Maurice Samuel Wiggin (1912 – 1986) was an English journalist and memoirist. As a journalist, he worked on a wide variety of titles, including the Birmingham Gazette and the Sunday Times. His books include memoirs (with a particular focus on his Black Country upbringing), fishing guides, and contemplations of country life.
Wiggin attended Queen Mary's Grammar School, Walsall, and received a Third class degree from the University of Oxford. His career as a journalist began at the Birmingham Evening Despatch. At the age of 26, he was appointed editor of the Birmingham Gazette, and later moved to London where he worked as the literary editor of the Daily Express. During World War II, he joined the Royal Air Force, trained as an aircraft fitter at MOD St Athan, and took part in the Normandy landings. He had married his wife Kay by this time. A Country Idyll, p. 14
After the war, Wiggin resumed his career in journalism. As a features' editor on the Evening Standard, he commissioned essays from George Orwell, including The Moon Under Water. For The Sunday Times, he was an angling correspondent and an influential television critic of long-standing. In 1969, Wiggin appeared on a BBC television programme called Colourful One, where he discussed what viewers might expect from the launch of the first British colour television transmissions.
Wiggin retired to Herefordshire and died there in 1986.
Henry Williamson, author and fellow country pursuits enthusiast, who was championed by Wiggin, dedicated the novel The Power of The Dead (1963) to him.
|
|