HISTORY fans are getting excited that historian and broadcaster Dan Snow is coming to town this summer.

Dan who runs his own online TV Channel History Hit TV and has a regular ‘history’ slot on The One Show, will share memorable anecdotes from his career as a historian and broadcaster during the tour.

Audiences are in for an additional treat as every show will have its own exclusive ‘local’ element that will see Dan present historical facts about each town and area.

Dan’s tales will be enhanced with compelling digital imagery.

Tickets are available from southendtheatres.org.uk

Q: Can you please talk us through the motivation behind doing your first live tour, Dan Snow: An Evening with ‘The History Guy’ On The History Hit TV Tour 2018?

A: When you’re making television and podcasts, it’s very lonely. You sit by yourself and think, “Is anyone watching?” That’s why TV presenters take to Facebook Live. That gives you the number of viewers at the bottom of the screen. It might be only five people, but at least you know someone is there!

Echo: Dan Snow

Q: Tell us more

A: Doing live events at book festivals and book launches is a huge treat because you get to meet people. It’s an enormous boost to the confidence to know there are people out there following what you do! The tour is the first time I’ve done this in an organised way where we’ve been able to build a proper show. It’s a great chance to meet people and say thank you to those on whom my career depends. I’m really looking forward to it.

Q: What will you be talking about in the show?

A: A large chunk of the show will be about local history. It will have direct relevance to the place we’re in. That’s not difficult to write. Just looking at the list of venues, I can see I’m going to St Albans. That was an incredible Roman settlement that was destroyed by Boudicca. I’m also visiting Shrewsbury. That was the site of the Battle of Shrewsbury, where Henry IV defeated a rebel army led by Henry 'Harry Hotspur' Percy. I’m going to Newark, too, which has really unusual fortifications.

Q: Do members of the public help with your research?

A: Yes they do. I get lots of messages on my Facebook page. There is so much history out there it’s ridiculous and I find the stories that people send me fascinating.

Q: Do people want to recount their personal histories, too?

A: Yes they often want to tell me all about their family history or the part their family played in history, like a soldier in the First World War. A huge number of people tell me stories about their ancestors. They will say something like, “my father was the first black RAF pilot.” Listening to them, you realise how many firsts there are.

Echo: Television historian Dan Snow today (Thurs 10 July) flew into Royal Air Force Fairford, Gloucestershire, in a Second World War Dakota aircraft of the RAF’s Battle of Britain Memorial Flight to present live BBC TV coverage of the Presentation of new Colo

Q: Is your hope that you can captivate audiences with your infectious enthusiasm for your subject?

A: Yes! History is not all about dead kings, old libraries and dust. It’s everything. It’s your parents’ eyes meeting across a crowded room and why we are who we are and why we are speaking English and why it’s acceptable for women and men to mingle together. I hope people walk out of the theatre saying that they had a really good time. I also hope they leave having thought deeply about the past of their town, their country and their world.

Q: History has become fashionable again, hasn’t it?

A: Yes. In the 1990s history was very unfashionable. People thought that history was 'finished'. But 9/11 changed all that. It was a huge wake-up call. It reminded everyone that many people around the world felt that history was not finished. They felt enormous resentment about the fact that some people thought that the hands of history had stopped.

Echo: Dan Snow

Q: Can you explain your passion for history?

A: I love history. It’s everywhere. It’s everything that ever happened to anyone who has ever lived on this planet. It also means that I’m never bored on a train journey. As you travel, you see names that echo from the past. Every place has a history.

Q: Can you expand on that?

A: The first question I’m always asked at events is, “what’s the best place you’ve ever been to?” They expect me to say something like Angkor Wat. But perhaps weirdly, I just love this country – there is so much character and history here. Wherever you go in Britain, there are so many stories. For example, you can visit a place just outside Manchester and find the perfect Industrial Revolution era textile mill where global industrialisation began.

Q: What do you think are the benefits of studying history?

A: It’s very good for your mental health to go to these places. When I went to Odiham Castle for example it was a beautiful sunlit morning – not a bad way to spend 20 minutes. Being a historian is a lovely job, but we can all do it at any time.

Q: Does studying history also help us to understand more about the present day?

A: Definitely. It explains so much about today. Why can’t you book a boozy holiday in Somalia? That is down to history. The country’s instability is the result of colonial interference, food scarcity and the interference of America. In the same way, why can’t you go to a pub in Armagh and sing 'God Save the Queen' without being glassed, while 20 miles away it would be fine. That’s all about history. If you’re curious about the world today, history can help you understand it. It will also make you realise that we are so lucky to be alive today. It gives things a real sense of perspective.

Q: Is it important that children learn history at school?

A: Yes. History is a fantastic thing to teach kids. It teaches young people about the things they say and hear, and it teaches them to be profoundly distrustful of politicians – and also not to invade Russia! Literacy about history is vital. People are mad to believe politicians without checking the evidence first. Young people need to learn about the reliability of sources and sifting through people’s motivations and understanding why they are saying something you. There is nothing more important than questioning those in authority.

Q: You go into schools and teach children about history, don’t you?

A: Yes. I try and help kids to think about history in the best possible way. I give them a sense of why we bother studying the past. It affects the present, what we wear or our economic status or the fact that there is violence on some streets. All those things are products of history. But it’s stuff that a teacher might not get the time to cover in a planned lesson.

Q: Tell us about your channel, History Hit TV.

A: Life is very exciting at the moment. Our podcasts have a million listeners. It’s no longer about going to a publisher and waiting for a commission. It’s about going out there and making instant connections with people. I love doing the podcast because of its simplicity and speed.

Q: Can you give us an example?

A: I recently spoke to a 94-year-old Second World War veteran. He told me that Montgomery pinned the medal on his chest after D-Day. I said to him, “Let’s end this conversation. I’m coming to see you now.” The podcast is also so important for breaking news. When the story recently broke about the Bayeux Tapestry coming to the UK, I immediately got Marc Morris, legend of Norman studies, on the phone and recorded him for my podcast that evening. The podcast gives you such freedom and immediacy.

Q: What you do in your spare time?

A: We go on holiday and visit historic sites! The kids are more manageable when you’re doing stuff with them. Having them around the house in winter is brutal. Looking around Winchester or Basingstoke is great fun. Walking around the Roman walls of Chester is a really good day out. You’re a better parent if you take your children out to these historic places. It will make them better citizens. We’re also on the water all the time. I often row with the kids near our house.

Q: Did you inherit your love of history from your family?

A: Yes. My dad is fantastic on the heritage side. I inherited that from him. He has relentless energy and was always taking us to different places as children. Also, my Welsh grandma, Nain, was a huge storyteller. She taught me to give history a human element and to bring it alive. I hope my history is very real and vivid because of her.

Q: So were you were introduced to the joys of history at a very young age?

A: Yes. Every weekend as a child, I was taken to a historical site, a castle, palace or a museum. I got History Stockholm Syndrome as a boy, and now I’m inflicting it on my own children! I don’t bother asking them how they feel about it. They seem to tolerate it – they don’t know any better! Two weeks ago, I took my two-year-old daughter to HMS Victory. It was just another day in the office for her!