Fflorens Roch


The Hon. Fflorens Roch was an author and chief commissioner for Girl Guides in Wales. In 1916 she donated the Llanover Manuscripts to the National Library of Wales. She was a recipient of the Silver Fish Award, the Girl Guide Association's highest adult honour, in 1922.

Family and personal life

Born the Hon. Fflorens Mary Ursula Herbert, she was the daughter of Sir Ivor John Caradoc Herbert, 1st Baron Treowen and Hon. Albertina Agnes Mary Denison. She had one brother, Hon. Elydir John Bernard Herbert, who was killed in World War I, at which point she inherited the family fortune. She was a descendent of Peter FitzHerbert, one of the counsellor's named in the Magna Carta. She was a student at Cambridge University. The family estate was Llanarth Court, Monmouthshire.
She married Walter Roch, the MP for Pembrokeshire on 20 April 1911. At that year's annual general meeting of the Liberal Social Council in Newport, she was presented with a bookcase containing a "valuable collection of Welsh literature" as a wedding gift.
She "lived very little with her husband and had nothing in common with him." She developed a "close and long-lasting relationship" with Scottish author and art theorist Clementina Anstruther-Thomson. The two were "rarely apart".

Catholic faith

Roch, like her parents, was a committed Catholic. In 1948, she donated the main house of Llanover Court to the Catholic Church, and moved into a small home on the estate. She also paid for the building of a Catholic church, Our Lady of Peace, in Newbridge, Caerphilly, published several pamphlets and books through the Catholic Truth Society including about the Catholic faith in Girl Guiding.

Girl Guides

During World War I, Roch and Anstruther-Thomson organised Girl Guides in London, and gave joint classes in drill and public speaking at the first Girl Guide Training School. She also held other roles within Girl Guiding over the years:
Roch also paid for the building of Llanarth Village Hall and gave land for the Llanarth Cricket Club.

Author

In 1910 Roch was endowed by Gorsedd Beirdd Ynys Prydain with the "delightfully poetic" bardic name Seren Gwent. It echoed the title Gwenynen Gwent that had been bestowed on her Great-Grandmother, Augusta Hall, Baroness Llanover.
Roch published the following books and pamphlets:
  • The Call of the Past Pub. Sands & Co.
  • Peg's Patrol Pub. Religious Tract Society - introduction
  • Girl Guides in the Catholic Church pub. Catholic Truth Society
  • Wonder Night: A Nativity Play Pub. Catholic Truth Society
  • Because of Thy Holy Cross: A Lenten play
  • And With the Children: A Child's Passion play Pub. Catholic Truth Society
  • The Gates of Heaven and How They Were Opened to Mankind Pub. Catholic Truth Society
  • St Francis of Assisi: Lives for Children Pub. Pellegrini & Co
  • The Third Order of St Francis
  • St Anthony of Padua Pub. Burns Oates & Washbourne
  • The Venerable Sister Mary Assunta, Franciscan Missionary of Mary: 1878-1905 Pub. Catholic Truth Society
  • The Catholic Way of Worship Pub. Catholic Truth Society
  • The Isle of Caldey: A Short Guide, illustrated by Edith M Gill Pub. R H Johns Limited
She contributed articles to Wales: A National Magazine in 1912 and chapters to Naomi Whelpton and Kitty Streatfield's 1926 book Rangers Pub. Pearson. She was a book reviewer for Life of the Spirit magazine from 1947 to 1953.