Edward "Ned" Maddrell (1877?–December 27, 1974) was a fisherman from the Isle of Man who was arguably the last surviving native speaker of the Manx language. Today, however, so-called "neo-native" speakers have once again appeared.
Following the death of Mrs. Sage Kinvig (c. 1870–1962), Maddrell was the only remaining person who could claim to have spoken Manx Gaelic from childhood (according to one source, Maddrell had some knowledge of English before he learned Manx, and learned Manx from his great-aunt1), although some others at the time also spoke it as a second language, having learned it later in life.
Maddrell recorded some of his speech for the sake of linguistic preservation; for example, in 1948 he recorded the following about fishing (in Manx, with the English translation):
A newspaper article about the decline of Manx from about 1959 (which gave Maddrell's age as 82) mentions and quotes him, since at the time he was, along with Kinvig, one of only two native speakers:
In contrast to some other native speakers, Maddrell appears to have enjoyed his minor celebrity status, and was very willing to teach younger language revivalists such as the recently deceased Leslie Quirk, and the still active Brian Stowell. When Irish Taoiseach Éamon de Valera visited the island he called upon Ned personally. De Valera had been angered some years before at the inaction of the British and Manx governments over the language, and had sent over a team from the Irish Folklore Commission with a sound recording van to preserve what was left.
The first objection to this claim is that a number of small children speak Manx as a first language now, as they have been raised in the language. The counterargument to this is that they speak "Neo-Manx" and are "native speakers" in the sense that young Israelis are new "native speakers" of neo-Hebrew rather than Classical Hebrew.
The second objection to the claim is that many Manx native speakers often did not openly announce themselves due to some social stigma attached to the language, and/or due to the fact that some native Manx speakers may have emigrated. For example, an unverified story claims that a native speaker died in Chicago in the 1980s, the best part of ten years after Ned.
The third objection is quite different, claiming that Ned was not a true native speaker at all, but had acquired it as a very young child from his great-aunt rather than his parents. However, Ned was fluent in Manx from a very early age, which would have made him a near-native speaker.
The late Leslie Quirk learnt his first Manx from his grandmother, a native speaker, as a child. Some argue that he was a native speaker.
Last native speakers | Manx culture | Manx people | 1877 births | 1974 deaths
Ned Maddrell | Ned Maddrell | Ned Maddrell | Ned Maddrell | Ned Maddrell | Ned Maddrell
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