the elizabethan newsletter 2009/2010
Transcription
the elizabethan newsletter 2009/2010
WESTMINSTER SCHOOL THE ELIZABETHAN NEWSLETTER 2009/2010 THE ELIZABETHAN NEWSLETTER 2 009/2010 The Elizabethan Newsletter is produced annually by the Development Office of Westminster School and is available to all OWW. Letters are positively encouraged and should be sent to: The Development Office Westminster School 17a Dean’s Yard, London SW1P 3PB T: +44 (0)20 7963 1115 F: +44 (0)20 7963 1064 E: developmentoffice@westminster.org.uk Deaths Maurice James Baird-Smith Grant’s 1932-1936 14/08/1918 - 31/01/2009 Ralph Bernard Samuel Instone Ashburnham 1930-1936 27/07/1918 - 03/03/2009 Robert Alexander Neill Petrie Rigaud’s 1941-1945 15/08/1927 - 20/07/2009 John Darell Barnes Rigaud’s 1948-1952 13/10/1934 - 25/08/2008 Stephen John Instone Rigaud’s 1968-1973 22/12/1954 - 25/07/2009 John Anthony Storm Roberts Busby’s 1949-1954 24/02/1936 - 29/11/2009 Johnstone Fletcher Britten King’s Scholar 1945-1950 01/10/1931 - 11/2009 Huw Elwyn Jones Busby’s 1957-1961 13/12/1943 - 11/09/2009 Gerard Chalmers Ross Ashburnham 1947-1951 11/12/1933 - 18/02/2009 Henry Thomas Cadbury-Brown Grant’s 1927-1930 20/05/1913 - 09/07/2009 Dan Victor Klein Ashburnham 1951-1956 04/11/1938 - 28/06/2009 Hugh Anthony Izett Rowland Busby’s 1935-1939 18/06/1923 - 11/03/2009 Peter Francis Gabain Copley Home Boarders 1929-1932 20/05/1915 - 17/10/2008 Thomas Paul Kowol Rigaud’s 1969-1973 18/01/1956 - 22/08/2009 Martin William Sherwood Wren’s 1957-1962 14/01/1944 - 2009 Michael Stuart De Mowbray Busby’s 1935-1940 01/10/1921 - 01/08/2008 Gordon Stuart Law Wren’s 1949-1955 17/11/1936 - 19/03/2009 Peter Louis Michael Sherwood Queen’s Scholar 1954-1959 27/10/1941 - 19/03/2009 Alexander Walter Henry Dick Rigaud’s 1933-1938 29/02/1920 - 16/08/2008 David Oliver Lloyd-Jacob King’s Scholar 1951-1956 30/03/1938 - 06/08/2009 Paul Martin Sofer Liddell’s 1976-1979 05/01/1963 - 14/02/2009 Nigel Edward Athelstan Eddis Wren’s 1950-1952 02/03/1936 - 11/01/2009 Peter Hugh Jefferd Lloyd-Jones Ashburnham 1935-1940 21/09/1922 - 05/10/2009 Hugh Francis Brady Symons Ashburnham 1931-1935 23/09/1916 - 13/06/2009 Timothy March Beaupre Eiloart Wren’s 1950-1954 29/12/1936 - 04/03/2009 Richard Cameron Low King’s Scholar 1941-1946 30/03/1928 - 17/02/2008 Vereker Thomas Michael Ryan Tenison Grant’s 1937-1940 06/09/1923 - 19/01/2009 Richard John Bell Glanville Rigaud’s 1922-1927 16/11/1908 - 2009 Nigel Livingston Macassey Ashburnham 1935-1937 05/04/1921 - 10/05/2009 David Arthur Trehearne Ashburnham 1935-1939 11/11/1921 - 09/01/2009 William Maitland Grigor-Taylor Rigaud’s 1958-1963 11/03/1945 - 24/04/2009 Benjamin William Malcolm Martin Wren’s 1999-2004 08/11/1985 - 31/12/2008 Peter Sherod Duguid Walker Rigaud’s 1954-1959 20/05/1941 - 21/01/2009 Nadim Gulamhuseinwala Wren’s 1993-1995 05/12/1976 - 05/08/2009 Michael Miller King’s Scholar 1946-1951 28/06/1933 - 20/02/2008 Gordon Trueman Riviere Waller Liddell’s 1958-1963 04/06/1945 - 17/07/2009 Peter Hampton-Smith Busby’s 1938-1942 12/06/1925 - 01/02/2009 Alexander James Mosley Grant’s 1983-1987 05/04/1970 - 05/05/2009 Former members of Staff William Booth Frank Kilvington Samuel Hood Andrew Charles Hugh Hordern Liddell’s 1978-1983 05/07/1965 - 2010 John Ormiston Ashburnham 1929-1932 21/01/1916 - 09/01/2010 Christopher Gerard Housden Wren’s 1955-1960 03/04/1942 - 29/08/2008 David Francis Pears Wren’s 1934-1939 08/08/1921 - 01/07/2009 CONTENTS To advertise in next year’s Elizabethan Newsletter, please contact: The Development Office, Westminster School 17a Dean’s Yard, London SW1P 3PB T: +44 (0)20 7963 1115 F: +44 (0)20 7963 1064 E: developmentoffice@westminster.org.uk Head of Alumni Relations/Editor: Tori Roddy Design: Tam Ying Wah Photographs: Colin Wagg, Sandy Crole, Tori Roddy, Photoshot, Alex Rawes, Ed Miller, Matthew Webb, Paul Tam Printed by: The Marstan Press First published by Westminster School, 2010 © Westminster School All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any shape or form by any means electronic, mechanical photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of Westminster School. The views and opinions expressed by writers within The Elizabethan Newsletter do not necessarily reflect those of Westminster School. No responsibility is assumed by the publisher for any injury and/or damage to persons or property as a matter of products liability, negligence or otherwise, or from any use or operation of any methods, products, instructions or ideas contained in the material herein. From the School Head Master • Dean of Westminster Bursar • Director of Development Head of Alumni Relations The Elizabethan Club • School Society 02 House Societies College Society • Rigaud's Society Liddell's Society • Dryden's Society Wren's Society • Ashburnham Society Old Grantite Club • Busby Society 18 OW Sports Cricket • Fives • Football • Athletics Tennis • Real Tennis • Golf Society 26 Westminster Today Tom Edlin • Andrew Johnson Gavin Griffiths • Edmund Jolliffe 34 OW News Prag Prize • 450th Anniversary Celebrations Neville Walton Travel / Cultural Bursary From the Archives • OW News Henley Royal Regatta • OW Careers 44 Obituaries and Deaths Maurice Baird-Smith • Willie Booth Jim Cadbury-Brown • Michael de Mowbray Nadim Gulamhuseinwala • John Hopkyns Stephen Instone • Huw Elwyn Jones Hugh Lloyd-Jones • Richard Low Louis Sherwood • Paul Sofer • Hugh Symons 62 Above: At the Elizabethan Club Dinner 2009. From the School • Dr Stephen Spurr (Head Master) • The Very Reverend Dr John Hall (Dean of Westminster) • Chris Silcock (Bursar) chris.silcock@westminster.org.uk • Angie Garvich (Director of Development) angie.garvich@westminster.org.uk • Tori Roddy (Head of Alumni Relations) tori.roddy@westminster.org.uk • Tim Woods (Chairman, The Elizabethan Club) twoods@jupiter-group.co.uk • Michael Rugman (Chairman, School Society) michael.rugman@btinternet.com Westminster Past and Present Dr Stephen Spurr Head Master 2010! The aims for this anniversary year are to: enjoy ourselves; engage all constituents of the Westminster community; learn about our past; celebrate our foundational links with the Abbey; reflect critically on Westminster today; and leave the School in good heart for the future. We are off to a good start, despite the weather; and I hope very many Old Westminsters will join us at 2010 events throughout the year and help us all to fulfil our aims. Tickets for the Ball are selling very quickly! Above: Dr Stephen Spurr (right) with Jim Forrest (AHH 1957-1962) at the Fund for Westminster Drinks. The Bishop of Reading stirred the School into thought at the snow-bound opening service on the first morning back, interweaving the ancient and modern themes of poker and memento mori: that, in judging ourselves and not others, we will be remembered for how we played our hand of cards and used our talents to the full. On that theme I know that current Westminsters will receive inspiration from reading the rich accounts of the lives in these pages. Still snow-bound a week later, with the meteorological conditions of January 2010 imitating the mini ice age of Elizabethan times, Susan Doran, the Oxford historian, spoke to some 300 pupils, parents, Common Room, OWW 04 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Westminster’s intellectual ‘While credentials remain its most enduring feature, there is no aspect of a fully rounded education in which we are not totally competitive. ’ Edlin of the physical changes to the facilities in the decade between leaving in the Remove and returning as a teacher of History speaks for itself), pre-eminent in the league tables both at GCSE and A-level, and victorious at Henley, as described vividly by Oliver Cox - a win which was the uncorking of the fine vintage of Westminster Water that had been maturing for some time. My thanks also go to the OW readers of Tatler who noted the icing on the cake, namely that Westminster was judged public school of the year in 2009! The serious point to emphasize being that, while Westminster’s intellectual credentials remain its most enduring feature, there is no aspect of a fully rounded education in which we are not totally competitive. and members of the Abbey community, her broad canvas of the English Reformation and Renaissance shot through with colourful references to Westminster’s involvement in the political, religious and cultural questions of the time. In the words of Elizabeth I, the aim of a Westminster education is described as: The youth, which is growing to manhood, as tender shoots in the wood of our state, shall be liberally instructed in good books to the greater honour of the state. In looking back to that and forwards to Mark Easton’s lecture on ‘Education Policy in an Age of Globalization’, I have established a Head Master’s 2010 prize-winning essay, open to all pupils in the School, on the purpose of education at Westminster today and tomorrow, as we move into the second decade of the 21st Century. The School Society has generously funded a magnificent statue of Elizabeth I, sculpted by Matthew Spender (LL 1958-1962), to be unveiled in Yard on 21st May; and the School Monitors are preparing a robust time-capsule to bury at her feet on the evening of Big Commem on 19th November. These will endure as memorials of the 450th Anniversary; and the new School Archives are actively setting about conservation of our heritage for the future. The School is in very good shape despite the strains and stresses of recession. Fuller than ever before with 740 pupils and an expanded campus (the account by Tom From this position of overall strength we are looking to help others. Westminster has always been involved in the local community, and we are now giving greater coherence to our efforts. In particular we have decided that we would like all pupils (rather than a dedicated few) to engage in some significant, sustained form of civic engagement during their time at School. Among recent initiatives to assist with raising educational standards more widely, we have established a Summer School, in partnership with local authorities and educational charities, to encourage GCSE pupils from Central London state schools to continue to A-level and then to university. The two principal charitable endeavours for 2010 are: Phab, whose significance for the life of past and current Westminsters is made clear in the article by Andrew Johnson and our memories of Willie Booth; and social projects in Swaziland in partnership with Waterford Khamlhaba School with which we have a long-standing connection. You can support Phab most easily by purchasing one of the handsome 2010 mugs pictured on p.60: they have been designed and produced for Westminster at cost price, which means that all profit will go to straight to Phab, which has now been running for an unbroken 33 years. The Fund for Westminster, now in its second year, has been very successful, as will be seen from the report of the new Director of Development, Angie Garvich. The bulk of the money raised has gone towards providing financial assistance as we continue to widen access and find deserving pupils with the ability and potential to benefit from a Westminster education. Please be generous again this year when the letter or telephone call comes! >> ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 05 >> This year’s special projects which are being supported by parents and OWW include the establishment of Westminster teaching studentships, where recent Westminster graduates are invited to spend a term or a year back at School learning the rudiments of teaching and contributing to the extra-curricular programme. I hope this is a practical idea for identifying the brilliant and inspiring teachers of the future and that OWW generally will agree to support through The Fund For Westminster. We have some five OWW on the staff at present, and I would like to see more! One project to which OWW generously contributed through last year’s Fund for Westminster was the relocation and refitting of the archives. I am therefore especially pleased that the archivist, Rita Boswell, has contributed to the 2010 edition of the Elizabethan Newsletter. Please do contact her if you have any items you would like to donate or if would like to be involved in the Oral History Project. Gloomy predictions currently surround the future of university education in the UK, as the Higher Education sector faces cuts in Government spending. It is at such times that Westminster School can be particularly glad of its independence. You will be pleased to know that admission to the top universities continues unabated. Westminsters are being increasingly discerning in choosing university courses that suit what really interests them. While Oxbridge still claims on average a remarkable 45% of the year group, other leading UK universities, which can offer a wider range of courses, and a lengthening list of US destinations are often pupils’ first choices. The recent recognition of this by the Elizabethan Club, in going to meet OWW at UCL, Bristol, Durham and Edinburgh - and gatherings in New York - in addition to Oxford and Cambridge, has been particularly welcome. I have also been very grateful to the Elizabethan Club for the career mentoring and work experience opportunities they have offered to pupils and undergraduates. In a shrinking (and thus ever more competitive) job market this form of assistance is enormously valuable. Finally, since the last Elizabethan Newsletter, it gives me great pleasure to let you know of the promotions of two members of the Common Room: Dr Frances Ramsay was appointed to be the Head of Queen’s College Girls’ School, starting last September; and Dr Gary Savage (the current Under Master) will move in September 2010 to become Headmaster of Alleyn’s in Dulwich. 06 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Westminster’s Foundation The Very Reverend Dr John Hall Dean of Westminster 2010 is a significant year and a year of celebration for Westminster Abbey and Westminster School. The Abbey’s history is replete with important dates: 960 we remember as the date of the foundation (or re-foundation) by St Dunstan, still Bishop of London on the eve of his translation to Canterbury, of the Benedictine monastery here on Thorney Island; 28th December 1065 as the date of consecration of King Edward the Confessor’s wonderful Norman church and abbey buildings; 13th October 1269 as the date of the consecration of King Henry III’s still more marvellous, though unfinished, Abbey Church; 21st April 1509 as the day of death of King Henry VII whose amazing Lady Chapel was nearing completion; 16th January 1540 when the abbot and monks executed their deed of surrender at the dissolution of the monastery; 21st November 1556 when Queen Mary I re-erected the monastery under Abbot Feckenham; 21st May 1560 when her half-sister Queen Elizabeth I gave her Royal Charter, establishing their perpetual succession and restoring their lands to the Dean and Chapter of the Collegiate Church of the Blessed Peter in Westminster. When King Henry VIII’s dissolution of the monasteries took effect in 1540, he was naturally keen to preserve the church of his and his royal predecessors’ coronation since 1066, as well as maintaining intact the tomb of his father in the Lady Chapel. There could therefore be no possibility, as with many other dissolved monasteries, of razing the abbey buildings to the ground and using the stone to provide a favoured magnate with a new great house. But the remaining great Abbey Church had to have a new purpose. So, the king created the diocese of Westminster, a geographical area carved out of the diocese of London; and a diocese needed a cathedral for its bishop to have his throne. So Westminster Abbey became in 1540 Westminster Cathedral. Five other great dissolved monasteries elsewhere in the country, including Gloucester and Peterborough, he treated in a similar way. Collectively such former monastic churches now cathedrals are known as cathedrals of the new highlights of 2010 will ‘beTwoa service for the Abbey community with the Great and Under Schools on 21st May, in the presence we hope of Her Majesty The Queen, and the Elizabethan Ball on 9th July. ’ foundation, thus contrasted with the cathedrals that had never been monasteries (of the old foundation) and new diocesan cathedrals built in the 19th and 20th centuries (of modern foundation). Every new foundation cathedral other than Westminster remains what it has been since the 16th century. But the new diocese only survived for ten years. In 1550, it was reabsorbed into the diocese of London, which was then compensated with thirteen of Westminster’s manors in Paddington and Westbourne. So Peter was first robbed to pay Paul. 1550 to 1560 were surely the ten years in England of the most extraordinary change: first to an extremely Protestant form of liturgy under Edward VI; then to a restored Roman Catholicism under Mary I; and finally to the via media under Elizabeth I, the Church of England, Catholic and Reformed. Elizabeth I rescued Westminster from the turmoil on 21st May 1560. The new Collegiate Church of St Peter Westminster was to be ruled by a Dean and Chapter (twelve Canons, later reduced to the current four) and they were assisted as now by other clergy known as Minor Canons and lay staff including the Receiver General. Westminster School of course traces its origin to the days of the new foundation under Elizabeth I, whom the School celebrates as its foundress. Without denying one iota of the importance of Elizabeth I or her benefaction, it has to be said that the School was already solidly in existence. The monastery would from the beginning have educated at least a handful of boys. At the dissolution, Henry VIII replaced the monastic school with a new school of two Masters and forty King’s Scholars. Mary would have re-established the monastic school, perhaps even as one of the same complement. That was the school that Elizabeth re-erected in 1560 as part of the Collegiate Church: two Masters and 40 Queen’s Scholars who remain part of the Westminster Collegiate Foundation, alongside the Dean and Chapter. The School was established on a separate trust in 1868 but with the Dean as chairman and two Canons on the governing body. Since then its growth in numbers and importance nationally has been phenomenal. Two highlights of 2010 will be a service for the Abbey community with the Great and Under Schools on 21st May, in the presence we hope of Her Majesty The Queen, and the Elizabethan Ball on 9th July. Thus we can celebrate our shared past and deepen the relationship for the future. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 07 bursar’s Report Chris Silcock My annual contribution to the Elizabethan reminds me of Andrew Marvell’s wonderful lines “But at my back I always hear / Time’s wingèd chariot hurrying near” - I fear I am generally caught if not trammeled and overtaken by said chariot driven hard by Tori Roddy. I shall begin not with Estates but with Catering. I know many OWW eat in School for House or School functions each year and that you will be keen to know standards are high. Last Lent term the Governors advertised the catering contract and following a rigorous beauty parade, including some waistline busting tastings, Grayson Education won the contract. They are a well established catering company which operates in dining rooms and restaurants around the City, but Westminster is their first school. Sir Humphrey Appleby may have described the decision to appoint them as courageous, but the Governors were impressed by Grayson’s commitment to deliver high quality food, locally sourced where possible and with new elements such as theatre cooking to make suppers for boarders in particular an exciting and tasty experience. Initial results are excellent so I hope you get to enjoy their fare. On the Estates front, the final phase of the Busby’s Yard project was completed after five years work in Busby’s 08 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Above: The Governors have purchased a building in Douglas Street adjacent to the Under School. It has been a triumph for the ‘architect Ptolemy Dean’s original vision to open up Busby’s Yard and recover the spirit of the place whilst creating modern spaces for pupils and staff. ’ Yard, Rigaud’s, Liddell’s and Hakluyt’s, the Common Room and the main reception under Arch. Photos of earlier phases appeared in the 2007/08 and 2008/09 editions. When you visit the School, do ask for a tour of Busby’s Yard because I wager there is not an OW or Busbyte in particular who would not think the result magnificent. Busby’s Yard has become a haven of quiet where on nice days staff and pupils may sit outside and study or simply enjoy the sun. and her interest in her Scholars, would seem fitting indeed. She will be unveiled on 21st May. For those OWW who came up from the Under School, you may be pleased to hear that the Governors purchased a building in Douglas Street adjacent to the Under School and their intention is to convert it to provide a new kitchen and dining room, and a new Art department, The School’s bursary programme, supported by very generous donations ‘from OWW as part of the Fund for Westminster, is enabling any pupil who wins a place on merit to receive appropriate financial support. ’ The teaching staff now has a Common Room and support area which they deserve and in which they can work or relax. In what used to be Liddell’s ground floor in No. 18, medieval openings have been reopened, historic walls exposed and a main corridor created to allow the original building and rooms to work better and permit users much improved access. It has been a triumph for the architect Ptolemy Dean’s original vision to open up Busby’s Yard and thereby easing considerably the very tight space in Adrian House. This will add three much needed classrooms to Adrian House and allow the main hall to be used just for drama, music, assemblies, and no longer dining. If all goes well Douglas Street will be ready in September 2011. Last year I mentioned the work of the Charity Commission to define public benefit and to determine whether schools Above: Busby’s Yard. recover the spirit of the place whilst creating modern spaces for pupils and staff. By contrast, 2009/10 will be a quieter year. The Governors agreed that everyone deserved a rest from living on a building site whilst also wishing to ensure that 2010 would be a time to celebrate the School’s 450th anniversary of its re-foundation with a clear Yard! Mention of 2010 allows me to flag up the Statue of Elizabeth I which the School Society is funding and which the sculptor Matthew Spender (LL 1958-1962) is close to completing. She will stand under the tree at the base of the steps and she will look towards College which, given Elizabeth’s scholarship meet the test. Since then five schools have been inspected in a pilot process and sadly two did not pass. It appears that bursaries are the key, if only, metric which makes the difference. Westminster’s Governors are content that the School’s Bursary Programme, supported by very generous donations from OWW as part of the Fund for Westminster, is enabling any pupil who wins a place on merit to receive appropriate financial support. Any 2009 article should mention the crunch. You will be pleased to hear that finances remain sound and with applications far exceeding places, Westminster is set reasonably fair to weather the storm. Floreat. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 09 Westminster Development Angie Garvich Director of Development I have to say, writing this has proven to be a bit of a challenge. There have been the common distractions (the odd blizzard outside of my office window being just one), but in the end I realised that my real problem was that the “new girl in the office” angle had been pretty well covered. Staff changes have become a bit of a running joke in the Development Office, to the extent that we now seem to get through Directors the way Spinal Tap gets through drummers. For the past few issues new members of staff have been saying hello, only to disappear before the next edition, and I didn’t feel the need to tempt fate by continuing the trend! Above: King’s Scholars on the terrace, c. 1906/1907. 