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  • There's always a time and a place

    The Daily Telegraph, UK
    Feb 17 2008


    There's always a time and a place

    Sandi Toksvig
    Last Updated: 12:01am GMT 17/02/2008



    What's big, white, furry and always points north? A polar bearing.
    It's the only geography joke I know. I liked geography at school. It
    was sort of colouring-in with a purpose. Ever-flirting with the
    notion of emigrating to somewhere remote, the other night I decided
    to order some maps. With the breathlessness of the modern world, I
    placed my internet request at bedtime and the following morning the
    postman brought my order to the door before I or the dog were ready
    to greet the day. Here, I thought, was a tribute to the wide, open
    spaces of the American south in action. Don't panic - I haven't lost
    the plot completely. The fact is that the concept of ordering what
    you want by post might never have come up if American geography had
    been different.

    Today marks the birthday of Aaron Montgomery Ward. Had he been alive
    today, he would have been 164 and the price of stamps might well have
    been a shock. He would, however, also have been a hero, for he is the
    man who invented mail order. Back in the 1860s, Aaron worked for a
    dry-goods company, selling all manner of things to rural communities
    in remote southern states. He got tired of hiring the only horse in
    one-horse towns, taking endless steam trains across miles of
    tumbleweed and hearing people moaning when he got there because he
    didn't have quite what they wanted. So in 1872 he came up with the
    idea of selling things from a catalogue that would arrive by the hand
    of the US version of Postman Pat. Aaron stayed home, the goods were
    delivered and the rest, frankly, marks the foundation of Amazon and
    eBay.

    Now here is a question: would you say the story of Mr Ward is one of
    geography or of history? If I may be so bold, I posit that it is
    both; that the one would not have happened without the other. If I
    wanted to explain the origins of my map delivery to my son, I
    wouldn't just show him the Montgomery Ward catalogue, I'd probably
    get him to colour in the dull bits of ?Tennessee as well. Geography
    is where history happens. I don't think it's just a chance thing that
    you find early civilisations all slumming it together in major river
    valleys. Why didn't the Germans manage to set up camp in Britain
    during that unpleasantness in the 1940s? It'll be something to do
    with that thing about Britain being an island.

    I mention all this because of a curious problem I'm facing. My
    beloved boy is currently choosing his GCSE subjects. I didn't think
    this would be difficult. He has no interest in dance or bagpiping and
    steering him away from a certificate in leisure and tourism has been
    surprisingly easy. He has, however, been told he must choose between
    geography and history. Up until now I have thought of these two
    subjects as the twinset of the basic world-knowledge wardrobe. Add to
    these a simple string of pearls-of-wisdom and you'd be intellectually
    dressed for any occasion. It has never occurred to me to separate
    these studies, for surely they are as joined at the hip as Prince
    Andrew and his golf clubs.

    Take the great Apache leader, Geronimo, who died today in 1909. His
    entire history was about land. Had he lived on a continent with a
    regular coastline like Africa, it might have been many more years
    before his people were invaded from the sea. America, however, is
    awash with natural harbours practically begging pilgrims to pop in
    for a visit. Not that everyone in the United States is as certain
    about the importance of geography in life. The late president, Ronald
    Reagan, was famously given his world briefings by videotape as he had
    little idea about anywhere on the globe. In 1982 he visited the lands
    south of the American border and was asked for his views. 'Well, I
    learnt a lot,' he replied. 'I went down to Latin America to find out
    from them and [learn] their views. You'd be surprised?... They're all
    individual countries.'

    Herodotus, the Venerable Bede and even that laugh-a-minute Greek,
    Homer, couldn't jot down a speck of history without first explaining
    the lay of the land. And it isn't just history. ?The splendidly named
    Mesrop Mashtots, who died today in 440, invented the Armenian
    alphabet. Check Armenia on a map and you see a place ripe for
    unwelcome visitors. Mashtots invented an alphabet that allowed the
    Armenians to write down their own language and ideas. The upshot was
    a feeling of national pride and a deepening of the desire to tell
    others to push off. Literature, geography and history intertwined.

    I don't know what to tell my lad. Perhaps he should do neither. Maybe
    I was hasty about the leisure-and-tourism option. He'll end up like
    the late Arthur Marshall, who once received a report from his
    geography master that read, 'This boy does well to find his way
    home.'
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