Rodney Dale


Rodney A.M. Dale was an English author, editor, publisher, and a co-founder and former member of Cambridge Consultants Ltd. He wrote principally on non-fiction topics, as well as three novels, a number of poems, and pantomimes.

Early life

Dale was born in Muswell Hill to Donald and Celia Dale in 1933. In 1939, with the approach of war, the family left London for Cambridge, where Dale was to develop lifelong interests in writing, engineering, printing, publishing, and music. He attended The Perse School from 1940 to 1952. In 1953 Dale began a two-year term of National Service, first joining the Suffolk Regiment and later transferring to the Royal Army Education Corps, where he served as a sergeant instructor both in Shorncliffe, Kent, and Münster, Westphalia, Germany. Having earlier been awarded a scholarship to the University of Cambridge, he attended Queens' College in the fall of 1955 and studied natural sciences. In 1959 he established Polyhedron Services, a design and print company, which he developed for four years.

Cambridge Consultants

It was at the University of Cambridge that Dale had met Tim Eiloart and David Southward, then fellow students and with whom he would later establish Cambridge Consultants Ltd., the first independent research and development organisation in the United Kingdom. In 1963 he joined Cambridge Consultants full-time, heading several design projects before ultimately assuming the role of the organisation's personnel and training manager. His 1979 book From Ram Yard to Milton Hilton chronicles the organisation's background, founding, and first two decades; his 2010 revision, From Ram Yard to Milton Hilton: Cambridge Consultants – The Early Years, was published upon the 50th anniversary of the establishment of Cambridge Consultants.

Writing and publishing

In parallel with his work at Cambridge Consultants, Dale developed his career as an author, writing a series of articles on new technology for The Engineer as well as the first biography of artist–illustrator Louis Wain. Louis Wain: The Man Who Drew Cats renewed national interest in Wain and led to an exhibition of his works, which Dale helped to organise, at the Victoria & Albert Museum in December 1972.
In 1976 Dale left Cambridge Consultants to become a full-time writer, both of books and commercial literature. Among books written during this period were The Manna Machine and The Kaballah Decoded, both co-authored with the multitalented linguist George Sassoon. He also wrote The World of Jazz and The Sinclair Story, a biography of the entrepreneur Sir Clive Sinclair.
In the mid-1970s Dale began collecting apocryphal anecdotes, which at the time were sometimes termed "whale-tumour stories," now more commonly known as contemporary or urban legends. This resulted in publication of The Tumour in the Whale: A Collection of Modern Myths, the first popular compilation of and commentary on contemporary or urban legends and which American folklorist Jan Brunvand has described as "a landmark work." In 1976 Dale coined the word "foaf" to describe apocryphal narratives involving someone at some distance from the teller. He used this word in The Tumour in the Whale to signify that an anecdote in question "has been reported from several quarters, that its provenance is shady, that it is almost certainly a whale-tumour story." As the International Society for Contemporary Legend Research has since noted, "Dale pointed out that contemporary legends always seemed to be about someone just two or three steps from the teller – a boyfriend's cousin, a co-worker's aunt, or a neighbor of the teller's mechanic"; in recognition of this concept, the ISCLR in 1985 named its quarterly newsletter FoafTale News. Brunvand holds that "international students of urban legends have accepted FOAF with enthusiasm as a shorthand reference to the claimed source of stories." "Foaf" was added to the Oxford English Dictionary in 2009. Dale continued his work on contemporary legends with the publications of It's True... It Happened to a Friend: A Collection of Urban Legends and The Wordsworth Book of Urban Legend: Tall Tales for Our Times.
With colleagues, Dale in 1984 created Business Literature Services Ltd., a publishing house devoted to business-related writing, and singlehandedly established Fern House Publishing in 1990. In addition, between 1992 and 1994 Dale served as series editor and writer for eight Discoveries & Inventions books for the British Library. He also wrote three novels: About Time, The Secret World of Zoë Golding, and The New Life of Hannah Brooks. He also from time to time performed a one-man show called "Hello, Mrs Fish."

Community service

Dale served as a trustee of the non-profit Centre for Computing History in Cambridge. He was also a long-serving trustee of the Cambridgeshire Farmland Museum, now to be found on the A10 at Waterbeach, which shares a site with the ancient monument, Denny Abbey. Dale played a crucial part in organising the Museum's move from its original site in Haddenham, Cambridgeshire, to its present location. He was a Magistrate on the Cambridge City Bench from 1977 to 1984 and was a past member of both Bar Hill and Haddenham Parish Councils.

Published works