10 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 I am, however, cautiously hopeful that we are moving towards a full house (not that I don’t think we could have Tori continue on as a one woman army, but after a while you do start to feel just a tad guilty!) and have ambitious plans to one day attain the lofty heights of four full time employees. In the meantime, we have been filling the gap with some amazing volunteers, and would like to thank the Old Westminsters and parents who have kindly sent along their own offspring to undertake “work experience” on the Development Office slave ship! Staffing hiccups aside, it has been a pretty remarkable year. The School’s Annual Fund Campaign, the Fund for Westminster, produced incredible results, raising over £390,000 and enabling us to fund not only all of our targeted projects but also to direct over £250,000 towards the School’s Bursary Programme. This amazing outcome just reinforces the fact that there is no such thing as a small gift, and that together Westminster parents and alumni were able to make great things happen. We’re expecting no less from 2010, and with the 450th Anniversary upon us, we can look forward to a year of very special events. The Fund for Westminster will return with even more ambitious targets, and with an American patchwork than a landscape, often times focusing more on the quirky than the practical, it has helped enormously in attempting to navigate my way through this wonderful, yet slightly mad, place. (And who wouldn’t rather know more about rowing in 1955 than, say, the quickest way to Vincent’s Square?) While I’m afraid I can’t offer too much in the way of reflections on the year just gone, I do feel that in my very short time here I have learned some pretty remarkable things about a pretty remarkable institution. Westminster is the very best example of a solid foundation with enormous potential, not just in fundraising terms, but in scope for further integrating both alumni and parents into School’s Annual Fund Campaign, the Fund for Westminster, ‘The produced incredible results, raising over £390,000 and enabling us to fund not only all of our targeted projects but also to direct over £250,000 towards the School’s Bursary Programme. and Canadian Friends of Westminster to launch, more bursaries to fund, a website to revamp and a new Under School building to fundraise for, we have quite a busy twelve months ahead! I think the thing I am most looking forward to is having the opportunity to meet more of our alumni and parents. The ones I have been lucky enough to encounter so far have not only given me invaluable insight into the kinds of things that matter to our extended Westminster Family, but have also helped to paint a fuller picture of life at the School. While I would have to say that it’s more of a ’ the fabric of the School. And while we are going to do our very best to make sure that we keep working towards success, I would like to hope that we can count on your support and feedback to keep us on the right track. Please do feel free to give us a call or send an email, or even better, pay us a visit. I can almost guarantee that we’ll have biscuits, and we’re always grateful for the input! Below: Pupils in Little Dean’s Yard, 2009. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 11 Covers of The Elizabethan. Below: June 1937 issue. Right: Issue 573, April 1948. Below right: Issue 677, July 1972. Elizabethan Evolution Tori Roddy Head of Alumni Relations / Editor Despite a certain OW Club’s Secretary’s persistent efforts, I continue to hold the dubious title as the last person to submit their article for the Elizabethan. To give the fellow his due, he even left the country in an attempt to take my crown this year, but of course, as Editor, I tracked him down and I suppose I do have a slight advantage! Alas, this will be the last battle that he and I will face on this front, as he steps down from his position after wonderfully organising their activities for a number of years. I will miss our yearly skirmish! Note that he remains (slightly) anonymous. Submitting my article last does have its pitfalls, for I read in other articles all the introductions to be made and much of the news reported, and, of course, the pressure is then on, not to repeat other people’s jokes. Our new Director has already alluded to Development Office staffing (joke), 12 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 and I hear you cry, “let’s not go there”! So I won’t, suffice to say, it is all change once again, and to welcome Angie and to thank Alex Rawes for all his help. So given that the other contributors have stolen my thunder, how else was I to upstage them? I know, redesign the newsletter... Actually, it did seem like a good idea at the time, and it has been a number of years in the previous design and we thought to mark this special 450th Anniversary Year, a facelift would be nice (for the publication, not me). Left: The Elizabethan, Issue 1 published in July 1874. Below: The Elizabethan Newsletter 2007/2008. next year will hold plenty ‘This of new opportunities for OWW to get involved with our regular events and some special functions on the calendar. ’ previous 12 months, so I will not pre-empt his article but to say it has been busier than ever and would not have been possible without his dedication and enthusiasm and that of our many OW volunteers, on the House, Sports and Elizabethan Club committees- thank you one and all. It sounds a simple task, but I have to say that it often felt like I was pulling to pieces an old but much loved jumper. Whilst the content, I hope, will continue to be of interest, I also hope that bringing to you the year’s activities in full colour will be a welcome change. Of course, this is not the first nip and tuck that the Elizabethan has experienced I was most interested when looking through the archives at the various forms it has taken over the years and I do hope that this year’s will meet your approval. However you feel, all comments, as always, are most welcome and I look forward to hearing your thoughts. Our Chairman’s report which follows will cover nicely all the things that we have been up to as a Club over the This next year will hold plenty of new opportunities for OWW to get involved with our regular events and some special functions on the calendar. Many of you will already be aware that Westminster has a year of celebrations planned to mark the 450th Anniversary of its re-foundation. For your information, I have enclosed with this Newsletter two inserts that may be of interest. The first is a calendar of events, specially planned by the School for the year, some of which I hope you will attend. The second is an Application Form for one of the most spectacular events of the year - The Elizabethan Ball - to be held in the School and Abbey Precincts on Friday, 9th July. Truly, this is an opportunity that we have not had before, and one which I hope you will not miss. Further details can be found later in the newsletter and, of course, on the OW website at www.oldwestminster.org.uk. And now the dust has finally settled over 17a Dean’s Yard, I will again be taking up the mantle of further developing the Career and Mentoring programme for OWW. Many of you have already kindly offered your assistance with this project, and I thank you all and promise that we will be in touch shortly. In the meantime, if you would be willing to offer work experience or to act as a career mentor for a current pupil or OW, then please drop me a line. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 13 The Elizabethan Club Tim Woods (GG 1969–1974) Chairman The Club has experienced yet another busy year, with the full calendar of established events being added to by a number of new functions aimed at increasing our contact with the worldwide Old Westminster community. Events At this year’s Elizabethan Dinner, diners were entertained by media and sports personality Daniel Topolski (WW 1959-1963). The Club will increasingly look to ‘work with the Parents Committee and Friends of Westminster School and build on our relationships with both the Abbey and the Common Room. ’ 14 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER Other gatherings have included the Lawyers’ Dinner organised by Simon Randall (RR 1957-1962) that was held at Buck’s Club with another good attendance from all ages. For the first time the Club financed the attendance at the dinner of prospective lawyers from the School. The Medics’ Dinner will now be held every other year and I am pleased to report that Sixth Form pupils will continue to be invited. The Travellers Club was the venue for the Business Drinks, kindly arranged by Alex Gee (DD 1988-1993), with over 80 Old Westminsters in attendance, despite a train strike that night. Even better support was seen at the Ben Jonson Drinks that was held at the Bankside Gallery on the South Bank and continued our drive to hold such functions outside the School premises. Regional parties continue with the Club visiting towns and cities outside of London with drinks parties at Christ | 2009/2010 John East as Chair of the OW Wine Society has arranged a great series of gatherings for OWW interested in wine. This year we were fortunate enough to hear from and taste wines from Esme Johnstone’s fromvineyardsdirect.com and those from the Montes estate in Chile. In addition, Fabian Baird introduced us to seasonal wines at a wellattended and most enjoyable evening in Ashburnham House. I addressed the Governing Body earlier this year in order to bring them up to date with our current and future plans and I continue to have a constructive and ongoing dialogue with the Head Master, recently concentrating on how the Club can assist Old Westminsters on the careers front. This is a prominent feature of the new website and will become even more important in the future. Other work within the School included addressing the Remove and their parents after the Leavers’ Service to tell them about the many advantages of membership of the Club. Above and left: At the Elizabethan Club Dinner 2009. Church, Oxford, and Trinity College, Cambridge (both particularly well attended by both undergraduates and Old Westminsters from those counties) and more recently a dinner in Edinburgh for our alumni of all ages north of the border. This year’s Young Gaudy was aimed at a wider age range with over 250 leavers from 1998-2008 returning to the School to meet each other and members of the Common Room. The Young Gaudy will continue and our aim is to extend the Gaudy Programme so that other decades can enjoy an informal evening gathering. House Societies You will read more later about the various and interesting activities that our House Societies have been up to over the last 12 months. This is an area in which the Club is particularly active and the annual meeting of the Club, House Society committees and House representatives, chaired by Graham Walker (RR 1963-1967), was particularly well attended and useful. The Club continues to support these important groups. Sport All the stations financed and supported by the Club have been very active this year and I am pleased to report the three new clubs (Akido, Angling and Fencing) were formed during the year. The annual meeting between the Club’s representatives, Masters-in-Charge, and pupils continues >> The Club hosted a drinks party to introduce members of the Common Room to its aims and activities and it is hoped that this will be a regular feature of the Club’s calendar. The highly popular Henley Regatta drinks was delivered with the assistance of the Elizabethan Boat Club who ably distributed champagne to over 50 of the Old Westminster boating fraternity on what turned out to be a historic year for Westminster on the water. Our lecture series given by members of the Common Room and other friends of the School continues to be a success with OWW enjoying informative evenings with Jacqueline Cockburn talking about Velàzquez, Chris Barton who, with members of the School Drama Department, gave a fascinating talk on the rules and pitfalls of Shakespearean verse-speaking and Fiona Sharp with an extremely fun and informative lecture on Emborio. Above: At the Young Gaudy. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 15 Elizabethan Club >> to be useful and we look forward to a full turnout later in 2010. Details of the various successful sporting activities can be found in the following pages. Neville Walton Travel/Cultural bursary A last minute rush of applications made this year’s choice of winner of the Neville Walton Bursary particularly difficult. Those Old Westminsters eligible to apply planned to travel to all four corners of the world but the winner was Will Harris (DD 2002-2007) whose plan to travel with a friend to the USA following a route loosely based on the “Blues Highway” you can read about later in this issue. Committee Members David Neubeurger (WW 1961–1965) President Tim Woods (GG 1969–1974) Chairman E: twoods@jupiter-group.co.uk Tim brocklebank-Fowler (RR 1976–1980) Hon. Treasurer E: tim@brocklebank.biz Nicholas brown (RR 1968–1973) Hon. Secretary E: nicholasbrown@bdb-law.co.uk Artin basirov (GG 1989-1994) E: abasirov@sdcglobal.net Jonathan Carey (GG 1964–1969) OW Sports Representative E: jhdc@jupiter-group.co.uk Jessica Chichester (GG 2000–2002) E: jessie_cc@hotmail.com Gavin Griffiths (WW 1967–1972) Common Room President E: gavin.griffiths@westminster.org.uk Above: At the Young Gaudy. The Development Office The Development Office continues to assist and support the Club in all areas. We remain committed to increasing communication within the membership and to this end the Club contributed to the latest software required to enable the Development Office to work even more efficiently and to give the Club a far more modern and useful web portal. As a result there is now an online booking system that we hope will attract increasing numbers of Old Westminsters to events. I would like to thank Tori Roddy for her work on this publication as well as all her other endeavours on behalf of the Club. I would also like to welcome Angie Garvich, Westminster’s new Director of Development. Future Plans The Club will increasingly look to work with the Parents Committee and Friends of Westminster School and build on our relationships with both the Abbey and the Common Room whilst monitoring carefully its financial health, which, thanks to our Hon. Treasurer and Hon. Examiner and their stewardship and hard work, is still robust. In the meantime, plans for the Elizabethan Ball on Friday, 9th July are progressing quickly. This event will be one of the highlights of the year’s celebrations to mark the 450th Anniversary of the re-foundation of the College of St Peter. Over 2,500 OWW, Parents and friends will join for an evening of entertainment held in the grounds of the School and Abbey. 16 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Caroline lewis (GG 1980-1982) E: caroline.f.lewis@btinternet.com Tarun Mathur (AHH 1988–1993) E: tarun.mathur@barcap.com Darius Norell (BB 1985–1990) E: darius@realworldmagazine.com David Roy (AHH 1955–1961) E: daroy@btinternet.com Graham Walker (RR 1963–1967) House Societies Representative E: gajwalker@aol.com Matthew Webb (BB 1999-2004) E: mwebb@gmx.com The Club has also contributed to the commissioning of a new Te Deum by Richard Blackford (LL 1967-1970) to be used during the 2010 celebrations. The Committee Without the Committee little could have happened and I would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone for their contribution over the last twelve months, in particular, I thank those stepping down from the Committee, Hannah Chambers (DD 1992-1994) and Charlie Hayes (GG 19982003) and I welcome those joining, Caroline Lewis (GG 1980-1982), Artin Basirov (GG 1989-1994) and Matthew Webb (BB 1999-2004). Michael Rugman (GG 1955–1960) Chairman In January the longest serving member of our Council, Michael Tenison, sadly died. His valuable contributions to our discussions will be much missed. The Society has continued with its support of bursaries and music scholarships at the School and has again made grants to assist numerous activities at the School, including the Library and Water, as well as grants to Houses, mainly for improvements to their amenities, such as pictures and framing. The Tizard Lecture this year, which we again sponsored, was given by Professor Steve Jones, of University College London, on the subject of Human Evolution. We also continued to make awards for travel by pupils, including the Philip Hendy Travel award. We are making a major contribution to the cost of a new statue of the Foundress of the School, Queen Elizabeth I, which will be installed in Little Dean’s Yard in 2010, as part of the School’s 450th Anniversary Celebrations. Above: Westminster Abbey Concert. Westminster School Society In conjunction with the School, we are planning further developments in the near future, which will increase the help we are able to give it, including possible assistance to the School with its outreach programme for the local community. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 17 House Societies For enquiries about House Societies, please contact the Development Office or the contacts listed below: Ashburnham Society Angus Roy (AHH 1993-1998) E. adroy@btinternet.com T. 01923 842538 P. 7 Sandy Lodge Lane, Moor Park, Northwood, HA6 2JA busby Society Christian Wells (BB 1968-1973) E. christian.wells@tiscali.co.uk James Nunns (BB 1967-1972) E. jnunns@talktalk.net College Society Jonathan Rawes (QS 1963-1968) E. jprawes@aol.com Charles low (QS 1967-1972) E. charles.low@westminster.org.uk Dryden's Society Aqib Aslam (DD 1994-1999) E. aqib.aslam@gmail.com Hakluyt's Society Please contact the Development Office T. 020 7963 1115 E. developmentoffice@westminster.org.uk liddell's Society David Eaton Turner (LL 1974-1979) E. det@newsquarechambers.co.uk Tom Weisselberg (LL 1984-1989) E. tomweisselberg@blackstonechambers.com www.liddellssociety.org.uk Milne's Society Alasdair Donaldson (MM 1994-1999) E. alasdair.donaldson@new-oxford.com Neil Fisher (MM 1994-1999) E. neil.fisher@thetimes.co.uk Thomas Munby (MM 1994-1999) E. TMunby@maitlandchambers.com Old Grantite Club Peter Cole (GG 1993-1998) E. pdcole7@hotmail.com Purcell's Society Please contact the Development Office T. 020 7963 1115 E. developmentoffice@westminster.org.uk Rigaud's Society Sam Ala (RR 1983-1988) E. globalsamala@yahoo.co.uk P. PO Box 165, 28 Old Brompton Road, London SW7 3DL Wren's Society Dean Chatterjee (WW 1997-2002) E. deanchatterjee@hotmail.com Centre: Matthew Rhodes (RR 1987-1991); Chairman of the Rigaud’s Society. College Society Continuity and stability have been the watchwords for the Society in the last few years, with a settled committee and a regular pattern of three well-attended events each year. Now we are entering a period of some change. Our programme of events is likely to be different for 2010; many of our members will be individually supporting the range of events which the School is arranging, but we also hope as the Society to mark the year in some way. We are delighted that Arda Eghiayan has agreed to join the committee, our first female committee member - and the first to be at the School in the 21st century! We also welcome Mark Feltham, the new Master of the Queen’s Scholars, who has already shown great interest in the Society’s activities. Mark’s predecessor Frances Ramsey has left to become Principal of Queen’s College, Harley Street, and she and her husband were able to join us at an enjoyable AGM and dinner in September, giving us the opportunity to record our appreciation of her support for the Society. In the past year we have made donations to two current Scholars: to David Wong, an exceptionally talented clarinettist, to enable him to be a member of the National Youth Orchestra, and to Jonathon Hazell, who completed a World Challenge expedition to Laos and Thailand. We were very pleased that Jenny Cogan came to this year’s drinks party in March, which was for those in the House during the time when Jim Cogan was Master; this was hosted by two veterans of that era, Duncan Matthews and Andrew Havery. And Naida Christie joined us for this year’s College Society lecture in June, given by Professor Victor Bulmer-Thomas (QS 1961-1965), former director of Chatham House; much of his career, and thus his talk, concentrated on Latin America, on the economics of which he is a leading expert, but during questions he displayed his astonishing expertise and insight into the global political scene. As always I would like to thank the committee, and the Development Office, for their support over what has been another successful year, although overshadowed by the death of Louis Sherwood, who was a staunch supporter of the Society and member of the committee for several years. If you would like to join the Society contact Charles Low. Jonathan Rawes (QS 1963-1968) 20 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Rigaud’s Society Our one social event this year was our Gaudy on 11th June, when as before, all old Rigaudites together with their partners, and current Rigaud’s parents, were invited to attend. It was a good turnout with a fine spread of ORR vintages, from Seb Rosin and Hugh Isaacs who were at the Rectory in Whitbourne in the early 1940s, to Dara Barkhordar, Nicholas Day and Alexander Gilbert who were in last year’s Remove. There was also a very welcome number of parents - one of them, Michael McCarthy, I last saw in very different circumstances when he was a young newspaper reporter on the riot-torn streets of Londonderry in 1973 - and now a proud Rigaud’s parent. Our Travel Award has been made to Peter Smith, who will be travelling to Darmstadt, Germany, in the New Year to teach English as a foreign language in the Gerhart Hauptmann School there. His aim is not just to gain some valuable experience of teaching, especially to pupils who will have no knowledge of English whatsoever, but also to improve his own skills and studies into the German language. On the social side, our next event will be another Rigaud’s Gaudy. We had planned to hold a Dinner in 2010, but have now postponed it until 2011, so that there is no likelihood of any sort of clash with the Elizabethan Ball on 9th July. My successor, Sam Ala, will be sending out all the details of the Gaudy. ipsu razu Michael Steele (RR 1945-1949) Above (left to right): Nick Brown (RR 1968-1973), Sam Price (RR 1949-1954), Seb Rosin (RR 1940-1944). liddell’s Society In January 2009 the Society arranged an evening tour of the Abbey, followed by a reception in the Camden Room. The event was very well-attended, and highly atmospheric. Old Liddellites and their guests enjoyed fascinating talks from our guides Eddie Smith and John Curtis. Much of Liddell’s has been refurbished over recent years, gaining a roof-top extension at third-floor level providing seven extra rooms, and a Resident Tutor’s flat. The five bedrooms in the Hilary wing and the three ground floor bedrooms have been given up to other uses. The Housemaster’s flat was moved from 18 Dean’s Yard to No.19 and the displaced study bedrooms moved into the vacated area, so that all study bedrooms are now closer together, with the Housemaster and Resident Tutor nearby. The addition of the extra floor meant that the subdivided bedrooms on the ground floor of No.18 could be converted to much-needed staff working space. The old and very unsuitable building in Busby’s Yard was demolished, allowing Busby’s Yard to be opened up. The five-year project was carried out under the supervision of Ptolemy Dean Architects Ltd who worked closely with English Heritage and Westminster Council to obtain the necessary consents to alter the Grade 1 listed buildings. The work allowed medieval walls and other historic features in No. 18 and No. 19 to be opened up, and the original proportions of the rooms to be restored. Ptolemy Dean - who is also well-known as an author, and as a presenter of the BBC Television series Restoration - has kindly agreed to give an illustrated talk about the work carried out on the house to Old Liddellites and to parents of present pupils on the evening of Wednesday, 26th May 2010, to be followed by a reception and the opportunity to tour some of the refurbished areas of the house. The Committee of the Liddell’s Society comprises: David Eaton Turner (Hon Chairman), Tom Weisselberg (Hon Secretary) and Emilie Bosworth Speight (Hon Treasurer), David Dudding, Edward Hasted, Andrew Howe, Christina Kulukundis, Edward Oates and Tony Willoughby. We would be very pleased to hear from any Old Liddellite who wishes to be involved in the Society. Above three images: At the Rigaud’s Gaudy. In order to make sure we can contact you about future events, please update your own details at www.oldwestminster.org.uk and encourage other Old Liddellites with whom you are in touch to provide contact details and to attend the Society’s events. David Eaton Turner (LL 1974-1979) ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 21 Apart from the opportunity to ‘meet old friends and exchange updates, former Drydenites feasted their eyes on the incredible haul of sporting trophies won by the House’s most recent inductees. ’ Dryden’s Society “All human things are subject to decay, and, when fate summons, monarchs must obey.” Fate chose 2009 for the inauguration of the Dryden’s Society - the fortieth year since the House was founded - and Drydenites, old and new, obeyed. Under the auspices of Housemaster Martin Boulton, those Drydenites brave enough to bear the cold and reach the Camden Room met on 5th February for the launch of the Dryden’s Society. Apart from the opportunity to meet old friends and exchange updates, former Drydenites feasted their eyes on the incredible haul of sporting trophies