of a wastrel.
In 1780, on the death of his father, he inherits a property in west Wales and,
on visiting it for the first time, is captivated and decides that this will
be the location of a life long project. Within three years his wife has died,
he has secretly married his cousin Jane, and in 1784 a daughter is born - to
be named Mariamne. The date of the marriage of Thomas and Jane is uncertain
- if it took place at all - and it may be that Mariamne was born out of wedlock.
In 1786, according to one Welsh writer, another child - named Evan - is born
but dies in infancy.
In the same year, Johnes begins to build a new house on the site of the old.
In 1788 it is finished and the first stage of Johnes project is complete. Over
the following years he is to spend an enormous fortune on the Hatod estate.
He carries out extensive afforestation of the land, he collects art works from
all over Europe, he investigates and develops entirely new methods of agriculture
and he even sets up a printing press at Hafod.
In 1793 he is forced away to fight the French and for two years the house is
unoccupied by the family. In 1796, he is elected MP for Cardiganshire. In the
same year, a garden is created for Mariamne, but she falls ill with a mysterious
sickness. It is discovered that she is suffering from a disease of the spine
that is to leave her body misshapen for the fest of her life. She suffers terribly
for three years and has to be fitted with metal 'stays’ to enable her
to walk.
During these years Johnes begins to go through an ever deepening financial crisis
- Hafod is draining his resources.
After a brief respite, Mariamne falls ill again in 1804, but by 1806 she is
walking five miles a day with her adult companion James Smith - the President
of the Linnaean Society, and an eminent scholar and naturalist, who is astonished
at the child's knowledge of insects and plants. In 1807, a fire destroys Hafod
and much of Johnes' collection of books, furniture and art objects is lost.
Astonishingly, considering his deepening financial crisis, he decides to rebuild
the house and for the next 3 or 4 years the family have to live elsewhere. By
1809, Mariamne is seriously ill again, and the family move back into Hafod in
1810, where she finally dies a year later at the age of 27.
Johnes is in financial ruin, and by 1813 he is living in Devon where, on the
23rd of April 1818, he dies.
Over the following years Hafod changes hands several times, its buildings are
extended by other owners and it is systematically stripped of its assets. Johnes'
trees are felled and sold for timber, and the house is repeatedly sold on until,
by 1955, it is considered a dangerous ruin and is demolished.
Johnes is recorded as a pioneer in the field of Welsh agriculture, as a benefactor
and good landlord to his tenants, and as a fine gentleman who created a perfect
and picturesque world in west Wales, where he lived with his wife and only daughter
like "peacocks in paradise".
