Blue plaque honours poet and soldier from Endon

A poet who founded a poetry movement has been honoured with a blue plaque at the house where he lived.

Thomas Ernest Hulme was born in Gratton but later moved to Endon Bank on Church Lane in Endon, Staffordshire, with his family.

The Imagist movement he started was credited with modernising poetry and influenced poets including TS Eliot who described Hulme’s short poems as some of the finest in the English language.

He joined the army at the outbreak of World War One and was killed in 1917, at the age of 34, having re-enlisted after being discharged due to an injury.

The plaque, sponsored by Moorlands Partnership Board, commemorates both his contribution to literature and his service to his country during the war.

The plaque was unveiled by the Deputy Lieutenant Judy Scott Moncrieff and Staffordshire Moorlands District Council chairman Adam Parkes.

“TE Hulme was one of the leading lights of the Imagist movement in the early 1900s which marked a significant shift from the ornate styles of Victorian poetry and romanticism,” said Christina Jebb, chair of the Moorlands Partnership Board.

“It’s great to be able to formally recognise his significant contribution to literature, and also his service in the British Army during the First World War, with this plaque.”

Continue Reading