won by the House’s most recent inductees, kindly laid out by Dr Boulton - contrary to the House’s traditionally unOlympic heritage, senior members were delighted to find that Dryden’s has been excelling in inter-House events. The Housemaster also found the time to dig out and put on display several House portraits from each decade for former Drydenites to huddle over and reminisce. Despite fears that Dryden’s suffers from a much smaller base of alumni compared to the older Houses, the turnout was extremely high. The younger members were also extremely fortunate to have the opportunity to meet some of the first members of the House, who explained how they had been handpicked from existing Houses when Dryden’s was first formed back in 1969. Furthermore, it was revealed over the course of the evening that it has only been in the last few years that Dryden’s has been fortunate enough to have more than one generation from the same family cross the threshold of No.4 Little Dean’s Yard. The evening passed very quickly, but not without numerous observations on the warmth and camaraderie. There was much delight that finally the Society had come into being and a strong desire for it to continue. Given that Dryden’s is much younger relative to other Houses, the Society is in the enviable position of having a much younger base of senior members, which will hopefully lead to a very active calendar of future events. As well as being a first chance to relive old memories and celebrate all things Dryden’s, we hope that 2009 will be the first heroic couplet in a long poem of events for the Dryden’s Society. Aqib Aslam (DD 1994-1999) 22 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Wren’s Society The 60th anniversary dinner celebrating the formation of Wren's was attended by over 70 people in College hall on 24th September. This was the follow up event to the inaugural drinks last year. It was a fantastic evening attended by the Head Master and his wife along with the new Housemaster of Wren's, Simon Wurr. It was good to see so many people there who also attended the inaugural drinks event as well as parents of current pupils in Wren's. The Head Master gave a speech and the current Housemaster also said a few words. I managed to put a few words together but could see the classic Wrenite looks on the guests ushering me to sit down quickly! I would like to thank Tori Roddy for all her help in putting the event together at such short notice and to thank everyone who attended the night. Once again I am keen to organise more events and am open to suggestions from fellow Wrenites. If anyone is interested in joining or acting as a connection to fellow Wrenites then please let me or the Development Office know. Dean Chatterjee (WW 1997-2002) Ashburnham Society After a quiet year for the Society in 2008, there was activity during 2009. The Society learnt early on in 2009 that after 9 years as Housemaster of Ashburnham, Geran Jones would be stepping down to concentrate on some of his other commitments in the School. To thank Geran and his wife Gaby for their contribution to the house, we held a drinks party in September in Ashburnham Garden. Over 50 Old Ashburnhamites gathered to say thank you as well as others who came to reconnect with some of their contemporaries. We were all able to wish Geran and Gaby the very best in their new ventures based up Purcell’s. We were also lucky enough to have the new Housemaster of Ashburnham, Andrew Johnston (LL 1987-1992), present at the drinks which gave Old Ashburnhamites a chance to meet him. Last year the Society were pleased to announce that we are able to offer an annual bursary of up to £500 to Ashburnhamites in their final two years at School and in the first few years after they have left. We hope that this bursary will be able to be used by the selected student towards a project (whether travel, music, arts or otherwise) which they would, without the bursary, not have been able to do. The first bursary was awarded to Anthony Ellis (AHH 1999-2004) to put towards research trips abroad as he undertakes a PhD at Edinburgh University. Anthony will during his PhD write a commentary on the seventh books of the Histories by Herodotus of Halicarnassus, the so-called ‘Father of History’. Anthony will be writing about his research trips in a later edition of this newsletter. If any Old Ashburnhamite wants to apply the bursary next year, please write to Angus Roy (at adroy@btinternet.com) explaining what you would like to use the money for and what you plan to achieve from the project. The Society hopes that this Bursary will prove very successful. first bursary was awarded ‘toTheAnthony Ellis to put towards research trips abroad as he undertakes a PhD at Edinburgh University. ’ As some of you will be aware, the School will be celebrating the 450th Anniversary of the re-foundation of the School with many events throughout 2010. One of these events will be the Elizabethan Ball on 9th July 2010. The Society would like to encourage anyone interested in attending the Ball to book tickets through the Development Office. The Society hopes that there will be a large contingent of Old Ashburnhamites at the Ball and if any of them would like to sit on an Old Ashburnhamites table, please highlight this on the application form. We would like to build on the success of last year’s events and expand the activities of the Society. We have had some ideas already but please do get in touch with the Development Office (020 7963 1115 or email: tori.roddy@westminster.org.uk) if there is something in particular you would like to attend. In this regard, the Society is trying to expand its committee, and if anyone is interested in joining the committee or simply helping as a link to their fellow contemporaries, then please let Angus Roy or Tori Roddy know. We look forward to a successful year in 2010. Angus Roy (AHH 1993-1998) ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 23 Old Grantite Club This year has seen a time of consolidation within the Club, with the influx of new Committee Members from the past few years, having taken up various appointments within the Committee and now contributing to the running of the Club. Following on from the successful Leavers’ Dinner held in 2007, the Club had hoped to hold a repeat event this year, however, this proved not possible and those Grantites leaving the School in 2009 were instead invited to this year’s AGM and Dinner for no charge. The event, which was open to all Old Grantites, was highly successful with about 60 attendees. This year the Club was ‘fortunate enough to have John Brown, founder of John Brown Publishing, as an after dinner speaker. ’ This year the Club was fortunate enough to have John Brown (GG 1966-1971), founder of John Brown Publishing, as an after dinner speaker, and all those who attended agreed that it helped to make what was a very enjoyable evening. We hope to repeat this dinner, open to all Old Grantites, bi-annually and will be looking to attract a similar calibre of speaker for these future events. Please do contact us if you have any suggestions! Going into 2010, we are very aware that the Club has to compete with the School’s Anniversary events for Old Grantites’ affections, and therefore intend to arrange a number of smaller, more casual or themed events. Information about these events will be circulated in the New Year and via the Club’s website which is also due an overhaul in 2010. It just remains to say that the Committee remains determined to continue its work in communicating with and arranging events for all Old Grantites, and to this end we are thankful for the support and input of both David Hargreaves, the Housemaster, and the School 24 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Development Office. However, to make the Club fit for purpose, we need to hear from our Members of all ages and to understand what is expected from us. We would also like to hear from any Old Grantite who feels that they can help develop the future of the Club by playing some role within the Committee. Peter Cole (GG 1993-1998) busby Society We had a successful and happy Busby Dinner in College Hall on 27th November. The new Housemaster, Paul Botton, let us have drinks in Busby’s pool room (formerly the Under). He was unable personally to attend on this occasion. The photo shows from left to right: Malcolm Kafetz (former Chairman of the Society), Dan Cornwell (Head of House), Harriet Allan (Busby’s Head of Girls) and Anne Dunn (former Matron). At our AGM, Matthew Webb (BB 19992004) was appointed our new secretary, and we are grateful to him for taking on this role. After dinner, all the recent leavers stood and spoke briefly about their days up Busby’s, each to loud applause. We welcome new members of the Society and its committee. Please get in touch if you are interested. James Nunns (BB 1967-1972) At our AGM, Matthew Webb was ‘appointed our new secretary, and we are grateful to him for taking on this role. ’ Above (left to right): Malcolm Kafetz (former Chairman of the Society), Dan Cornwell (Head of House), Harriet Allan (Busby's Head of Girls) and Anne Dunn (former Matron). ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 25 OW Sports Contacts Athletics John Goodbody (LL 1956-1961) E. john@jbgoodbody.co.uk Cricket Daniel Cavanagh (RR 1993-1998) E. daniel.cavanagh@gipartners.co.uk Rowan bamford (LL 1993-1998) E. rowan.bamford@dentonwildesapte.com Fencing Chris Namih (DD 1999-2004) E. c.namih@gmail.com Golf Society David Roy (AHH 1955-1961) 7 Sandy Lodge Lane, Moor Park Northwood, HA6 2JA E. daroy@btinternet.com Real Tennis Simon Marshall (DD 1990-1995) E. simarsha@hotmail.com T. 07985 604042 Tennis Tristan Vanhegan (HH 1994-1999) E. tristanvanhegan@hotmail.com T. 07977 993193 Fives Andrew Aitken (WW 1967-1971) E. aa@artefact.co.uk Water Sam Scheuringer (DD 1997-2002) E. sam@scheuringer.co.uk T. 07958 765205 Football: Hugo braddick (QS 1989-1994) E. hugobraddick@hotmail.com Jack Holborn (LL 1997-2002) E. jack.holborn@hotmail.co.uk T. 07909 962576 Cricket In some quarters 2009 will be remembered as the year England reclaimed the Ashes, but for real connoisseurs of the game the vintage will be remembered for the inaugural Jim Cogan memorial trophy game. Cricket was just one of the many ways that Jim influenced generations of OWW and so it was fitting that a fair spread of those generations turned out on a warm May afternoon to take on the School. The fact the game was the most oversubscribed in OW history was entirely apt, as was the return to headquarters of numerous OW cricketing luminaries, many of whom had been feared lost to the Club many moons ago. Unfortunately the match script writer had a day off and despite the undoubted pedigree and combined (hundreds of) years of experience, the OWW fell cruelly short in their run chase. Next up came the Cricketer Cup. The Club has underperformed in this arena in recent years, as despite being able to call on an increasingly strong pool of players a combination of some tough draws and failing to rise to the occasion have conspired against us. Unfortunately 2009 can be added to that list as an extremely strong Old Wellingtonians side, full of county IIs players brushed us aside with rather too much ease. Despite these two early season setbacks a silver lining had been gained from the School game, as post match nostalgia and inebriation was cynically exploited, with the result that Cricket Week teams were pretty much filled on the night. When this was combined with some hungry youngsters the result was the strongest OW Cricket Week line-up on record. For once paper strength was translated into on-field results as the OWW won five, drew one and lost two. Victories came against Marlborough, Butterflies, Lords & Commons, Kensington and particularly impressively, the 28 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Free Foresters, on their return to the Cricket Week line-up. Notable individual performances included: A. Sahai’s (WW 1988-1993) 5-55 against Eton, 50s for A. Hines-Green (QS 2002-2007) and K. Patel against the Free Foresters, 75 for B. Orme (RR 2002-2007) against Seagullians, 100 for A. Campbell (WW 1989-1994) against Lords & Commons. Champagne moment of the week came from M. Cornes (DD 1988-1993) who after a few years trying, opened his hundred account with a majestic one against Eton. The Club would like to thank the School for its continued access to London’s finest private cricket ground, and particularly the new groundsman, Franklin Barrett, whose helpful and accommodating attitude was a wonderful breath of fresh air. As ever, the OWCC welcomes young or old from the OW cricketing fraternity who are interested in playing or supporting. For more information get in touch with the Development Office, Daniel Cavanagh or Rowan Bamford. Daniel Cavanagh (RR 1993-1998) Fives A curate’s egg of a season was one description of the Old Westminsters’ fortunes in 08/09. Following their impressive debut back in the top flight, when they finished as Division One runners-up, the OW1 squad enjoyed another really solid campaign to come third, behind the Olavians and Harrovians. OW2 had a very tough course to steer in Division Two, much of it through the choppy waters of the relegation zone, but managed to pull clear at the end, leaving four clubs in their wake. This escape was in no small measure due to strength in numbers - 30+ active players - which meant we did not suffer penalty points for defaulting on pairs (as did many of the other teams), together with the ever-immaculate match management of Edward Levy and Chris Watts. It’s too early to report much on 09/10, though the First Team are currently still in third place, with a convincing recent victory over the Old Harrovians. Also cause for celebration is their run in the Barber Cup (in which all players have to be genuine former pupils, with no guest players as in the League), galvanised by Giles Coren: “After OW’s historic defeat of the Harrovians, the defending League Champions, in the First Division on Nov 17 - finally overturning 80 years of league precedent - further glory was brought on the club with a defeat of the Wulfrunians in the first round of the Barber Cup by a bona fide Westminster ‘originals’ side (six OWs fair and true, educated in Dean’s Yard) featuring Rose and Coren at 1st, Albert and Brock at 2nd and Chen and Jackson at 3rd. It’s the first time we’ve competed in the premier knockout competition in recent memory and a great thing to have got six up to the Black Country by train on a vile wet November weekend and beaten a really competitive side 2-1. first time we’ve competed ‘inIt’sthethepremier knockout competition in recent memory and a great thing to have got six up to the Black Country by train on a vile wet November weekend... ’ Huge respect to Laurie and Alf who shlepped all the way from Cambridge via three trains taking four hours to be there. We had a few crisp Heinekens on the way home and felt very damn fine about ourselves. I don’t think I can remember a better day for OWFC.” GC Coming up in early 2010 (the product of a post-match pub session) is what we hope to be the first of many ‘Very Old Westminster’ fixtures - against long-standing friendly rivals, the Very Old Ipswichians. Players must be over 50 and we have three pairs who were all at School in 1970: Messrs Margerison, Sanderson, Wilson, Hooper, Grant and Aitken. That we can still do this 40 years on is a testament to the life-enhancing qualities of the game (or something) and a challenge for more recently joined members, such as Laurie Brock, Napper Tandy, Freddie Krespi and Matt Chen, to take up... Andrew Aitken (WW 1967-1971) ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 29 Football: 1st Xi For the 1st XI, the 2008/09 season was akin to the old footballing idiom: ‘a game of two halves’. The season started impeccably. Ten minutes in, on a sunny afternoon away at Harrow, the Pinks took the lead. A nice move down the right flank produced a curling cross from Anthony Doeh, which was duly dispatched by Rupert Ratcliffe. This led the way for what is commonly known as ‘champagne football’. The opposition fought hard but the Pinks danced around their aggression like a matador easing a bull towards its destiny. Rupert Ratcliffe added another and Ezra Rubenstein notched up a couple until skipper, Fabian Joseph finished the job. The result was a 5-0 drubbing against a team that was to finish the season in 2nd. The next two matches saw a team high in confidence take charge of the Premier Division with a 4-1 home win against Lancing, followed by a 2-0 win away at Malvern. Will Wolton in goal and a back four of Hugo Braddick, Rob Sawbridge, Rupert Coltart and Sherif Salem had conceded one goal in three games. Then came a loss at Brentwood. A tight game in which the team were punished for two lapses in concentration. Westminster then became draw specialists. Stalemates against Eton, Charterhouse and Malvern, combined with a thrilling 4-3 victory over Forest, were enough to ensure that the Pinks were top of the league come Christmas. This was added to in January with a 3-2 win away at Eton and then detracted from by the reverse score against Harrow. In the Arthur Dunn Cup, Westminster had smashed Old Berkhamstedians 6-1 and Bradfield 4-0 to reach the quarter finals. This was to be the turning point of the season. An agonising last minute defeat against Lancing triggered a series of disappointing results that saw the team plummet from title hopefuls to a final finish of 6th. Westminster had taken a two goal lead, after two cool finishes by David Weinstein-Linder, but Lancing managed to get themselves back into the match with a goal just before half time. For the majority of the second half it was an evenly fought contest but the opposition found something extra and scored twice in injury time to win the tie 3-2. 30 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Losses to Brentwood, Kings and Forest were only salvaged by a point away at Charterhouse, the eventual title winners, and a 3-0 win away at Lancing on the final day of the season. Special mention should go to Fabian Joseph, for his energy and enthusiasm in the role of captain. A final finish of sixth in the Premier Division, viewed to some as an underachievement, shows how far this team has come. The previous season where the 1st XI finished third, and achieved the club’s best ever league finish, was not to be surpassed, but that remains the ambition for the future of this club. Other special mentions should go to Rob Sawbridge who scooped the big prize of player of the season, Sam Sazaki, for Young Player of the Season, and Rupert Ratcliffe, who was the team’s top scorer with 14 goals. The 2009/10 season has thus far been a different story, as the club has struggled to deal with some internal reorganisation. Half of the last season’s 1st XI from last season have either moved on or been injured, and we have won only one of our first five matches in the league. A 4-1 win over Kings Wimbledon where Jon Korganker had one of the most inspirational performances seen in a Pink shirt, scoring all four before half time. Previous to that fixture, Westminster had been beaten by Lancing, Aldenham and Brentwood, the last two being lost in the final minute from set pieces. Momentum gained by a fantastic first round win in the Arthur Dunn Cup, against the odds away at Salopians, where keeper William Wolton was outstanding, was then lost in the last round, in terrible conditions, against Tonbridge. With a strong side being assembled, morale still good and several players returning from injury, Westminster will be looking to reverse their fortunes in 2010 and target a respectable league finish. Rupert Ratcliffe (AHH 1997-2002) year’s event was won by ‘This Tom Samuel, who in 2008 became the first OW in living memory to have competed in the Varsity cross-country race. ’ Athletics Football: 2nd/3rd Xi The 2008/09 season was a glorious one for the OW 3rd XI, with the side winning the 4th Division title, taking 36 out of a possible 42 points, and remaining unbeaten. The final record was: P:14, W:11, D:3, L:0. The team consistently showed real spirit and character, regularly coming from behind to score crucial late goals, epitomised by the last minute goal scored on the last day of the season, to win the title, and maintain the 3 year unbeaten home record. A wide pool of players were used throughout the season, but Tezcan, Scimone, Sen Gupta, Lancaster, Khera, Jones, Gregory and Bamford all deserve notable mentions, while the player of the season award went to Jo-Jo Gunnell who was something of a colossus at centre back. The year’s activities have been overshadowed by the death of our long-standing member, Dr Stephen Instone, who combined lecturing in Classics at University College London with longdistance running. Stephen, a regular marathon runner, died aged 54, when swimming in Lake Geneva on 25th July. We will always remember him, particularly his zeal and determination - he is believed to have run the perimeter of Richmond Park more often than anyone in history. A minute’s silence in his memory was held at the start of the Towpath Cup on 20th September, when the OWW annually compete against the School and the Common Room. This year’s event was won by Tom Samuel, who in 2008 became the first OW in living memory to have competed in the Varsity cross-country race. The Oxford Blue won in 16 minutes 34 seconds, a course shortened this year by 230 metres because of the building work being done on Barnes Railway Bridge. Second was another OW, Will Sweet, who did 17 minutes 42 seconds and Richard Kowenicki, representing the Common Room, was third. The OWW won the team event. Currently the 2nd X1 are sitting in the bottom 1/2 of the table in Div 2, and facing a potential relegation battle - so the 2nd half of the season will present a great challenge to everyone in the squad. Unfortunately, most of the younger OWW were unavailable for the Thames Hare and Hounds annual Old Boys’ Race on Wimbledon Common on 12th December. If they had been able to run in their normal form, we probably would have finished second behind Winchester, our perennial rivals. As it was, the OWW finished 8th in a field of 85 runners over the hilly, five mile course, won by Charles Sykes of Sedbergh in 27 minutes 27 seconds. Miles Copeland was our highest scorer in 26th place in 32 minutes 06 seconds followed by Tristan Vanhegan in 32 minutes 42 seconds, his best-ever time, and his brother Toby, running in his 10th race in 11 years, was our third scorer and James Furlong, our fourth. Anyone interested in taking part in the OW athletic activities should e-mail: john@jbgoodbody.co.uk. Daniel Cavanagh (RR 1993-1998) John Goodbody (LL 1956-1961) Sadly, following the retirement of a number of key players, and a decidedly patchy start to the 2009/10 season by all 3 teams, the decision has recently been taken to merge the 2nd and 3rd XIs. While disappointing at the time, and not a decision taken easily, this has left the club with two strong teams and competition for places, and we feel it should help to make the club stronger in the long term. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 31 Tennis As I file my copy from Rex Hotel garden roof, Saigon, I am very happy to report that it has been an excellent year for the OWLTC troops; the Club goes from strength to strength with numbers and activity continuing to expand. The Tuesday club evenings at Vincent Square from late April continue to be very popular. This year, thanks to the generosity of the School and the tremendous support of the new Groundsman, we have even been able to extend into early September. We are delighted to have been able to resume weekend morning play, mainly on Saturday mornings, thanks again to the terrific commitment of the School but also of Franklin Barrett: he has been unstinting in his efforts on our behalf, to every problem he has a solution and his kindness is hugely appreciated. The Saturday morning sessions were particularly popular with the younger players and continued until snow stopped play late in the year. The match activity has continued: impressive efforts by stalwarts Marc Baghdadi and Ed Roussell again saw us through the round robin section of the D’Abernon Cup, thereby earning us a seat at the table to discuss the future of this event, as we continue to hope to penetrate further into the second section of the event (or re-write the rules in our favour). The match against the School was of exceptional value this year: stalwart efforts from the OWW saw the match reach a thunderous (this time, happily, not literally) climax with the much hoped for decider between Marc Baghdadi and his erstwhile partner Chris Anguelov. What can I say except well done Marc, though Chris will be a very welcome addition to our ranks. 