The Compleat Trespasser by John Bainbridge – Out now in a revised and expanded new edition
WALK MAGAZINE SAID OF THE FIRST EDITION OF THE COMPLEAT TRESPASSER – “On a vagabonding tour through Britain’s most delightful countryside and forbidden tracts, Bainbridge charts the history of access and assesses the present state of the law. Villainous landowners feature; so do the likes of GHB Ward and CEM Joad, calling at rallies for access to mountain and moor. Gamekeepers, spring-guns and mass trespasses also get a look-in. Redolent of country air, with nature and archaeology dealt with in graphic style, the book evokes the age of campaigns before words like ‘stakeholder’ and ‘partnership’ were hatched out. The author lends his support to the England Coast Path campaign and calls for the Scottish access model to be extended throughout Britain. It’s thought-provoking stuff and well worth a read.”
ABOUT THE COMPLEAT TRESPASSER: In 1932, five ramblers in England were imprisoned for daring to walk in their own countryside. The Mass Trespass on to Kinder Scout, which led to their arrests, has since becoming an iconic symbol of the campaign for the freedom to roam in the British countryside. Over the centuries, thousands of walkers have fought for their right to roam – many are still fighting.
The Compleat Trespasser – Journeys Into The Heart Of Forbidden Britain, written by outdoors journalist and novelist John Bainbridge, looks at just why the British were – and still are – denied responsible access to much of their own land. This ground-breaking book examines how events through history led to the countryside being the preserve of the few rather than the many.
But there were earlier mass trespassers. Long before the iconic trespass on Kinder Scout, Victorians mass trespassed in the Lake District and Lancashire. The Compleat Trespasser looks at the direct actions in Ambleside and Keswick in the Lakes, Winter Hill in Lancashire and the battle of Glen Tilt in the Scottish Highlands.
It examines the landscapes to which access is still denied, from stretches of moorland and downland to many of our beautiful forests and woodlands. It poses the question: should we walk and trespass through these areas regardless of restrictions?
An inveterate trespasser, John Bainbridge gives an account of some of his own journeys into Britain’s forbidden lands, as he walks in the steps of poachers, literary figures and pioneer ramblers.
The book concludes with a helpful chapter of “Notes for Prospective Trespassers”, giving a practical feel to this handbook on the art of trespass. At a time when government is putting our civil liberties at threat, destroying the beauties of our countryside, and your right to access it, this book is a most useful read.
The British Government wants to turn walkers into criminals with its harsh new law of criminal trespass. The Compleat Trespasser shows you why we should fight back!
John Bainbridge has been a country walker for over fifty years. He has been commended by the Ramblers Association for his many years of campaigning service to the rambling movement. He is the author of some thirty books and hundreds of magazine and newspaper articles, mostly about the countryside and outdoor life. He is also well-known as a novelist.
This is a revised and enlarged version of the original book published in 2014
“Probably the most subversive rambling book you will ever read”
Out now in paperback for £6.99 and as a Kindle E-Book for £2.99
Follow John Bainbridge at
www.walkingtheoldways.wordpress.com
www.johnbainbridgewriter.wordpress.com
During the current restrictions on bookshop opening, you can order The Compleat Trespasser online at
Reblogged this on John Bainbridge Writer and commented:
Out Today!
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Bought today!
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It sounds really interesting. TV signals from our area come from Winter Hill now – there’s a huge transmitter sat on top of it !!
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I know it had a bad fire recently. It deserves its place in history, John B.
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Looks a great read, John. Well done, and looking forward to diving in. 🙂
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Many thanks. Now back to the novel writing! Regards JB
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A writer’s work is never done. 🙂
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Not while we have to pay the bills!
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Too true! 🙂
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I always think of Glen Tilt as Scotland’s ‘Rift Valley’!
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It is. We walk it often.
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Kind of reminds me of the battles had in coastal Florida in the U.S. where condo owners try to have beachgoers arrested for trespassing on “their” beach… They never could get it that from the water to the high tide line is PUBLIC beach, for ALL of us to borrow… Maybe we should have listened to our indigenous population when they tried to caution us that no one owns the land, we simply occupy it….
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So very true. There’s always been a tradition of free access over here, though there have been recent problems with beaches. Regards John
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