Sam Bell was a professional football player who played for Burnhope Institution, Norwich City, Luton Town, Tottenham Hotspur, Southend United, Millwall and Tonbridge.
Background
He was born in Glasgow to Ulster Scots parents. Following the death of his father he was brought at the age of seven to be reared in the Strangford Lough area of County Down, where his acclaimed novel of Ulster rural life, December Bride (1951), would be set.
Career
He moved to Belfast in 1921, where he worked at a variety of manual jobs before securing a post with the British Broadcasting Corporation in 1945. His first collection of short stories, Summer Loanen, was published in 1943. His novels include December Bride (1951), The Hollow Ball (1961), A Manitoba Flourishing (1973) and Across the Narrow Sea (1987).
Bell was recruited to the British Broadcasting Corporation, in 1946, along with fellow writer, West.R.Rodgers, by the Irish poet and radio producer, Louis MacNeice.
(Sean MacMahon, 1999, Sam Hannah Bell: a biography, Belfast: The Blackstaff Press, page 44). Some of his work as a radio producer was highly innovative.
"This is Northern Ireland, An Ulster Journey" of 1949 is a classic radio feature incorporating actuality, poetry, music and narration. in later work Hanna Bell incorporated the voices of "ordinary people" in his attempt to paint a picture of Ulster as rooted in the lives and traditions of its people. His collaboration with West.R.Rodgers, The Return Room (1955) is one of the most important post-war Irish radio features and shows the influence of Dylan Thomas on Rodgers the poet.
In 1977 he was honoured with an Administration Member of the Order of the British Empire in recognition of his contribution to the cultural life of Northern Ireland.
December Bride was made into an acclaimed film in 1990. In April 1999 December Bride was selected by award-winning novelist and critic Colm Tóibín and publisher, writer and critic Carmen Callil for inclusion in The Modern Library: The 200 Best Novels in English Since 1950 (Picador). Sam Hanna Bell died in 1990 just before the premiere of the film of December Bride.
On 15 October 2009, a blue plaque was unveiled by Northern Ireland Culture Minister Nelson McCausland on the Belfast house where Sam Hanna Bell wrote December Bride.
(Such plaques are erected to commemorate and honour notable people).