32 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Above: © Matthew Webb. The match against the Common Room was almost as impressive, above all for an almost unprecedented development: a full team from the Common Room with no ringers, albeit happily again two (Simon Craft and Andy Johnson) who could have played for either side. A great afternoon, the precise score lost sight of in a delightful picnic. Whilst one or two other normal fixtures fell by the wayside this year, they are all back in planning for next season which promises to be better than ever. This is due in no small measure to the enthusiasm of a new generation and their willingness to step up and take over the reins. I greatly welcome the contribution that the new team of Tristan Vanhegan, Yasheen Rajan, Matthew Webb and Alex Perry are going to make to running the Club. They are assured of the continuing support of the less young guard (including Nick Perry, Alec Melville, Tom Sooke, Tim and Simon Brocklebank-Fowler, Simon Clement-Davies and the indomitable Stephenson quad) without whom there would be no club to take over. We wish them every success in continuing to encourage new members and especially in attracting a critical mass of female players. Duncan Matthews QC (QS 1974-1979) (Outgoing) Hon. Sec. OWLTC Players of all standards are more than welcome. To find out more check the OWLTC page on the OW website where you can also find the link to our Facebook site for the latest news. the Old Boys Putting ‘InCompetition at Royal Wimbledon we just failed to qualify for the Final. ’ Image: iStockphoto. Real Tennis Golf Society The season was somewhat truncated by a wholescale revision by the clubs of their social match policy, whereby those teams and clubs who are not able to offer reciprocal matches have been moved down the pecking order. This is not great news for teams such as the Old Wets, Old Harrovians, and others without a ‘home’ court, although it is testament to the ever-increasing popularity of the sport, so no one should complain! The Club has played in five Old Boys Golf Competitions during the year. In the Halford Hewitt we lost 4-1 to Eastbourne, our winning pair was Edward Cartwright and Johnny Woolf. It was nice to welcome a new member Oli Flynn to the team. In the plate competition the team lost 2-1 to Framlingham. The solitary fixture in the season was therefore Patrick Schmitt, sadly losing 3-2 on the last singles to his other alma mater, Oxford. The 2009-10 season should be a bit more active, with three matches already lined up for the spring, and the hope that we can once again put out a competitive team in the old boys tournament, the Henry Leaf Cup, in Leamington Spa in March. If anyone, current or past student, is interested in taking up the game and playing in these matches and others, please do get in touch with me. Simon Marshall (DD 1990-1995) In the Grafton Morrish we failed to qualify for the knock-out stage, and in both the Bernard Darwin and Senior Darwin we lost to Radley. In the Old Boys Putting Competition at Royal Wimbledon we just failed to qualify for the Final. This year the Club has played ten inter Old Boys matches where we have won four, halved one and lost five. The Club has defeated the Old Uppinghamians, Old Paulines, Old Radleians and Old Carthusians, the Club halved with the Old Canfordians. All three Society meetings were well attended. If anybody would like to join the Old Westminster Golf Society please contact me. David Roy (AHH 1955-61) ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 33 Above: At the Young Gaudy. Westminster Today This year’s Elizabethan Newsletter features articles written by Old Westminsters who are now members of the School’s teaching staff and have focused on their experiences as both pupil and teacher. • Tom Edlin (DD 1993–1998) • Andrew Johnson (LL 1987–1992) • Gavin Griffiths (WW 1967–1972) • Edmund Jolliffe (LL 1989-1994) Tom Edlin Dryden’s 1993–1998 June, 1998. The brief two-hour existence of the Remove ‘most likely to…’ list, an addendum to the leavers’ yearbook so tactlessly offensive (in parts) that it was immediately excised and destroyed - if not quite forgotten. I only mention this loss to the Archive as I was not ‘most likely to return to Westminster to teach’ (step forward Jamie McClelland, who has become a barrister instead) - but I should perhaps add (while saying nothing of what I was deemed most likely to do) that my contemporaries have responded to the news with amusement rather than amazement. That may be indicative. One does not return to one’s old school if one hates the place. I was away from the School for ten years; enough time had elapsed for Westminster to have changed a good deal. My final term was also David Summerscale’s last as Head Master; we were awaiting the return of Tristram JonesParry, who taught me maths in the fifth form before departing for Emanuel. Others too left that year - Robert Court, Richard Ballard and one Brian Smith, if I remember rightly… And it is certainly true that the Common Room I joined in 2008 included many unfamiliar faces. Indeed, I was part of perhaps the largest single intake of new teaching staff in living memory. So it was perhaps a little odd for one of those new boys to find that the colleagues he knew best were among the most senior - but the fourteen of them who once taught me have been universally tactful in their reminiscences. Some, I fear, have been so by default - in fact, one ‘introduced’ herself at lunch on my first day and I’m afraid I did remind her that, yes, I knew her well as she’d taught me for three years... 36 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 The History Department has grown and moved, but much remains the same. Giles Brown, who taught me in the fifth form and became Head of History when I was in the Remove, is now my boss, and has yet to carry through his threat of digging out his mark-book for 1993-94 (just as I have yet to re-submit any of my preps). Frances Ramsey, who taught me at GCSE, only left this summer. But a department of seven (I think) has become one of eleven - partly through internal promotions and partly an impressive expansion at Sixth Form level. Expansion has been physical too - the move to Weston’s means I am spared the horror of teaching in any of my old classrooms, and gives us space, light and penthouse views of the Abbey, which were decidedly lacking in the Sutcliff’s basement. Weston’s, the Manoukian and the Millicent Fawcett Hall offer far better facilities than we who taught me ‘inGilestheBrown, fifth form and became Head of History when I was in the Remove, is now my boss, and has yet to carry through his threat of digging out his mark-book for 1993-94. ’ Main image: Dryden’s House photograph 1998. enjoyed back in the 1990s, and the added space has made the School a calmer place (certainly from our top floor perspective). The John Sargeaunt Room has been added to the library as a dedicated History room, and it was a relief to find the book still valued in an IT-driven world (though I have mixed feelings about picking out certain titles, noticing the last date stamped was ‘Nov.97’ and wondering if that was me). The courses we teach have certainly changed - and the style of examination even more so. International Relations from the Treaty of Versailles onwards is still a staple of the Lower Shell, but we now cover a wider period and this year, with the introduction of the IGCSE, we reach 1989, which I still struggle to see as ‘History’. Coursework has evolved (whether in the direction of extinction we shall have to wait and see) - and the muchderided empathy questions on Nazi Germany have been replaced by proper source analysis on the Six Day War. At A level, thankfully, the range of periods and papers remains broad, and we stick to our practice of all teaching different units, though some old favourites have been wiped from the syllabus. The modular structure of AS and A2 imposes its own constraints, and finding a logical path of progression from Sixth Form to Remove is something of a challenge - while the need to master a greater range of techniques and approaches than simply ‘essay’ and ‘document’ makes the subject more technical, and probably less content-rich. Beyond the department, I have occasional feelings of déjà vu. This year I have returned to Dryden’s as a tutor, and noted that within a week our 1998 house photograph (hanging in full view all last year, but noticed by few…) had been politely removed and replaced with one of a Above: Dryden’s House photograph (April 1998). Tom Edlin (2nd row from front, 9th from left). more recent vintage. Tutoring the fifth form has meant returning to Alston for the first time since Lent 1994 (when we used to go as half form-groups); the school house was worryingly familiar and the correct route through the lead mine came back to me as soon as we reached the first turning. On Station afternoons, my hockey stick from the days when out-of-season puntsmen had to find something to do between October and April has been brought into use for the first time in ten years, though I have detected a level of disappointment in my skills from those who forget that it was never really my ‘proper’ Station. Still, I have kept up my proud record in the Common Room vs 1st XI match, which at the time of writing runs: played 6 (three on each side), lost 6, aggregate goals for: 5, aggregate goals against: approximately 28. These continuities raise the question of how best to negotiate the pitfalls of being an OW on the staff. From the start, I have seen no point in being too secretive about the fact - which is probably just as well, for it is hard to conceal (even more so now). ‘OW’ is included in the pink list, where all other letters of distinction are deemed surplus to requirements. And perhaps there is more to it than that. At my first parents’ evening a mother with no knowledge of the fact suddenly stopped in mid sentence and commented that I was surely an old boy, wasn’t I, I simply must be… She was unable to say exactly how she knew. One of my tutors in Oxford once said that you could always tell a Westminster as they couldn’t walk properly, but I was sitting down. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 37 Andrew Johnson LL 1987–1992 The original request was to reflect upon my experiences as a Westminster pupil (LL 1987-1992) and History teacher. This seemed to be a fine opportunity to jeopardise my career and the reputations of others by embarking on the sort of confessions piece associated with retired American tennis players or golfers who have driven into trees. Needless to say, whilst the Berlin Wall was crumbling and the first Gulf War raged, I was the model student and all my teachers were true professionals. The history department that inspired my choice of degree did not misplace coursework, teach medieval history using language that would make Gordon Ramsay blush, or operate with such dedication that staff came to work the morning after being up all night to support the birth of their first child. The aspect of Westminster life that I have decided to write about instead is Phab. In front of me I have two photographs, group photos from Phab 1992 and 2009. The first photo was found in 2000 behind one of Tim Francis’ filing cabinets when the Registrar’s office was refurbished. 1992 was Charlotte Moore’s first year running Phab and my second year volunteering. The previous year, my first as a helper, had been Willie Booth’s final year running the course he had set up in 1977. By contrast, Phab 2009 was my last year organising Phab, something I had the privilege of doing since 2003, taking over from David Hargreaves. Looking at these two photos, it is clear that much has changed about Phab in the last 17 years, and that much, thankfully, has not changed at all. The same is also true of the School. Has presentation triumphed over substance? In 1992 participants on Phab were PHs or ABs - Physically Handicapped or Able Bodied. PHAB is now Phab - a community not an acronym - and a community comprised of ‘guests’ and ‘hosts’ rather than PHs and ABs. Is this merely political correctness? The semantics change reinforces the idea that physical appearance and mental capacity do not define our roles or relationships with others. The principles of parity and inclusion that Willie built at the heart of Phab were a revelation to me in 1991 and still surprise hosts, staff and parents alike. Styles of presentation may change, but it is the substance of what is happening behind that matters. In 1992 I was an ‘AB’ sporting a ludicrous quiff and a 38 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Christmas jumper in mid-July, whereas in 2009 I was a balding course Director in a Chelsea FC T-shirt. Clearly there’s more to having value than looking good. I learnt this on Phab and it is a lesson that continues to improve many within the School community, even if it might irk our notoriously vain foundress Queen Elizabeth I. Does size matter? In the 1992 picture I can see 18 guests, 24 hosts and 6 staff. In 2009 there are 29 guests, 35 hosts, and 15 staff. Phab, like the School, has expanded considerably since the early 90s. It is the nature of the expansion that matters, however. Phab has been vastly oversubscribed from the 6th form since the mid-1990s. Few Remove pupils get a chance to volunteer and nobody is able to do it twice as I did in 1991 and 1992. It is a huge testimony to my predecessors who ran Phab, as well as the guests, that a summer course as demanding as Phab has developed this profile. There are now 35 pupils in every year group who have a chance to be hosts on Phab, and many more who would have liked to. Increased size has also come with increased opportunity. Phab is now free thanks to the generosity of the School and well-wishers. The ideal of a fun, educational experience that is both subsidised and more accessible than it was in 1992 is to be celebrated. I am glad this is true of Phab and also that it is true for some within the School via the bursary system. Does technology damage young people? I have some sympathy for those concerned about a generation growing up with a lack of sensitivity to the difference between private and public spaces, and for those anxious to protect us all from the dangers of the internet. However, let’s not be blinded by generational anxieties about technology that pupils use better than we do. How did Phab work without mobile phones? I know it did, but I can’t imagine running it then. Mobiles help to limit Health and Safety risks via 24/7 contact to the nurse and the staff. Without the internet, the Phab website, and the Phab facebook group, guests and hosts, scattered across the country, would not be able to sustain so readily the genuine and important friendships made on Phab. More fundamental than all of that, there are no electric wheelchairs in the 1992 photo. For these reasons, I can tolerate thumb print registration and pupils playing computer games at break times in School. Above: Phab 2009. Andrew Johnson (seated front left). Below: Phab 1992. ‘ The exhilaration comes from achieving something better than grades as a reward for unself-conscious hard work for the benefit of others as well as oneself. ’ Do continuities matter as much as changes? Yes! Just ask a historian. Among the guests in both photos I can see James Gusterson (my roommate in 1991), Neil Ross (my roommate in 1992), and Dorcas Munday. James can no longer stand, as he is doing in the 1992 photo, Neil, like Phab, has expanded somewhat, and Dorcas (MBE) remains one of the most remarkable and inspirational people I have ever met. I also recognise the expressions on so many faces in both photos. There is a beautiful combination of exhaustion and exhilaration. The exhaustion comes from a demanding residential course involving huge responsibility, the delivery of care, workshops, outings and continual, often side-splittingly entertaining social integration. The exhilaration comes from achieving something better than grades as a reward for unselfconscious hard work for the benefit of others as well as oneself. It is the continuity of ethos which is so important. I hope that is still true of a School that has always prized individuality without pandering to ego. So where does this all lead in a discussion of Westminster ‘then and now’? In a School driven by a hunger for academic success, Phab has always offered invaluable perspective. I know of ex-Phabbers who have found affluent careers but whose values are partly shaped by Phab. I know of others whose choice of future has been defined by Phab. I didn’t realise that was happening to me in 1991 or 1992, but I now know that it did. What has happened to Phab since Willie’s last Phab in 1991 mirrors much that has happened to the School - expansion, technological advance, changes in personnel and styles of leadership and all this, I hope, without a fundamental change in ethos. Long may this remain the case. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 39 Gavin Griffiths WW 1967–1972 I was at Westminster, as a pupil, between 1967 and 1972; returning as a teacher in 1980, I have remained ever since. To have spent thirty five years in the same institution possesses a certain circus freakishness, and it would be idle to object being classified with bearded ladies and pin-headed ape men. The reasons for my life sentence are a result of the marriage between Westminster’s advantages and my own deficiencies: among the former are the lively students, (mostly) endearing colleagues, pretty surroundings and convenience for the District Line; among the latter are want of imagination, innate conservatism, a chronic absence of ambition and an inability to focus on, or indeed believe in, the ‘future’. Whenever I meet Old Westminsters, one question pops up and beneath it slobbers an enduring fantasy. The question is ‘has the old School changed?’; the fantasy behind it is the belief that the School must have gone downhill. Of course, Westminster has altered - whether or not it is in perpetual decline depends very much on the attitude of the Old Westminster who is proposing the initial question. The School has changed because society has changed, largely for the better. You may like to recall that until July 1967 homosexual acts between consenting adults were a criminal offence. If there were any gay teachers or students at Westminster, they would have had to engage in dishonesty, subterfuge, hypocrisy and deceit on a daily basis. Today people can choose to be open about their 40 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 sexuality. This must be regarded as an improvement of some sort, even if the British, as a nation, habitually relish evasive euphemism over plain expression. I came to Westminster from the Lycée Français de Londres, in South Kensington. The French attitude to education is clear in its assumptions: children are to be taught subjects, the ethical stuff is left to parents; co-education is selfevidently ‘healthier’ than the alternative; if children have authority over other children, it will result in bullying. Westminster came as a culture shock. To an extent, my views chimed in with the poet Larkin: ‘When I was a child I thought I hated everybody but when I grew up I realised it was just children I didn’t like’; but in my case, substitute ‘public schoolboy’ for ‘child’. Frankly, I found it difficult to understand why it was that my fellow pupils had such confidence, authority and selfimportance. Gradually I came to understand how prep schools operated - prizes, pins, badges, ties, coloured blazers, prefects, etc, etc: a panoply of devices designed to stuff the child’s mind with respect for their Elders, and a belief in themselves. Of course, in many respects, Westminster perpetuated this toff-tosh, and Independent Schools (another euphemism) still enjoy flirting with the idea of empowering their charges with the idea of ‘leadership’. Which is fine and dandy, except that it assumes that somewhere out there, beyond the school gates, is to be found a tribe of natural ‘followers’. The other thing that Westminster had in spades was charismatic teaching. The Heavens preserve us from the charismatic and inspiring schoolmaster, a breed which is fortunately dying out and, if not, requires immediate putting down. Although tweedy eccentrics with booming Main image: Common Room 1989. Gavin Griffith (3rd row, 2nd from left). voices, coloured socks and insulting ways can be initially fun, after a bit, it becomes wearing. How often at Old Westminster gatherings have I had to listen to some reminiscence of adult bullying, now lauded as a hilarious example of Mr X’s colourful method of instruction. To give an example, I remember one highly respected English master kicking a copy of George Eliot in the bin to dissuade me from wasting my private hours on such ‘lugubrious Victorian trash.’ To quote Larkin once more, ‘useful to get that learnt’. Westminster has grown up since then. We no longer believe that it is imperative for pupils to shoulder the burden of their teacher’s psychological quirks and defects. On the contrary, it is now seen to be the responsibility of the teacher to think about the mental well-being of the student. Surely this is the right way round. no longer believe that it ‘We is imperative for pupils to shoulder the burden of their teacher’s psychological quirks and defects. ’ On the whole, though, I enjoyed my school-days at Westminster but when I returned to teach it was a relief to find that some of the jolly old assumptions were quietly expiring. Even the PE teacher no longer pretended that he was training troops for jungle warfare, although the Head Master still behaved as if he were Louis XIV, and 17 Dean’s Yard the court of Versailles. My own hope for the School’s future (if I could believe in the concept for a moment) would be that it should embrace co-education throughout all five years. I am a sufficiently old fashioned English teacher to believe that for people to be happy they need to sort out their relationships with members of their own sex and members of the opposite sex, at the earliest possible opportunity. This is the undercurrent that runs through great English fiction from Samuel Richardson (via George Eliot, of course) to D H Lawrence, and possibly beyond. Over the years, Westminster has become more liberal, not less, because British society has freed itself from many of the inhibiting prejudices - about sexuality, race and religion - which no doubt won us the Empire and two World Wars. It seems to me that in 2010 the pupils are more selfconscious and thoughtful and that teachers are more selfaware and responsible. There is no doubt that co-education in the Sixth Form has made the school more interesting and intellectually lively than it was in 1967, when Little Dean’s Yard was awash with blokes in black suits. My other hope is that we can dump the idea of the ‘great schoolmaster’ - and, while we’re about it ‘great headmaster’ - once and for good. After all, it makes no sense to talk of ‘great’ accountants or ‘great’ solicitors. Teaching is a job like any other: and it suits some more than most. I have been privileged to teach at Westminster for thirty years and the reason that I’ve felt privileged is because it has been great fun to be involved with a bunch of entertaining people who are interested in learning something. It is not more complicated than that. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 41 A blast from the past Twenty years ago at the Under School Westminster Under School now has two OWW (and former WUS pupils) on the staff: Greg Pallis (maths) and Edmund Jolliffe (music). A number of OWW have contributed to this issue of the Elizabethan Newsletter and Edmund Jolliffe (LL 1989-1994) outlines below some of his thoughts on what life was like at WUS twenty years ago. As I flick through my school magazine of 1989, I am reminded of all the wonderful things that WUS did and continues to do. The Science Labs that boys now use were first installed at the top of Adrian House, much to the annoyance of boys in Year 8, who had previously had a table tennis and snooker table kept there for their use in break time. The general knowledge quiz continued apace, although Mr James bemoaned the fact that ‘nobody yet had managed to answer the question of the previous year: Who was the first actor to play James Bond?’ Can anybody answer this now? In 1989 the choir became film stars by appearing in a British Airways film about a traditional British Christmas. Sadly they were not allowed to eat all the food laid out on the film set. The Music Department gained its first Music Technology in the form of 8 very small keyboards. It was housed in Mr Walker’s present office, which seems hard to imagine, but then his office was housed in the electrical store cupboard where all the gowns are kept now. The present Music Technology room used to be the Music classroom where all rehearsals took place. Can you imagine the entire choir stuffed in there for rehearsals! 42 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Talking of the choir, they went on tour to the Rhineland and Mr Walker wrote that the choir performing Holst’s Ave Maria was ‘perhaps the most magical moment of my musical career’. I am sure there have been many more moments since then! Trips to Italy, the Norfolk Broads, Alston (for the geography field trip) and Paris all took place as well and there were trips to the Opera, Scotland and the Isle of Wight. Risk assessments must have been a little different back then as I remember on the Paris trip we all went to see a film and lost a boy on the Metro. The awful thing is that nobody noticed until we all returned to the hotel after the film! In those days there was a special ‘room for House Captains (really an oversized cupboard) where we could make cheese toasties and plot world domination. ’ assessments must have ‘Risk been a little different back then as I remember on the Paris trip we all went to see a film and lost a boy on the Metro. The awful thing is that nobody noticed until we all returned to the hotel after the film. ’ Above: The Under School. Competitions like the Scrabble, Model and Reading competitions were already firmly established and there were many sporting fixtures won (the first XI played 9 matches: won 6, drew 1 and lost 2). I could not resist quoting this report on the Under 11’s performance: ‘Unfortunately due to the vagaries of the international postal system (not to mention those of the author), the Under 11 Soccer report has not yet found its way out of Africa ...’ From my own point of view, 1989 saw me rise to the pinnacle of my WUS career as House Captain of Martlets. In those days there was a special room for House Captains (really an oversized cupboard) where we could make cheese toasties and plot world domination. I appeared in the senior production of ‘Treasure Island’ playing somebody’s mother. There is a very fetching picture of me on page 16 of the school magazine. I beat the 400m record on Sports Day, knocking 4 seconds off the time (only to be beaten the very next year). I clearly was not that good a Cricketer though as I ended up scoring a lot of Cricket games. I was not very good at that either as I distinctly remember not knowing how many balls were in an over and trying to make it five. Oops! Above: Edmund Jolliffe. I am writing this in June, with Common Entrance going on in the hall. It’s the final term for the Year 8s - the end of one era and the beginning of another. So many exciting things ahead - will these boys ever return to the Under School? Can you imagine what Westminster Under School will be like in 2029? ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 43 Above: At the Elizabethan Club Dinner. News if you have any news you would like to share with your contemporaries, please send details to the Editor: The Elizabethan Newsletter The Development Office 17a Dean’s Yard, london SW1P 3Pb E. developmentoffice@westminster.org.uk T. 020 7963 1115 From the Archives In a new regular feature in the Newsletter, the School’s Consultant Archivist, Rita Boswell, brings us up to date with news from the archives. 46 Above: Old Tuck Shop (demolished in 1903). Can archivists make things last longer? inherent attitudes? The temptation of being involved in relocating and setting up a new Archive at the prestigious Westminster School was too much to resist. You would perhaps be forgiven for thinking that after being involved in physically moving three Archive Collections, two while working as an archivist at Essex Record Office, and another at Harrow School that enough was enough. There is, however, enormous satisfaction in putting order into a ‘collection’ and making it accessible for research, each move exposes weaknesses in systems to be corrected and avoided in the future. It is worth explaining that Westminster School Archive contains the written heritage of the School, but its remit also involves the caretaking of its treasures such as paintings, trophies, furniture, antiquarian books and artefacts spread throughout its premises. My professional training included conservation and preservation of all paper records and artefacts as well as the intellectual control of information, in the form of documentation, for both archives, modern and electronic records. It is frequently thought a boring, dirty, dusty job, usually undertaken by a plain Jane with horn-rimmed spectacles, tweed skirt and brogues; there may be many similarities here but it is certainly not boring! Now the users of an archive are a different matter, of course! They can be young/old, want the impossible - particularly when asking for photographs of their ancestors who attended in the 18th century - or just difficult when they think the pencil only rule doesn’t apply to them. But, believe me, ink marks can not be removed from manuscripts or photographs and do serious damage. In the past antiquarians, particularly in the 19th century, were keen to cherry-pick what they considered were important historical documents; however it was not until the 20th century that day to day records came to be considered future archives. As a result many paper documents were either destroyed or lost before their potential as a future historical record were recognised; this is the case in most schools. | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Enlightenment and action Westminster School has a unique heritage and a special place in the history of public schools. Over many years it has retained a valuable collection of antiquarian books, which in recent years have been painstakingly listed by Eddie Smith. By their nature, books, however, are not unique, while the written routine of school life is. Westminster has acknowledged the importance of its long history by engaging professional help and providing dedicated archival storage. During the summer of 2008 the archive was generously allocated an office and two storage rooms in the space previously used for teaching Spanish on Wren’s mezzanine floor. The first task was to reinforce the floor, as paper is extremely heavy, after which special racking was installed and the office fitted out. I arrived in September 2008 and together with Eddie Smith started preparing storage for the transfer of records and labeling shelves. A welcome extra pair of hands, in the guise of David Clifford, arrived in the autumn of 2009, which enabled the majority of the collections scattered throughout the School to be transferred into the store by the end of term, with just a few pockets outstanding. As a result the initial objective of completing a full transfer of records by 2010 is well on target. The records are being boxed in archival acid-free containers and listed to allow for efficient retrieval; a more long-term task will be to allocate unique identifiers and catalogue (a more detailed listing) each item. What do we have? As we go through the collections it is slowly becoming apparent what we have and what is missing. It is strange that the 20th Century should have lost so much of its written records, no doubt due to the disposable attitude which evolved during this period. There is a small collection of roughly sorted photographs covering the 19th and 20th century, many of which are without captions. House records look interesting and worth actively extending. A good selection of school magazines, such as the Ash Tree, The Clarion and The Elizabethan - all possible candidates for digitization. Plans and prints of buildings and people. There are school uniforms, including ties and caps, videos, CDs and an excellent though massive collection of books. There are, however, enormous gaps. So, where do we go from here? It is obvious to an archivist that an archive must not be allowed to stagnate, so a good archive motto might be ‘Today’s records make tomorrow’s archives’. It is very important to continue to collect and actively seek out items for inclusion which reflect the activities of the school, its teachers and pupils. Archivists should look forward as much as they look backward. What questions will the researcher of the future be asking in say 50 or 100 years? Records do not have to be written - they can also be in sound and video forms. Recordings of people’s school memories are very useful at putting back missing periods in the School’s history. Old Westminsters and former members of staff may well be able to help in all these areas. Another plan is to adopt an active collections policy, which involves surveying various record-generating areas in the School and consider which might produce information of possible historical interest in the future and then implement a system to capture this data. Who uses such a collection? A wide variety of researchers, from academics to family historians, are interested in school records. The topics are diverse concerning subjects such as cricket, football and Old Westminsters. This year’s main topic of interest has been flu epidemics in schools, obviously triggered by the outbreak of Swine Flu. Over the last 100 years many schools have recorded pupil deaths from various outbreaks, particularly the Spanish Flu pandemic in 1918/9; more recent episodes happened in 1957/8 and 1967/8. This time the researchers came from the medical profession rather than academia. There is a growing demand for statistical information which is impossible to meet without a lengthy series of relevant records. This is a clear indication of a future research trend. There are also internal demands for displays to celebrate occasions, such as the 450th Anniversary. National interest in school records There has been much enthusiasm shown in school records in recent years, encouraged by TV programmes such as “Who Do You Think You Are?”. As a consequence, many schools are now setting up small archives, with either a Librarian or retired member of staff in charge. They have recognized the specialist knowledge required and sought help from other schools. In 1998 this interest resulted in these acting archivists banding together into The School Archivists’ Group, a self-help organisation for the purpose of information sharing and support. Today its membership numbers over 165 independent schools. Above: Rita Boswell Can you help? Yes you can. If you have any documents, such as reports/ correspondence, concerning school activities or former pupils/teachers etc., please consider donating them to the archive. Photographs and memoirs of school life would be particularly welcome. We aim to set up an Oral History Project commencing next year and if you would like to take part to record memories of your time at the School please contact me. The Future of Westminster School Archive The archive collections have now been consolidated into a sound base for future growth. A watching brief is being kept on auction houses/eBay and an in-house collections policy will be adopted in the very near future to help build up the collections even further. The future looks encouraging. Above: The new rolling stacks Rita boswell E. rita.boswell@westminster.org.uk T. 020 7963 1106 ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 47 Passion crawl: the Prag award Ted Tregear (BB) and Roland Walters (BB) The first annual award given in memory of teacher Adolf Prag was given to two pupils in Busby’s for an Eastertide crawl of performances of the Passions. I don’t think either of us really knew what we were doing when we set off on this. I certainly didn’t: the Passions are pieces I thought I knew very well through recordings, and it seemed a nice idea to watch as many of them as we could fit in to one Eastertide. So when we planned it, it seemed best to choose from a whole range of performance styles and capabilities. To know the music itself, you have either got to ignore performance and sit at home with a score, or you have got to see as many performances as you possibly can, giving you a whole range of different insights and interpretations. In the end, we saw three of each Passion. This amounted to about 15 hours’ worth of pieces lasting five hours. And you would think, seeing them again and again, I would have a completely sure idea of exactly what they mean and were written for. But I am not sure I do. There were some incredibly important things the series of performances showed both of us. The first and most novel idea - at least for me - was how astonishingly difficult they are to perform well. The first passion was a John at a tiny church in Hampstead, performed by the local choral society and orchestra. Normally, there would be so many of these I would not have thought of going to them, but the Church had somehow managed to book Sarah Connolly and Gerald Finley to do it - two of the greatest soloists around at the moment. In the end, Sarah Connolly was in the middle of a run of Dido and Aeneas at the Royal Opera House, and felt physically exhausted to do it, but their names brought us to the first (mostly) amateur passion I had ever seen. This is when I realised how tricky it is as a piece. The conductor was less than inspiring, the choir was over-enthusiastic but under-rehearsed, and the 48 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Image from iStockphoto. text was a translation by the local vicar, who had included some very theologically questionably interpretations of the original Luther text Bach used for the story - including the ‘Temple Police’, and the tossing of a coin to determine who got Christ’s robe. But I wouldn’t have missed it for anything; Gerald Finley was fantastic - I had not heard him sing Bach before - and though the piece as a whole was not a huge success, it just showed how much Bach put in to these pieces, and how difficult it was to get even a small amount of that out. Another interesting performance we went to was a One Voice Per Part interpretation of the Matthew Passion at the Royal Festival Hall. This collaboration between the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment and a group of eight soloists, led by Mark Padmore, was the continuation of a fierce debate among performance scholars, started over thirty years ago by Joshua Rifkin. The theory that Bach would only have had eight singers, four in each choir With the sermon and hymns, ‘the service took about four hours, but it was an immensely moving experience. ’ and so one on each part, has attracted some very serious musicians, including Andrew Parrott and Paul McCreesh. Before this concert I thought it sounded like a great idea; I had only ever heard the results on recordings, where the balance of each voice can be fine-tuned to create the sound of a choir with more clarity. But this conductorless and choirless performance, which I expected to be the highlight of the whole Passion Crawl, showed me how much I needed a conductor and choir to enjoy the work. In a space like the Royal Festival Hall, the eight voices seemed underpowered. They were also obliged to sing at the top of their voices all the time just to be heard, and so the subtlety called for by the Chorales could not be shown. And for all the talent of the eight voices - including not only Mark Padmore, but Roderick Williams and Christianne Stotijn, so some really great soloists - they just did not blend as a choir. Perhaps it was the enormous pressure on each of them, or the fact that they are so used to singing on their own. The lack of a conductor also seemed to effect the performance; the crucial orchestral flurry, Sind Blitze, Sind Donde, was a bit of a mess without someone regulating it from the podium. As a whole it was less good than I had imagined, and it stood as a convincing proof of the necessity of a choir, at least in live performances. Above: Frede and Adolf Prag. Top: Image from iStockphoto. The most touching one we went to see was at St George’s Hanover Square. Each year, one of the Passions is performed on Good Friday, in the context of a service. So there was a hymn at the beginning and a hymn at the end, and a sermon after the first half. This year, Laurence Cummings was directing the choir in the Matthew Passion. The church has a long musical history - it was Handel’s church - but I did not expect the choir to be quite as good as they were. There were only about 16 of them, but the wood-panelling of the church meant it sounded very close. With the sermon and hymns, the service took about four hours, but it was an immensely moving experience. In a church that feels as small as St George’s, every small utterance by the Evangelist is picked up, and nothing is lost. This was my favourite concert of the Crawl; it communicated more than anything else the intimacy of the Passion, that it does not have to be remote and withdrawn, but can be much more personal. The process of rehearsal was one we got to see up close. Early in March, we went up to Cambridge for the day to hear Stephen Cleobury rehearsing for the St John Passion with the Choir at King’s and the Academy of Ancient Music, before watching the performance at the end of it. This gave an insight into the role of the conductor in a performance of this piece. Though much of his rehearsal was technical, he confessed to the choir at one point that he did not know what to do with the Chorale which ends the John Passion. ‘With the Matthew, it’s much easier to know when you stop: there’s a big chorus which ends with triumph. I just don’t know what to make of the Chorale at the end of this.’ I’m not sure he really succeeded in the end, but watching the rehearsals was a unique experience, all the more useful considering the performance did not really live up to them. His soloists were the same generation as him: James Bowman (now 68 or 69), William Kendall (around 60) and Stephen Varcoe (who started singing Christ about thirty years ago). The sad truth is that these great names were not the singers they once were. It was interesting to see them, but the music which had once come so naturally to them seemed to elude them this time. The role of the Evangelist was also something I had underestimated before. It is a role which pushes any tenor to their limits - both vocally and emotionally. And each performance had its different styles. At the Barbican, Riccardo Chailly used a German tenor, Johannes Chum. His voice sounded very like Kurt Equiluz’s, and he had the same, rather detached method of telling the story. This eliminated the sense of narrative line that a singer has to maintain to keep the work from flopping at all. Padmore’s Evangelist, famous throughout the world, was indeed a triumph - particularly considering his participation in all of the Chorales and choruses as well - but Nicholas Mulroy’s interpretation at St George’s was just as accomplished vocally, and had a sense of communication Padmore missed, probably because of the size of the Royal Festival Hall. There is a very difficult bit in the John Passion when Christ is being flogged, where the Evangelist has some incredible coloratura to manage, and this stood as a test for each singer than attempted it. At St John’s Smith Square, Mark Wilde coped completely comfortably, just grouping the notes and relaxing on them. The different treatments of the top B and melisma describing Peter’s betrayal in the Matthew Passion, just before Erbarme Dich, were very interesting to compare. Chum tried to get it over with, but Padmore - who trained as an haute-contre - dwelt on the top note, slowing the pace down, and really leaning into the suspensions of his line. This was really a wonderful thing to hear. I don’t think I understand the Passions now. I thought I did before we started. The effect of this Passion Crawl was to make me realise how little I knew about the pieces. But to be able to start all over again with an interpretation, to rid all influences - whether from recordings or performances - from your head, that is the real value in doing this. I feel closer to the work than I have ever felt before, simply from feeling further from truly understanding it. And for that I’ll be eternally grateful to this project. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 49 Sweet Home Chicago Will Harris (DD 2002-2007) winner of the 2009 Neville Walton Travel/Cultural Bursary writes. This summer, between August and September, a friend and I travelled from Chicago to Houston on Greyhound buses; we slept on the couches of strangers, some of whom we had contacted beforehand, most we discovered only days or hours before. On our first night in Chicago we meet our host Hayley at the bus stop. She gives us the key to her apartment and a set of directions written on the back of a carryout menu. She says she’s sorry she can’t go with us, she has a dance recital at eight, but will try to get back as soon as she can, probably around eleven. We are on Division Street, a Hispanic area once controlled by an infamous gang called the Latino Kings. This, like many other parts of the South and Westside, functions as a ductless gland for the city, secreting its problems and successes directly into the bloodstream. In the half-light young men gather on bikes outside the local cantina, shouting at each other from behind the handlebars. One of them looks at us sceptically but does nothing, too busy explaining something to a friend. We both notice a service station mural. Though its colours have been obscured by years of dust and rain it is still possible to decipher the image of a Puerta Rican family smiling at the Chicago skyline, eyes fixed on the twopronged tip of the Sears Tower. We ask each other if we were meant to turn off a block before. A half-hour later we come to Maplewood and find it is a different neighbourhood altogether, an African-American neighbourhood. But perhaps neighbourhood is not the best word. Each street is a self-contained community that, though it may exist within a larger community, is distinctively, racially, its own. Together they are a jumble, each limb jutting into another, jostling for supremacy. Into this street, this community we walk, slack-limbed, hopelessly out of place. We ask ourselves how we fit in. We could not be said to bridge any divisions. Perhaps we should ask these kids, home from school playing basketball, how 50 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 they think we fit into their lives. Or the smaller ones that chase each other across the street, dodging cars, the ones who follow us for a bit pretending we can’t see them, maybe they know. We find what we think is the apartment and double-check the menu before sliding our hands behind the front gate, shoving it until it opens. Because Hayley moved into the apartment less than two weeks ago it is still a mess. There are piles of clothes on the floor, scatterings of artwork and books. The only real furnishing is her sister’s chaise longue, which is the same dull cobalt as the walls and ceiling. We cannot find the light switch so must endure the half-darkness. At least, because the blinds have fallen off their rail, a little light reaches us from outside. We lie down, resting our heads on our bags and fall asleep. Two hours later the door opens violently. ‘I’ve never seen anything like it! Have you looked outside?’ she says, turning on the light behind the fridge. ‘There’s a pool of blood outside the house.’ At first we cannot remember where we are, who we’re talking to. ‘Outside, there’s a fight outside!’ Hayley continues. ‘I’ve never seen anything like it.’ ‘Who’s fighting who?’ we ask. She throws down her coat and sits beside us. ‘Two gangs! There must be at least six on either side.’ ‘Do you think they have guns?’ we ask. ‘They don’t bother.’ ‘I guess if they already have a conviction it’s not worth it.’ ‘Yeah, it’s only the young guys that have them now.’ We sit upright, looking Hayley in the eyes. ‘So who are the people outside? Why are they fighting?’ ‘One gang’s Puerta Rican, I think, the other’s Black. They always fight, but not usually around here.’ ‘Why not here?’ ‘Most of this street is families, I guess,’ she pauses thoughtfully. ‘The woman who lives upstairs, Debbie, called the police. Can you hear them?’ There are sirens, distant enough that they could be anywhere. We arc our necks and look out of the blindless window. ‘No police, not yet, but they’re not fighting anymore, they’re shouting. One of them looks badly hurt.’ ‘I think so, though I couldn’t get a good look. I didn’t want to go too close.’ ‘The blood must be his.’ We attempt to decode the scene from our vantage. Each drab of blood, gleaming like oil in the dark, leads back to the man outside, flat on his stomach. Two figures stand above his body, squaring off. ‘They can see into this house, you know, so we probably shouldn’t stare. Let’s go into the kitchen. You want something to eat or drink?’ We get up, startled to still be indoors, to have access to a kitchen, and walk into the next room. We think of something we read earlier, something Dos Passos had called the U.S.A. - ‘the link that tingled in the blood.’ As Hayley begins preparing an omelette, as the shouting grows louder and louder, the phrase takes on an ominous aspect. It must be that suggestion of a metallic element, the ‘link’ or chain, Meanwhile we cannot stop ourselves from staring at the injured man, still conscious though clearly in some pain. Based on the bandaging it looks like a deep gash beneath his left ribcage; perhaps his lower colon has been pierced, perhaps they have literally gutted him. He sees us and, without saying anything, gives us an unmistakable glance. If he could he would ask us what the hell we’re looking at. Four days later we are on Greyhound bus in Southern Illinois, travelling from St Louis to Carbondale, a small town whose stagnant coalmining industry has been practically killed off by the recent economic downturn. Cornfields with tall stalks, gold-headed, are watched over by dense green forest. From out of the trees comes a wind that combs through the corn. Among the forests and corn is a small lake of glacial stillness, perfectly reflective, with an unmanned pickup beside it. Because the land is so flat the sky seems huge. This must be why so many people in Chicago have no time for the rest of Illinois, why there are so many churches here. You can only be a small creature on this land, under its huge sky. You must build your house low because the closer it is to the ground the further from judgment. Judgment comes in the clouds. At dusk, they are black beasts, large enough to carry gods, whose nostrils fume. It is because of them that soon the heads of corn will not be so gold and the forests will merge with the darkness. Because the land is so flat the sky ‘seems huge. This must be why so many people in Chicago have no time for the rest of Illinois. ’ making contact and imposing itself with a tingle on the dark, moist flow of blood. There are no glasses so Hayley simply pours the beer into a measuring jug and hands it to us. An hour or two later police cars arrive. They knock on a few doors, ask questions, but by this point everyone who was involved is gone, probably not far, though easily beyond the warrant of any officer. We decide to go out to a bar on Division called Papa Ray’s. As we leave the man we saw earlier, badly injured, is being lifted onto a stretcher by paramedics. Just then Brooks, a neighbour, walks by. Hayley asks what he’s up to. Not much, he says, what with schoolwork and Labour Day coming up, when he’s going back to Ohio. Because he hasn’t been on Maplewood all night Hayley explains what happened. That night our hosts in Carbondale, a couple called Bill and Priya, take us to a bonfire in celebration of their friend Nate’s newly established organic farm. Nate studied in Chiacgo so we talk about our time there. He agrees, it has its problems, in some ways it’s still segregated and the city politics is definitely still corrupt. ‘I think the corruption there, at the head, infects everything, the whole body,’ he says. Nate has no workable saw so throws large trunks into the fire that take all evening just to char. He offers us some peach cobbler, sizzling beneath a bed of coals, but we are full, taken in by the density of the forest, the backdrop of hissing locusts and yowling coyotes, crying for one another’s company, for food. Apparently they will not bother us, the fire keeps them away. We are still thinking of our journey here. To get in and out of the city are several major arteries, one of which, Interstate 94, goes south and is crisscrossed by numerous overpasses, including several metrolink stops. Before leaving we have to drive across one of these overpasses and, for a moment, can see the whole system at work. The thousands of arteries draining blood from rural Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, all connect to this single, wide artery feeding into the city of Chicago, visible as downtown, the glittering cerebral cortex in the distance. To apply for the bursary, see details overleaf. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER >> | 2009/2010 | 51 The Neville Walton Travel /Cultural bursary Award: Worth £500 per annum Eligibility: Open to Old Westminsters under 25 Report: On return, write a ‘trip report’ for the Elizabethan Newsletter Application deadline: 1st May Winner announced: 1st June About the bursary In order to celebrate Neville Walton’s (QS 1966-1971) involvement with the Elizabethan Club and his love of travel and foreign culture, the Club created this annual Bursary in 2006. All Old Westminsters aged 25 and under at the time of application can apply. The value of the Bursary is £500 per annum and is awarded on the basis of the best application from an Old Westminster received by 1st May of each year. Application details Each application of not more than 500 words will be reviewed by the Elizabethan Club Committee who will consider the cultural aspect of each trip, rather than pure travel involved. Report on the trip The annual winner will be notified by 1st June of each year and the result will be posted on the Old Westminster website. An article on each trip should be prepared for publication in the Elizabethan Newsletter (1,000–1,500 words) and should be submitted within two months of return. Further information For further details please contact: The Development Office Westminster School 17a Dean's Yard London SW1P 3PB T: 020 7963 1115 Applications should be posted to the above address or sent by email to: developmentoffice@westminster.org.uk 52 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Above: Garden Party, 13 June 1946. OW News If you have any news you would like to share with your contemporaries, please send details to the Editor: The Elizabethan Newsletter, Development Office, 17 Dean’s Yard, London SW1P 3PB. E. developmentoffice@westminster.org.uk Edward’s book, The Perilous Road to Rome and Beyond, has been translated into Italian and a new edition is to be published in Rome. Council after seven years, as well as most other London based activities. His only regular duty visits to London are related to Vestey Pension Trust and Butchers’ Livery Company Court. Michael baron (GG 1942-1946) Richard Sturch (KS 1949-1954) Edward Grace (BB 1928-1932) Michael was the editor of On a Bat’s Wing: Poems about Bats (ISBN 978-1-905512-27-0), published by Five Leaves Poetry. Edward Enfield (RR 1944-1948) Edward’s latest book, Old Age and How to Survive It, was published in September. He says ‘it is a work of moral philosophy but the publishers have labelled it humour as they say there is more money in humour than in moral philosophy’. Graduated BSc from the Open University in 2007. Published From World to God? (Resource Publications) in 2008 and co-edited (with Professor Suzanne Bray) Charles Williams and his Contemporaries (Cambridge Scholars Publishing), published in 2009. Christopher bartlett (BB 1951-1956) Has authored The Flying Dictionary: Fascinating Explanations for Journalists, Aviation Buffs and Concerned Flyers, published by OpenHatch Books in 2008, followed this year by Air Crashes and Miracle Landings. Humphrey Palmer (BB 1943-1949) Previously Professor of Philosophy at Cardiff University, now retired, has written a book entitled How Parables Work, explaining what hearers found they had let themselves in for. For more information go to www.palmerparables.co.uk. Colin Cullimore (BB 1945-1950) Has handed over the Chairmanship of Lincoln Cathedral Grattan Puxon (GG 1953-1956) Wrote the novel Freeborn Traveller (Small World Media, 2007) as part of commitment to stop the eviction of a hundred Gypsy families from their own land at Dale Farm, Crays Hill, Essex. Founder of the Gypsy Council back in 1966 and former General-Secretary of the International Romani Union. Now back in his home town of Colchester after time abroad in Ireland, former ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 53 Above: At the Fund for Westminster Drinks. Yugoslavia, Greece, Germany and California. Email: dale.farm@btinternet.com Christopher Channer (GG 1955-1960) Retired in October 2008 after ten years as Rector of St Michael-in-Lewes and St Thomas, Cliffe, East Sussex. David Northmore (BB 1957-1960) Having retired in 2008 as Professor of Psychology at the University of Delaware, David and his wife Lenis now divide their time between Delaware and the Algarve, Portugal. Neil inglis (WW 1975-1979) Neil and his wife Marielle have been enjoying life in Washington DC, singing in the local church choir. Neil has reached his twentieth anniversary as a translator/ reviser at the International Monetary Fund, and is now the editor of the Tyndale Society Journal, a historical review focusing on the life and work of William Tyndale, the earliest published translator of the Bible, and a forum for discussion of broader Reformation issues. He is also the Associate Editor of www.interlitq.org, an on-line journal of literature and opinion. Paul lowenstein (DD 1977-1981) David Neuberger (WW 1961-1965) Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury has been appointed the new Master of the Rolls and Head of Civil Justice, having been the youngest of the law lords. His new role became effective from 1st October 2009. Peter Mieville (GG 1965-1970) The Suffolk launch of his third book in the Burnchester Mystery, Tyro’s Journey, took place at The Abbey in Eye on 14th June 2009. Nigel Planer (WW 1966-1970) Has been appearing in “Hairspray” in the West End during 2009, as well as his second play “Death of Long Pig”, about the last days of Robert Louis Stevenson and Paul Gauguin in Polynesia, produced at the Finborough Theatre to a good critical and audience reaction. Piers Gibbon (LL 1980-1984) Presented the show ‘Headshrinkers of the Amazon’, which was broadcast by Channel 5 and has been commissioned to present another TV documentary for National Geographic ‘Cannibals of the Pacific’. Todd Hamilton (AHH 1980-1984) Acquired dual Italian and British citizenship after seventeen years living in a small town near Venice. Now has a niece and nephew both by marriage and by blood and is enjoying the quiet life. Alex Williams (QS 1981-1985) A senior partner at Farrer & Co., his oldest son Robert (QS 1999-2004) is taking an MSc at Wolfson College, Oxford, in Mathematics and Computer Science. Has published two new collections of cartoons. 101 Ways to Leave the Law is a funny, subversive take on every lawyer’s secret fantasy - dumping the law for a new life, while with 101 Uses for a Useless Banker, Alex ruminates on what has become of the bankers who no longer find themselves in the positions they once enjoyed. David barnes (AHH 1967-1973) Mat loup (LL 1982-1986) James Furber (WW 1968-1971) Having obtained a City and Guild qualification, David offers picture framing on a semi professional basis (email: davidbarnes65@hotmail.com). After fifteen years at The Sunday Times, Mat has moved with his family to Canada’s west coast, and thus far has stayed away from grizzlies. Penny Wright (RR 1976-1978) Owen Matthews (DD 1985-1990) As Honorary Physician and Medical Director of the British Association for Performing Arts Medicine (www.bapam.org.uk), Penny would love to hear from any other medic-musicians or physio-musicians. 54 Took silk in March and now practising in Commercial, Financial and Business litigation. | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Owen’s book, Stalin’s Children, was published by Bloomsbury in June. A family memoir of three generations of the Russian side of his family, The Sunday Times described it as ‘a Russian Wild Swans’. Stalin’s Children Above: Neal Richardson playing piano at the Elizabethan Club Dinner. was shortlisted for the Guardian First Books Award and selected for the Book of the Year by the Sunday Telegraph, Spectator and The Sunday Times. Owen has donated a copy to the library and is sure that Bloomsbury would be delighted to make copies available at a discounted rate to Old Westminsters. Annabel was a corporate M&A lawyer at Ashursts, but has taken a rest from the legal world to be a mother. Andrew Howe (LL 1990-1995) Andrew and his wife Gaby have added one more to the population of South West London. Oliver was born in June 2009 and is doing well. Jennifer Rusby (BB 1990-1992) Recently appointed as a Consultant Oncoplastic Breast Surgeon at the Royal Marsden Hospital in Surrey. She trained in Oxford and Wessex before undertaking a research fellowship at Massachusetts General Hospital, and Oncoplastic Fellowships in Birmingham and at the Royal Marsden in Chelsea. Nan Atichatpong (GG 1988-1993) Having spent six years as a project architect on the renewal of St Martin-in-the-Fields (recently awarded the British Construction Industry Award), Nan has set up his own architecture practice, SolidVoid Architects, with projects in London, Madrid and Bangkok. Recent works include a conversion of a clock factory into a private residence and an exhibition for the City of Madrid on London’s Regent Street. John Mehrzad (BB 1992-1997) Called to the Bar in 2005 and has been practising as a barrister from Cloisters Chambers in the Temple, specialising in employment and commercial disputes. Having been Captain of Water and rowing at an international level for Ireland, he now rows for the Elizabethan Boat Club and is ‘reminiscing about how good we once were - but still picking up occasional medals along the way’. Serena Steinberg (née Hines) (DD 2001-2003) Living in Palo Alto, California, with her husband David. David is studying at Stanford University for his MBA, while Serena has received her Graduate Gemologist degree from the GIA in New York and now runs her own jewelry business, SHS Jewels. Artin basirov (GG 1989-1994) Maximilian Kamran Basirov was born to Artin and Alexandra on 15th August at 3.18am weighing 3.97kg (8lbs 12 oz), 55cm. Annabel Simpson (College 1992-1994) Married George Biddulph on 27 October 2001, and gave birth to two sons, Henry in 2004 and Alex in 2006. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 55 Westminster quad takes Henley glory Oliver Cox (HH 1997–2002) At a Henley Royal Regatta which drew most attention for record temperatures and an unprecedented possible removal of jackets in the Stewards, four Westminsters and their coaching team this year quietly prepared another piece of history. On Sunday, 5th July 2009 the First Quad of Pierre Thomas (HH), Wilf Kimberley (WW), Daniel Rix-Standing (BB) and Tom Fielder (DD) beat Melbourne Grammar School, Australia to take the Fawley Challenge Cup. Podium time an hour later was the culmination of years of hard training and months of specific preparation. However, this meant more: as generations of Westminster oarsmen who have battled year after year at Henley will know, a Westminster crew had never won a final since the Regatta’s inception in 1839. This crew was, of course, exceptional. While the year began with singles and pairs, a composite quad containing three of the Henley crew came sixth overall at Fours Head, beating Elite quads and fours that included aspirant Olympians. Those who questioned the result were presumably silenced when the Westminster scullers also then won National Schools’ Championship Quads. Bill Mason, their head coach, described an advanced training regime boosted by training camps in Ghent and Mequinenza and progressive physiological testing at Oxford Brookes’ facilities. Despite individual success at GB trials, the quad remained a unit - allowing them, at Marlow, to beat the junior Great Britain quad! Their defeated Melbourne opponents’ post-race report ruefully now describes them as “probably the fastest schoolboy quad in the world”. Once at Henley, a tense quarter-final against a Melbourne University & Barwon (Australia) composite saw our quad have to regain the lead after one sculler lost his seat. Even in the final, Melbourne Grammar School’s ever-quick start saw them lead to the Barrier marker. However, Westminster were leading before Fawley and, to the 56 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Above: The Henley Quad, C D Riches, Bill Mason and the Head Master. cheers of parents and Old Westminsters including the present Elizabethan Boat Club, increased their lead from half to two-thirds of a length down the enclosures to the finish. A group hug on shaky legs was their private celebration, before the grand prize-giving and collection of the Cup from Lord Coe. Bill Mason, formerly coach at Imperial College BC, praised the athletes’ discipline and professionalism throughout the build-up. These were, of course, months also dominated by exam preparation. “If they couldn’t train together, they’d just get together in pairs and train when they could. I could trust them... They showed what is possible.” He also had a word for the quad’s “totally supportive” parents, and gratitude for the support of the School and those other parents who have together supported the Club with its latest and most advanced equipment - especially Paul Burdell’s magnificent donation of a brand new Empacher quad in the run-up to the Regatta. Westminster’s oarsmen will not rest on their laurels. The squads are back in training, under CD and Bill’s watchful eyes. The Princess Elizabeth Cup remains to be won. Re-foundation of St Peter’s College at Westminster by Elizabeth i 450th Anniversary To mark the 450th Anniversary, a series of events (shown overleaf) has been planned to bring the School and Abbey communities together. For further details and to book for events, see our website: www.oldwestminster.org.uk In addition, a commemorative print (left) and pottery mug have been specially commissioned and designed, see details of how to obtain them on page 60. Above: 450th Anniversary Commemorative Limited Edition Print Produced from an original watercolour painting designed exclusively for Westminster School's 2010 celebrations by artist Alison Merry. The painting features Queen Elizabeth I enthroned beneath the School's Burlington Arch and surrounded by vignettes representing significant events, people and places from the School's history over the past 450 years. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 57 450th Anniversary Events Calendar 2010 A full list of events for 2010 is shown below. For further information and to book for events see our website: www.oldwestminster.org.uk Election Term 27–30 Apr Wed 5 May From 13 May Fri 21 May Fri 11 Jun Mon 21 Jun Fri 9 Jul School Musical: West Side Story 7.15 pm. School. To book tickets contact the Common Room Secretary (T: 020 7963 1050; E: 2010@westminster.org.uk) lecture: Helen Alexander (President of the CBI) 7.15 pm. School Exhibition of Abbey and School Artefacts Abbey Library. Group visits by prior arrangement with Abbey Librarian (T: 020 7654 4826) Foundation Anniversary Celebration School. By invitation only Cantandum Summer Concert: A Masque by Thomas linley – ‘Ode on the Spirits of Shakespeare’ 7.15 pm. Ashburnham Garden. No booking required Summer Art Show 4.00 pm. Art School (Sutcliff’s). No booking required 2010 Elizabethan ball 7.00 pm onwards. Abbey/School Play Term Until 30 Sep Wed 15 Sep 7–8 Oct Sat 9 Oct Fri 19 Nov 6–9 Dec Fri 10 Dec Wed 15 Dec 58 | Exhibition of Abbey and School Artefacts (continues) Abbey Library. Group visits by prior arrangement with Abbey Librarian (T: 020 7654 4826) lecture: Professor Rick Trainor – ‘british Schools and Universities 1560–2060: A Higher Education Perspective on Student Recruitment’ 7.15 pm. School Opera: King Arthur (music by Purcell, libretto by Dryden) 7.30 pm. Abbey September Saturday School. No booking required Commemoration of benefactors 7.30 pm. Abbey. By invitation only The latin Play: Phormio (Terence) 7.15 pm. Millicent Fawcett Hall lecture: David Starkey 7.15 pm. School Concluding service: The Rt Revd David Stancliffe (OW) bishop of Salisbury 9.00 am. Abbey. By invitation only ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 The Elizabethan ball 9th July 2010 One of the most spectacular events of the Anniversary Year will be The Elizabethan Ball which will be held in the beautiful surroundings of the School and the Abbey. The event will be a black tie evening of entertainment and celebration which will from 7pm on Friday and finish at 2am on Saturday. Venue and entertainment The Elizabethan Ball will be held in the precincts of the Abbey and School. The evening's entertainment will be drawn mainly from home grown talent, provided largely by the Abbey, pupils, parents, friends and Old Westminsters who will perform throughout the entire site, including the Abbey itself and College Garden, as well as Little Dean's Yard and Up School. Tickets ‘Dining Tickets’ have now sold out. ‘Non Dining Tickets’ are limited. If you would like to attend, please complete the enclosed ‘Elizabethan Ball Application Form’ and send it along with your payment. Old Westminsters are encouraged to apply for tickets as soon as possible to avoid disappointment. Further information E: elizabethanball@westminster.org.uk T: 020 7963 1115 ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 59 450th Anniversary Commemorative Mug Designed by Emma Bridgewater exclusively for the School, this commemorative pottery mug is now available to buy for £15.00 each. Description Standing 9.3cm high and with a diameter of 9 cm at the base, the mug is parchment cream with 'Westminster Pink' lettering. Around the outside rim of the mug the words read ‘1560-2010 - FlOREAT’ and on the inside of the rim, ‘450 YEARS iN THE PiNK’. Profits from sales All profits from sales of the mug will go to the charity 'Phab', which the School regularly supports. Phab's aim is “to promote and encourage people of all abilities to come together on equal terms, to achieve complete inclusion within the wider community”. How to order Please order your mugs by email or telephone: E: 2010@westminster.org.uk T: 020 7963 1180 Payment can be made by cash or cheque on collection of your order from the School Reception at 18 Dean's Yard. We are not able to send orders by post. 450th Anniversary Commemorative limited Edition Print Description The A2 colour print (overall size including border: 420mm x 594mm) is printed on 300gsm textured paper to give a matt finish. Each print will be signed and numbered by the artist, who has also composed an accompanying synopsis describing the sources and details featured in the illustration. The prints are presented in a cream mount, wrapped and flat-packed. Cost per print The cost of each print is £89. This price includes postage and packaging to addresses in the UK. Please add £15 for delivery overseas. Commissions for hand-painted copies of the original A2 painting are welcomed by Alison. The cost of a hand-painted copy is £750 plus postage and packaging. Delivery date by arrangement. 60 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 A limited edition print (250 copies) has been produced from an original watercolour painting designed exclusively for Westminster School's 2010 celebrations by artist Alison Merry. The painting features Queen Elizabeth I enthroned beneath the School's Burlington Arch and surrounded by vignettes representing significant events, people and places from the School's history over the past 450 years. How to order Orders can be made by telephone or in writing: T: 01452 770517 E: alisonjmerry@gmail.com Alison Merry illUMiNATiONS 3 Rose Hill, Far Wells Road, Bisley, Stroud, Glos. GL 6 7AQ www.merryilluminations.co.uk OW Careers SolidVoid Architects In a new section promoting OW Careers, we focus on Architect, Nan Atichatpong (GG 1988-1993) My job at Eric Parry Architects came rather unexpectedly. It was summer 2001 and I had wanted to return to New York City, where I worked for 2 year before coming back to complete my architecture Diploma at Cambridge University. A friend suggested I joined her at EPA to do some part time work while I plotted my next move. I was immediately attracted by the practice’s work ethos, their intellectual vigour and the quality of the architecture. Eric Parry is one of the great architects working in London today. After 9/11, however, I decided to continue at EPA and stay in London. In March 2002, EPA won the competition for a hugely prestigious and challenging project: the Renewal of St Martin-in-the-Fields on Trafalgar Square. I became one of the team and we embarked on the planning application, which we obtained, followed by the mammoth tender documentation, for which we worked late into the evening every night for a whole summer. Once on site, I was project architect for the new public underground atrium which replaced the leaky burial vaults. After 7 years and after the completion of that award-winning project, I felt it was the right time to move on. I resigned and went to Rio de Janeiro for two months. With my batteries recharged, I returned to London in January 2009 and set up SolidVoid Architects with two Spanish friends. We started in March 2009 and were fortunate enough to immediately win a competition. Since then we have picked up a variety of interesting projects, including a restaurant in Victoria, a touring art exhibition for the City of Madrid and a conversion of an old clock-part factory into a home for an Islamic art scholar. I have also started to teach at Nottingham University. It is a privilege indeed to be able to pass on the experiences I have picked up since I started studying architecture in 1994 to a whole new generation of eager students. Despite the current economic conditions, SolidVoid has had a successful first year and we are expanding. It is our hope that we will continue to attract interesting work and to develop a critical and responsive design process to provide thoughtful and elegant designs that are both innovative and contextually sensitive. Top: Design for private residence, London SW3 Middle: Exhibition design for Casa de Correos, Madrid and El Prat Airport, Barcelona Bottom: Nan Atichatpong, Marta Granda Nistal, Gonzalo Coello de Portugal SolidVoid Architects Unit 3.1 2-6 Northburgh Street London EC1V 0AY T. +44 (0) 20 3217 0025 M. +44 (0) 7854 924 004 W. www.solidvoid.net Nan Atichatpong E. nan@solidvoid.net ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 61 Obituaries Maurice James Baird-Smith 1918-2009 (GG 1932-1936) Maurice Baird-Smith, who has died aged 90, was one of the RAF’s last surviving World War II bomber pilots. He was a pathfinder and Wing Commander who flew Wellingtons and Lancasters with 7 Squadron. BairdSmith earned the Distinguished Flying Cross for his successful mission bombing the heavily-defended German air-base on Rhodes. By destroying enemy aircraft on the ground he permanently removed their air-cover. In 1943 the War Office decided that they needed a photogenic RAF officer to ‘sell’ the war to an American public who were largely indifferent to the bloody battle being fought in Europe. Baird-Smith, with his wit, intelligence and fine service record, proved to be the ideal choice. Through lectures and lobbying Washington he put across the argument for the US to enter the war. In the course of his tour of America he was particularly proud at having met Walt Disney, Henry Ford and Colonel Charles Lindbergh. Oscar-winning film director William Wyler even sent a letter to Hollywood actress Greer Garson ‘in the hope that you may be able to make Baird-Smith’s stay in California a little more pleasant’. On returning home he rejoined his squadron taking part in many bombing raids on Germany. His sorties proved how hollow Goering’s boast to Hitler was that ‘the RAF would never bomb Berlin’. In 1944, after a successful night raid on Berlin, Baird-Smith was shot down by a Messerschmitt 110 night fighter. His bombadier was subsequently murdered by the Berlin mob but BairdSmith evaded capture for a month. He was imprisoned in Stalag Luft III but, fortunately, arrived too late to join the Great Escape after which many prisoners were recaptured and shot. A grateful British government showed their appreciation of his contribution to the war effort by docking his pay during his imprisonment. 62 first to New York and Houston to learn the oil business. A hectic seven years followed in Brazil before he was drafted in to West Africa to sort out Shell’s complex holdings there. Moving to Chile as general manager was, Baird-Smith always said, the happiest period of his life. At weekends he could ski in the Andes before lunch and swim in the Pacific in the afternoon. His love of the country was reciprocated when the President awarded him the Order of Bernardo O’Higgins, an honour rarely bestowed on foreigners. Baird-Smith was posted to Havana as general manager shortly after the 1959 revolution. He recalled Fidel Castro’s younger brother Raul marching into his office, placing a pistol on the table and warning him that he had just 24 hours to leave Cuba. Baird-Smith’s final posting was to Athens as managing director where he made many friends and built a splendid home opposite Spetsai. He retired in 1969 when he was able to fully indulge his love of flying and sailing. He made three major flights aboard his Cessna Skylane and Piper Comanche: to West Africa, Hong Kong and Cape Town. He continued flying well into his eighties and in 1999 the Guinness Book of Records recognized him for having held a flying licence for a world record 63 years, 47 days. Maurice Baird-Smith died in Grasse on 31st January 2009. He was married twice: first to Vyvyan Bodley, a neice of of Viscount Waverley, a member of Churchill’s wartime cabinet. He is survived by his second wife Monique Mousseau, a former Carven fashion model. The Rev Prebendary Willie Booth 1939-2009 Willie Booth was the Sub-Dean of the Chapels Royal, the Sub-Almoner of the Royal Almonry, Deputy Clerk of the Closet of the Ecclesiastical Household, and Domestic Chaplain at Buckingham Palace from 1991 until his retirement in 2007. Maurice James Baird-Smith was born on 14th August 1918, the son of the Rev Alexander Baird-Smith, rector of Wheathampstead, Hertfordshire and Ellen Mary Campbell of the Campbell shipping family. He was educated at Westminster School but, instead of attending university, joined the RAF as an 18-year-old trainee pilot. He progressed from Tiger Moth bi-planes to flying ageing Harrow bombers. A year followed working for an Americanowned aircraft-instrument company. After the Munich crisis he realized that war was probably inevitable and rejoined the RAF. He became a flying instructor at RAF Harwell before demanding that he rejoin his squadron for active service. He flew countless bombing missions over Germany and attacked the German ground troops during the 1940 evacuation of Dunkirk. He was then posted to Malta where he took part in the epic Fleet Air Arm torpedo attack on the Italian fleet moored at Taranto. William James Booth was born in Ballymena, Co Antrim, Northern Ireland, in 1939. He was educated at Ballymena Academy and Trinity College Dublin. He was made deacon of the Church of Ireland in 1962, and ordained priest in 1963. Booth’s first appointment was as curate of St Luke’s Parish, Belfast, where he served in 1962-64. After the war Baird-Smith joined Shell as a trainee and began a 25-year career largely spent abroad. He was posted In 1973 when Westminster School was in need of a new chaplain, he was poached by John Rae, then the Head | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 In 1965 he arrived at Cranleigh School, Surrey, to take up the post of chaplain. For someone who had led a relatively sheltered life, it was a pretty severe shock to be pitched into the adolescent world of the Swinging Sixties. He had rooms right at the centre of the school and immersed himself in school life. It is testimony to the regard and affection that he engendered in the pupils that many kept in touch with him throughout his life. He married them, baptised their children and officiated at the funerals of some young people who had died before their time. coaster for guests and hosts. Many Westminster pupils said that this week was the most formative of their school days. Booth was the inspiration and entrepreneur behind Westminster PHAB. He had the ability to make everyone feel worthwhile. PHAB still flourishes at the school. Above: Willie Booth. Master, much to the annoyance of Cranleigh. Booth arrived at Westminster in September 1974. He was an instant success. His great strength as a chaplain was that he could get on the same wavelength as the young. If any pupil, or indeed colleague, was in difficulties nothing was too much trouble for him. Booth wore his faith lightly and yet many held him up as an example of a man whose life embodied all the Christian virtues. He was the first to say that he was not an academic and that was a relief to his adolescent audience. In his sermons he gave it to them straight - with the odd joke thrown in - and such talks were much more to their taste than some of the fustier offerings from others. The added element of a Northern Ireland twang when he was in full flow gave an extra piquancy. He made a point of being available to everybody. He did not foist himself on anyone but got to know pupils by being around and chatting so that they were relaxed in his company. They knew where to go if they were in trouble. He was famous for his late-night ghost stories which pinstriped stockbrokers would remind him of when they met him again many years later. As sometimes happens there are tragedies among the young. Far too often, even with all the help available from teachers and counsellors, a young man or woman may come to feel that it is better to end their life. Booth managed these horrors with great sensitivity and often remained in touch with parents long after the event. When Booth was at Cranleigh he had organised a PHAB (physically handicapped and able-bodied) course. This he took with him to Westminster. Every year at the beginning of the summer holidays about thirty sixth-form Westminster pupils would stay behind for a week. They would welcome 30 handicapped pupils as their guests for a residential course. They would work together in groups to produce art, dance and musical events, culminating in a show at the end of the week. It was an emotional roller- Booth was made Priest in Ordinary to the Queen in 1976 an honorary title which meant that he often officiated at the Chapel Royal. In 1990 Booth was invited to lunch at the Palace. He found himself sitting next to the Queen and unbeknown to him this was an interview. It obviously went well. In 1991 he left Westminster and moved to the Chapel Royal as Sub-Dean. This involved looking after the Chapels Royal as well as being Domestic Chaplain at Buckingham Palace. As one would expect, Booth regarded the job of chaplain as caring for everybody from the coachman to the Royal Family. Each individual mattered and was given equal time and care. Booth was constant in friendship and people in real distress came to him. Perhaps it was his Ulster background which made him refreshingly unfussy and unpompous about the liturgy. There was a freshness and lack of cynicism about Booth which endeared him to many. He was amazed that someone like him, who regarded himself as a simple fellow from Ballymena, was involved in the great ceremonies of state. He could never quite get over the fact that one day at Sandringham he found himself sitting on a sofa with the Queen on one side of him and Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother on the other. Both Chapels Royal have been used in recent years for the lying-in-state of members of the Royal Family. The coffins of the Queen Mother and of Princess Margaret lay at the Queen’s Chapel, while that of Diana, Princess of Wales, lay in the Chapel Royal at St James’s Palace. This meant that Booth was intimately involved with the family at those very difficult times. He was appointed LVO in 1999 and CVO in 2007 after 16 years’ service to the household. After his retirement he went to live in King’s Lynn, Norfolk. He maintained his base in London by becoming chaplain to the East India Club. Recently, covering a sabbatical, he had been the acting chaplain at New College, Oxford. He brought the same care and attention to the job as he always did, even though it was for no more than six months. Booth will be remembered with affection and gratitude by so many of the hundreds of people he came into contact with. He did not marry. He is survived by a brother and a sister. The Rev Prebendary Willie Booth, CVO, Sub-Dean of the Chapels Royal, was born on February 3, 1939. He died of heart failure on June 2, 2009, aged 70 © The Times, 10th June 2009 A donation of audio equipment to the Drama and Music departments at the School was very generously made by Oli Da Costa (RR 1990-1995) in memory of Willie and the great work he did at and for the School. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 63 Henry Thomas Cadbury-Brown 1913-2009 (GG 1927-1930) Henry Thomas Cadbury-Brown (always known as Jim) was one of Britain’s youngest and most vibrant Modernist architects. His work blossomed from the mid-30s when he won prestigious competitions. This enabled him to start his own practice in Mayfair and to forge ahead with new and exciting designs. Le Corbusier and Berthold Lubetkin inspired him - once he had absorbed their theories Jim never looked back. Pitched roofs and chimneys were out; glass, water, music and intricate modular designs were in. Jim’s father, H W Cadbury-Brown, a non-practising solicitor, was constantly on the move renting and buying properties. He was gassed and invalided out of the Royal Horse Artillery during World War I but remained a talented horseman. Jim’s grandfather H Cadbury-Brown (a descendant of the Cadbury chocolate family) was a prosperous property developer residing in a magnificent London home with greenhouses bursting with tropical fruit and exotic palms. Life was all tennis parties, motoring in the 1908 Fiat, soirées and Grand Tours. Jim was born in Sarratt, Hertfordshire but soon moved to Wormingford, Essex, nurturing his delight of living in East Anglia. His father owned a moated 200-acre farm keeping cattle, and breeding and showing horses at agricultural shows. Both Jim’s sisters enjoyed hunting and dressage but Jim was never comfortable on a horse, and disappointed his father by building little houses in the barn. His sisters were chunky and brave; Jim was lean and artistic and, later in life, preferred arranging flowers to repairing the roof. His worst memory was of having his tonsils removed on Grandpa’s dining table. “They put a hole in my tongue and a bit of string to hold it down, I fought like an animal with Auntie Edith and Auntie Nellie lying on top of me. There were lamps and sheets and a dreadful smell of ether.” As a reward he was presented with a bowl of two goldfish and a catfish. “The catfish ate the goldfish from the tails up, until they disappeared.” A governess called Beanie taught him at home, and he was then sent to a Dame school. As a very old man he harboured terrible memories of little boys being bullied by masters, pulped senseless with Fives racquets until they collapsed. Jim fell over frequently due, they said, to flat feet. Desperate to show his sporting prowess he won the Under 11. “Nothing fancy,” he said, “Just jumping, jumping, jumping. I could hardly walk.” Eventually he was diagnosed with diphtheria paralysis and confined to bed for months. A blind masseur was engaged to coax his muscles, “I hated him, he slapped me hard on the back and legs and I wanted to slap him back.” “My father wanted me to go to Westminster School and I was there from the age of 13 in January 1927 until I was 17 in July 1930. I struggled with the Common Entrance but got in by nepotism.” He was in Grant’s and received the Football League Medal. “I started in a class of boys 2 or 3 years older than me. My father discovered that they were 64 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Above: Jim Cadbury-Brown. low achievers but the sons of Old Boys who could not be refused. Eventually I was moved, and my schoolmaster was like Will Hay with a crooked pince-nez and a dusty mortarboard. We used to act things. We would rearrange the forms and desks and play at Law Courts. Until my voice broke, I was a chorister and sang in Westminster Abbey. Once the conductor was Gustav Holst but I was not impressed, he was just another old man waving a stick”. (Much later Holst’s daughter, Imogen, became Jim’s neighbour in Church Walk, Aldeburgh.). A good friend was R W P Smith with whom Jim lost touch but, later, met him again with photographer Norman Parkinson. Another fellow pupil was Kim Philby. “He was a bright scholar and the school goal keeper. As a team member he was a problem, but in a crisis he acted alone. Are all goalkeepers potential spies, or are spies loners?” Jim said he had an uneventful school career with minor successes in maths, physics and chemistry but was a major failure in the compulsory subject of Divinity. Aged about 15 or 16 he decided he wanted to be an architect. No one took much notice of him because he had no real interests. “So then I said I would be an accountant or a lawyer or an engineering draughtsman. I was wise enough to know that I should want to do something. Eventually architecture was agreed upon and, aged 17, I joined the Architectural Association which has always been one of organisation, ambition and operation running with a great deal of flexibility. It is still a unique school with a worldwide committed membership, and has always been at the cusp of coming to terms with new challenges posed by globalisation, urbanisation and new technologies.” He enjoyed every minute at the AA and did quite well. “I had a big interest in things I liked, but was not very good at things I didn’t like. In my fifth year I met Ërno Goldfinger and was his unpaid assistant. His contracts, mainly shops, were rewarding in themselves, and being part of the Goldfinger circle was an obvious advantage for a young architect.” Then he won a big railway ticket office competition and was able to set up on his own. In 1935, with war on the horizon, he volunteered for the Territorial Army. “It gave you an aspect of life you would not normally have had. I went into the Royal Engineers and spent 8 months in Searchlights as there were no bullets involved. I was against killing but it was a dead end job. A ‘desire to kill people’ came later and I went into artillery proper. When war is declared your attitude changes. In September 1938 I was ‘called up’ and given the rank of 2/Lt and joined 38th AA Brigade at Harrow-on-theHill as a Staff Officer posted to the Outer Hebrides (Scapa Flow). Things were hotting up and I was sent to Normandy (D Day + five to six days after the first landings), and moved on to Belgium and Holland and ended up in Germany. I was demobbed in 1945 with the rank of Major.” Before the war he became a founder member of MARS (Modern Architectural Research Society) which functioned from 1933 to 1957. It was started by a group of architects and critics including Wells Coates, Maxwell Fry and Morton Shand and was a ‘think tank’ for British modernism producing visionary plans and exhibitions. The founding members included members of Tecton, the progressive architectural group formed by the Russian emigré Berthold Lubetkin (1901-1990). In 1936 Joseph Paxton’s Crystal Palace was destroyed by fire and MARS initiated a debate on the loss of what it called Britain’s ‘most important claim to have made an original contribution to modern architecture’. Pilkington, the glass manufacturer, responded by launching a competition to show how the reconstruction of the Crystal Palace could showcase modern glass. By then, the group had grown to 58 members from its original core of 28, and felt ready to undertake a more ambitious project by organising an exhibition. The Hungarian-born Bauhaus emigré, László Moholy-Nagy (1895-1946), was charged with organising the exhibition, but handed over to Misha Black (1910-1977) when he left Britain for the US. More than 7,000 people trooped into the New Burlington Galleries to see it between 11 and 29 January 1938. Financially it was a disaster leaving the members of the MARS executive committee with a hefty deficit to pay off. But it had its effect and Le Corbusier wrote in the Architectural Review: ‘I dropped out of an airplane into the midst of a charming display of youth, and my lasting memory was the lyrical appeal of those poems in steel, glass and concrete. The New Architecture can no longer be reproached with being mere insensitive and soulless techniques.’ This was indeed praise for the struggling bank of British Modernists. The MARS Group was then the latest in a series of so-far unsuccessful attempts to create a support structure for the motley assortment of British-based architects, engineers and theorists, who shared the ideals of the European modern movement. Painfully isolated in conservative 1930s Britain, these Modernist pioneers - many of whom had fled to exile from Nazi oppression - sought support by banding together. It was influential in propagating the idea of modern architecture and continued after the war. It had a membership of 50-60 architects. They produced a radical scheme of a Plan for London, advocating the demolition of much of the existing city and its replacement by a collection of ‘hubs’ combining housing with workplaces and leisure facilities encircled by a ring road. But the group was fragmenting. Not only were there wide political divisions between individual members - Lubetkin, who was far further to the left of Coates and Shand, left in late 1938 after dismissing MARS as ‘a flat roofs club based on a gentleman’s agreement’ - but younger architects considered it too conservative. The MARS Group survived until the late 1950s, but the ‘flat roofs’ club’ never recovered the momentum it had enjoyed during what Le Corbusier described as its ‘charming display of youth’’. In 1950 Jim was commissioned to do various designs for the Festival of Britain. This was a source of cheer in austerity conditions, and he had met up with Hugh Casson, the architecture director who was always generous in involving others in jobs. Jim described this as “... an event for a new dawn, for enjoying life on modern terms, with modern technology.” He designed the People of Britain and Land of Britain pavilions using conical shapes; the Concourse; fountains and music for dancing. Jim had then met Elizabeth (Betty) Elwyn, an American architect. When asked, “What was your moment of glory? his reply was “Marrying Betty; Festival of Britain; getting the practice going and the Royal College of Art job”. “Having already taught for some years at the AA, Hugh Casson and I also taught at the Royal College of Art. It was then that the idea of a new building for the RCA and we worked together, with Robert Goodden, on the design, of which I did the majority. The uncompromisingly modern building was completed in 1963 and was sitting ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 65 well in the proximity of the Albert Hall and Albert Memorial.” Michael Stuart de Mowbray 1921-2008 (BB 1935-1940) Jim also was involved with building at several universities (Essex and Birmingham), designing a new civic centre at Gravesend, plus interiors at the Time-Life Building and Shell Centre and, later, at the Royal Academy - “I’ve always liked doing interiors.” Michael Stuart de Mowbray, who died on August first, 2008, was a consultant psychiatrist, and, (starting in his seventies) a composer. “I was invited to lecture at Harvard. I had no responsibilities, just talked and worked with students, and Betty was able to accompany me. The World’s End was a big project and a big problem. Not my favourite job. I liked Harlow it was very small. After 1945 onwards I did rehabbing of buildings, like more lavatories in Park Street, Green Street and had good clients including the Federation of British Industries. I also did work for Turners and Asbestos Cement, as well as Chance Glass who were bought out by Pilkingtons ‘Pilks left nothing to Chance’ - and the Building Centre. It was all fun to do. Harlow, Hatfield and Basildon were constrained by cost. When you go back, you see your work is not as individual as you imagined - I thought I was being original. Hornsey Lane School I enjoyed very much.” Another company he did work for was the Vaughan family in Bedfordshire. They made VONO beds ‘Vaughan Only No Others’”. Due to his Suffolk connections, Jim was commissioned to design a composing room for Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears at the Red House. His last job, with Betty, was the Print Room and Library at the Royal Academy of Arts. They worked in the spatial peace of their Aldeburgh home, designed by them and built in 1964, situated on a flat grassy plot surrounded by magnificent trees - one grown from a fir cone brought back from Italy. When he died, aged 96, Jim was the most senior Royal Academician, having been President of the Royal Institute of British Architects, Professor of Architecture at the RA and the Architectural Association, plus Prime Warden of the Worshipful Company of Dyers. He was also awarded the OBE. In 2006 the Royal Academy (where his work has been archived) produced an exhibition of Jim’s designs ‘Elegant Variation’. He was there; silver haired, handsome in long jacket and dark drainpipe jeans, a coloured scarf flopping from his top pocket, “I have met people today,” he said, “Who I never thought I would ever see again.” And we all went to dinner at the Arts Club and drank champagne. H T Cadbury-Brown died on 9 July 2009 at Ipswich Hospital, pre-deceased by Betty in 2002. They had no children. Natalie Wheatley (Jim’s Secretary 1957-59. Niece-in-law since 1960) Michael was the third of four sons, born in Lymington, Hampshire on October first, 1921. His father was a general practitioner and surgeon, and three of his four sons went into medicine. Michael’s oldest brother, John, (born in 1916) also went to Westminster. His next oldest brother, Robert, (born in 1920), went to Winchester, as did his younger brother, Steve, (born in 1925). For his early schooling Michael went to a local teacher in Lymington, Miss Latham. Sometimes he was the only pupil in her school. At age nine he went to a boarding school four miles from his home - Hordle House. (He would have gone there at eight, as Robert had done, but whooping cough postponed his entry by a year). At age thirteen he went to Westminster, and donned the top hat and tailcoat which were the school uniform. Having had a very good start in Latin and Greek from Miss Latham, he expected to study Classics, and eventually teach. However, while at Westminster he decided to become a doctor, and switched to science. During his last year at Westminster World War II broke out. The school was evacuated to Lancing College, where they lived in very crowded conditions. For their last six weeks they were sent to Exeter, which was further away from London (and much less crowded). While they were at Exeter, France fell. People then feared that Germany would invade Britain, for which they were quite unprepared. To assist the war effort, Michael and his schoolmates were given lessons from a grouse-shooting countryman on how to shoot down German planes. Pointing his airgun towards some birds, the grouse shooter told them, “You just go snap! snap!”. The boys also used to poke their rifles into ditches in case they might discover a German parachutist there. During the first holidays after he finished Westminster Michael joined the Homeguard (Dad’s Army) in Lymington. On duty nights he used to cycle to the local Drill Hall with a rifle slung over his back and a large mattress in his bicycle basket. They were expected to do sentry duty in the Drill Hall at all hours of the night. By this time Germany had started air raids on Great Britain. Some of their planes flew over Lymington, and the family home, on their way to Southampton, which was a very important port. Bombs ravaged Southampton High Street (while Michael’s mother watched, from Lymington). After Westminster, Michael went to Oxford, as did all his brothers. At Oxford, while many of his classmates were sent to war, Michael, like other medical students, finished his studies. While he was at Oxford, the war ended. 66 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Many of his friends returned to University, just as Michael was sent to Germany for two years as an army doctor. He was sad to leave Oxford, but greatly enjoyed his time in Germany, where he found a rich cultural and musical life. “On first acquaintance, he was always charming and instantly made you feel comfortable. His initial instinct was always to trust you, which is so different from the way we are all brought up to behave today. As a result, everyone liked him. As a doctor, Michael started in General Medicine, switched to Paediatrics, but then settled on Psychiatry, which suited him. Most of his work was done at Banstead Hospital, Surrey, and at St Mary Abbots in London, where he was in charge of an open ward. (Patients were not locked in.). His colleague, Dr. Peter Rohde, wrote to me, “His patients loved him. And he, in turn, cared greatly for them”. “On my last visit with Trad (in a rehabilitation center, after a fall) he appeared to be back to his old self. He was optimistic that he might have another 2 years left in him. He was looking forward to going home; grilling me for family news and stories from my recent holiday. He wanted to share his experiences at the Rehabilitation Centre and tell me about all the extraordinary people he’d met there and he was, of course, charming the socks off the staff! After his retirement from medicine a chance conversation led him to his second great endeavour. Music had always been a central part of his life. His father played the violin, his mother the piano, and from about age three Michael loved to listen to classical music. Michael played the violin, in duets with his brother Robert (on the piano), and as a soloist with the Oxford orchestra. Throughout his life he listened to, and read about music incessantly. Then one afternoon, as I was waiting at the school gate for our son Stuart, another mother, standing next to me, happened to mention that she was looking forward to returning to Birkbeck College to teach music composition. I went home and told Michael, who telephoned her, enrolled in the course at once, and never looked back. He finished the course with Distinction. Eventually he had all his compositions printed, and then professionally recorded on a series of compact discs. (These included all the pieces he wrote during, and after, the course, as well as several pieces he had written at age eight). Michael’s music includes four poems set to music, and sung by mezzo-soprano, as well as pieces for piano, violin, flute, and organ. His “Chromatic Elegy” was recorded by the world famous organist Jennifer Bate. A description of Michael must include his breadth of reading and knowledge, and his manner with people. My cousin, Bill Willcox (from America) described “that most kindly, cultured, elegant, estimable man. He was so brilliant, so affable, so knowledgeable and well-informed about everything, so easy and interesting in conversation, and quite as interested in your opinions as in his own indeed more interested, for like all large-minded persons, he knew what he knew and thought and so wanted most to find out what others knew and thought. We had wonderful conversations about English history and literature, and particularly about Britain’s finest hour, which Michael lived through as a young man and knew everything about. As an American I am proud and humbled to say to all attending this service that those great British days are still an inspiration to Americans and to everybody everywhere who resists tyranny and thuggery and terror in the world”. His son Julian (who called him “Trad”) described him as “fascinated by people - who they were, what they knew, where they came from... “A worker came into the room whilst I was there to ask what he would like for his evening meal. Trad, as was his way, engaged her in conversation about everything other than what he wanted for his evening meal and for the next 20 minutes we had a happy chat! Eventually, she remembered why she had come to see him and offered him a choice of rice or potatoes. There was never any doubt to me or him that his answer would be potatoes; but out of sheer good manners and politeness, he gave the matter due consideration, as if pondering a weighty dilemma. With a twinkle in his eye and a sweet smile, he finally answered, ‘If it’s alright, I think I’ll have the potatoes today’. That made my day and I suspect that the conversation she had with Trad made her day too. That to me was Trad encapsulated. “Maybe because I knew his habits so well, I felt that I never needed to see that much of him to feel close to him. I knew, for example, that at 4.45pm on every Saturday afternoon, we would both be sitting not too far from a radio tuned in to ‘5 Live’. We would both be in a state of high anxiety, waiting for the outcome of Southampton Football Club’s latest match, wondering whether they could yet again snatch defeat from the jaws of victory! “We went through that agony together many, many times and the relief associated with any victory would often prompt a phone call, when we would greet each other simultaneously with the words, ‘Up the Saints!’. Thanks to Southampton’s perennial poor form, sometimes we wouldn’t speak for weeks!” In February 2008, Michael fell and broke his arm. Following that he was unable to use the zimmerframe he needed to walk, and was bedridden, and in hospital, for most of the next five months. By mid-July his arm was fairly well healed, and he went to the rehabilitation centre for practice in walking and eventual discharge. On Sunday, July 27 Julian and I both visited him, and found him lively, optimistic, and impatient to return home. But the next morning he had a heart attack, followed by five days in a coma, before he died on August first. Sudden though this was, it gave me, and other family members a chance to be with him at the end, and seemed to be a comfortable and peaceful last few days for him. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 67 Michael is survived by his first wife, Hetty, and their grown children Tessa, Julian, Nikki, and Saskia, and by his second wife, Elizabeth, and our son Stuart. Nadim Gulamhuseinwala 1976-2009 (WW 1993-1995) Nadim Gulamhuseinwala, known fondly as ‘Nads’ or ‘Gulam’ at School, embodied much of what was expected from a Westminster boy - highly intelligent, competitive, motivated, playful, generous and, above all, his own man. When Nadim joined the sixth form class in September 1993, as a strong addition to the cohort from St Benedict’s School, Ealing, it was clear that adapting to a new environment would come naturally to him. He was continuing a family tradition at Westminster, his brother Imran having already completed his A-levels by the time Nadim arrived. Nadim studied Double Maths, Biology, Chemistry and Physics, with the express intention of reading Medicine at university. It was an ambition he was to achieve and one of many fields in which he was to excel. Nadim quickly became known as a fun loving but focused individual, who brought humour and intellect to classroom discussions in equal measure. He was compassionate to those around him and always ready and willing to assist any strugglers or champion the rights of the class underdog. He was also renowned for his sparkling wit, with few, if any, able to match him in the banter stakes. Nadim became a valued member of Wren’s, where he participated in both football and cricket, excelling with the bat. Nadim embraced the extra-curricular activities Westminster had to offer. In particular, he was a key member of the 1994 and 1995 Physically Handicapped and Able Bodied (PHAB) courses, held at school during the summer exeat. These intense and demanding courses allowed the aspiring medic to develop some of the attributes he would possess in abundance as the outstanding doctor he would go on to become. Moreover, Nadim illustrated at an early age that he was a natural leader, who was eminently capable of taking responsibility for the care of others. When exams came around, Nadim excelled, obtaining 5 A grades at A-level. This was a phenomenal achievement, and a justified reward for his hard work and natural talent. In October 1995, Nadim went to the University of Bristol to read Medicine. In the first year, Nadim lived in Clifton Wood House - an annexe of the larger Clifton Hill House halls of residence. The intimate surroundings of the house meant that most of his neighbours there would become his lifelong friends. His sense of fun and his wide-ranging interests from cricket to politics and academia meant that he made many friends in his six years at the University. He always managed to work out where the best party was happening and often went to more than one a night with a customary stop at the Medics’ Bar. He could also regularly be found at the gym and tried his hand at rowing with the University Boat Club. 68 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 At the same time, his focus on his work was second to none. Many of his friends say that his discipline and dedication served as an example to them to try put as much energy and work into their studies. On the academic front, Nadim excelled from the outset, particularly enjoying the traditional medical sciences. He achieved a string of merits and distinctions throughout his medical training. In 1997 he won a Wolfson Award to undertake an Intercalated BSc in Pathology and was awarded a First Class degree with Honours the following year. Outside the lecture theatre, he could readily switch his sharp academic focus to an equally sharp sense of humour. His easy-going charm mixed with a healthy dose of witty cynicism won him many friends. During the clinical years of medical school, Nadim set his sights on a career in surgery. In 2000 he chose to spend his two-month medical elective in Adelaide, studying craniofacial surgery. En route, he spent the summer travelling the world with friends, and developed his enduring passion for diving and playing golf. In 2001 Nadim graduated from Medical School amongst the top of his year, and embarked upon postgraduate medical training as a House Officer in Cheltenham. In 2002 he made the decision to move back to London. He spent a year teaching anatomy and training in Accident and Emergency at Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospitals, during which time he passed the first part of the Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons (MRCS) examination. He then secured a position as a Senior House Officer on the Basic Surgical Training programme at Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospitals, which he took up after having returned to Australia to work in Emergency Medicine in Sydney for six months. Once back in London, he applied himself to his surgical career with his characteristic focus. He achieved high scores in the remainder of his MRCS examinations, qualifying as an accredited surgeon with his title now ‘Mr’ rather than ‘Dr’. During this time he also managed to publish several articles in peer reviewed journals, and began to focus on a career in plastic surgery. He furthered this ambition by getting a series of jobs as a trainee plastic surgeon in several highly regarded hospitals including St George’s and St Thomas’ Hospitals in London, and Queen Victoria Hospital in East Grinstead. He developed a reputation as a hard working, knowledgeable and skilful surgeon and was well regarded by those who worked with him. However, in 2007, unimpressed by the changes to medical training and deeply frustrated with the uncertainty of a career in medicine and the NHS’ increasing bureaucracy, Nadim boldly elected to embark on a new career. True to form for someone who consistently reached the top, he was hired by management consultants McKinsey and Co, the industry’s most prestigious firm. He joined the Pharmaceuticals and Medical Products division as an Associate, advising clients in the sector in Europe, the with the unimaginably tragic circumstances of his passing. They were not alone. Nadim touched people’s lives everywhere he went. There was barely room in the vast Abbey for the hundreds of mourners who wished to pay their respects. Each one felt compelled to be part of the tribute to Nadim, whether they had met him as a schoolboy at St Benedict’s or Westminster, an aspiring student at Bristol, an overworked but enthusiastic trainee medic, a top-notch surgeon in London, a high flying management consultant at McKinsey or a flamboyant batsman on a village cricket pitch. All who were there burst into spontaneous applause following his brother Imran’s eulogy, in recognition not only of its perfectly pitched and indescribably moving content, but also of the premature loss of a truly unique and irreplaceable individual. Indeed, it is impossible to better his description of the scale of Nadim’s achievements in his life and the inspiration he was to others: Above: Nadim Gulamhuseinwala. “Nadim did more than live his life to the full, he lived his life at twice the speed of anyone else I know. He could not have achieved more in his 32 years.” “He wanted to be the best he could be; and when you were around him you wanted to be the best you could be too.” Middle East and the US. Despite having no prior business, financial or management experience, his capacity for hard work allowed him to bridge this gap. Within a few months he was excelling in this second career, earning a promotion to the position of Engagement Manager in the summer of 2009. He truly felt he had found a vocation that was at the same time challenging, professionally fulfilling and made the most of his many talents. In April 2009, he was seconded to McKinsey’s New York office, where he was due to stay until late August. Incredibly, though perhaps not surprisingly given Nadim’s remarkable reserves of energy, he flew back to London as often as he could, keeping in regular contact with his close-knit family, his beloved partner Rebecca and his many treasured friends. His natural amiability meant he was soon a hugely popular figure at McKinsey, where he’s remembered with immense warmth and affection. Despite having lived and worked in so many different locations, at home and abroad, Nadim retained a lasting affection for the area close to school and, when in London, chose to live a stone’s throw from Dean’s Yard. He was notorious for fitting in his social calls on his mobile phone as he jogged around Vincent Square to stay in shape. He also enjoyed walking in the green spaces of SW1 and had a particular fondness for St James’s Park, where he was known to sit on a bench and take some time out of his unrelenting schedule for reflection. It is a truly bitter irony that the savage and random attack that robbed him of his life happened in Green Park, which he had walked through so many times and where he had always felt safe. Nadim’s two years at Westminster had a hugely significant impact on many people. The class of 1995 stood in solidarity at his funeral at Ealing Abbey, trying to come to terms He will never be forgotten. The Friends of Nadim Gulamhuseinwala Should you wish to make a charitable donation, please consider donating to St James’s and Green Park, where Nadim loved to walk, for the purchase of a memorial (cheques should be made payable to Imran Gulamhuseinwala). All donations should be sent to Haven Funeral Services, 13 The Broadway, Gunnersbury Lane, London W3 8HR. If you are a UK taxpayer and would like to gift aid your donation, please write: “This donation should be treated as gift aid” followed by your name and address on the back of the cheque. John Creasey Wykeham Hopkyns 1915-2008 (BB 1929-1933) Born in 1915 in Suffolk, England and died in 2008 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. He is survived by five sons and one daughter, thirteen grandchildren and twelve great-grandchildren. John attended Westminster School from 1929-33. He went on to graduate in Medicine from Oxford and London Universities. John married Joan Edith Yates in 1941. He served as a Surgeon Lieutenant at sea and ashore in the Royal Naval Volunteer Service 1942-1946. He later transferred to the Royal Canadian Naval Reserve retiring as a Surgeon Lieutenant-Commander. John and Joan came to Edmonton in 1952 where John practiced Internal Medicine for many years. He obtained his fellowship at the Royal College of Physicians of Canada and taught Internal Medicine for the University of Alberta. In 1980 he was named an Emeritus Associate Professor when he semi-retired. John was active in the Anglican Church for many years. He enjoyed his extended family and travelled all over the world. ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 69 Stephen John Instone 1954-2009 (RR 1968-1973) It is with the deepest sadness that we have to record the tragic and untimely death of Stephen Instone at the age of 54. Stephen drowned whilst swimming in Lake Geneva in July 2009 while on holiday in Switzerland with his family. He was up Rigaud’s from 1968 to 1973 and was respected and loved by a wide circle of friends and colleagues. He was supremely fit at the time of the accident and its cause remains a mystery. An integral member of the classics department at UCL, Stephen was known for his universal helpfulness and his ability to bring the subject to life for his students. At the memorial event held in October at that institution there were many tributes to his support and enthusiasm and he is also sadly missed at St Mary’s University College, Twickenham, where he taught previously for some years. Stephen was also a staunch member of the Old Westminsters Athletic Club, running some 13 times in the Towpath Cup race against the school, with a best time of 17 minutes 45 seconds in 1987. His capacity to combine the worlds of classics and athletics was unique. The following is an extract from the obituary written by his running club, Ranelagh Harriers: “Rarely can the loss of a member have been so keenly felt not only throughout the club but also in the running community in general. Stephen was very special. We know of no-one who did not have a soft spot for him. Stephen joined Ranelagh in the early 1970s at just about the time he was leaving school and going up to Balliol College, Oxford, to study Classics. Stephen may not have been blessed with huge amounts of natural running ability but he made up for this with sheer hard work. It was not long before an “Instone furrow” formed round the perimeter of Richmond Park as Stephen put in lap after lap after lap of training. He improved steadily throughout the decade and by 1980 had run 10 miles in 55 minutes and 2:42 for the marathon. He ran crosscountry too, but road was his favoured surface, his slightly stiff running action with minimum knee lift being well suited to the longer distances. 70 Financial Times and other publications. He became Editor of the club Gazette, but the classical references which always found their way into his race reports revealed where his true love lay, and he returned to the world of academia and the Ancient Greeks. After spending some time in China with Hugh Jones, who won the 1982 London Marathon, in 1986 and then nine months in the USA in 1987-88, he completed his PhD at Royal Holloway and Bedford New College, London and subsequently became an Honorary Research Fellow and departmental tutor at University College London and a lecturer at St Mary’s College, University of Surrey. He became an acknowledged authority on the works of the Greek Poet Pindar, whose Odes were composed to commemorate victories in the Olympic and other Games of ancient Greece. When in 1993, the BBC was preparing a Radio 4 series entitled “Greek as a Treat” it was only natural that they should pick on Stephen to feature in the episode dealing with the Games. “Only the BBC,” wrote the Sunday Times reviewer, “could make a series which includes a scholar-athlete running around Regent’s Park with a saucepan on his head and clutching a dustbin lid to illustrate the difficulties of the Ancient Greeks’ 400 metres armour racing event: the same man tells of how he sprinted naked in Crete to see if the original Olympians’ practice of nude running was hindered by male encumbrances”. The latter had taken place on a secluded beach, but in 2004 his past came back to haunt him in the guise of a BBC2 crew filming a programme entitled “First Olympian”. Here’s BBC News Online: “Dr Instone, who bared all on Loughborough University campus despite the chill winds of winter, told BBC News Online: ‘If you are trying to recreate aspects of the ancient Olympics, when it comes to running you have got to run naked. I lined up with quite a few semi-international sprinters. I’m 49 and they were about half my age. They all had Lycra on, while I had to run unencumbered. I just tried it to show you can run perfectly well naked. People these days say it’s difficult from a practical point of view. At least I proved it could be done’. Dr Instone, a club runner himself, came last.”...and sadly the episode ended up on the cutting room floor. Progress was brought to a sudden halt in the spring of 1980 when, trying to clear some ivy from the guttering of his mother’s house on Barnes Common, he fell off a ladder and shattered his ankle. He spent two weeks in hospital at Roehampton where various pieces of metalwork were inserted into the leg, but it was entirely typical of Stephen that the day after his release he could be found completing a lap of the Park on crutches. A little over three months later he ran a 10 mile road race in 76 minutes. From then on there was always a trace of a limp in his running, but the upwards curve in his performances continued and by 1982 his marathon best had come down to 2:38. BBC News Online continues: “Although the modern Olympics - at least in theory - are supposed to be more about the taking part than the winning, the opposite was true of the original games, which started in 776BC. In fact, their ambition was as naked as their bodies. Dr Instone said: ‘It wasn’t like being British now, where coming second is considered quite good. Back then, it was considered a total disgrace. Some writings describe the loser having to go home by back alleyways to avoid other people. It was part of the Greek shame of defeat. Winners would bring back a great deal of reflected glory’.” Here’s an extract from Stephen’s translation of Pindar’s Ode “Olympian One”, published in 1996: “And the glory’s seen afar in races at Olympia of Pelops: for this is where speed of feet has a contest and hard-fought supremacy in strength. And he who is victor has a honeysweet tranquillity throughout the rest of life”. He dabbled with journalism after taking his degree, working for a local newspaper while also contributing articles to The In the mid-1990s Stephen married Shelley, aFrancis former Rawes student of his, and they had two children, Florence, now | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 11, and Arthur, 9. Shelley is a writer/reviewer herself and a regular contributor to the letters pages of The Times, sometimes at Stephen’s expense: “Already aware that he was on dangerous territory by giving me a tasteless wedding anniversary present just before Christmas, my husband surpassed all my low expectations of him as a lacklustre and deeply unimaginative present-giver by giving me a cookbook - the very one that he had given me the previous Christmas. Unfortunately for him, the present has only been used as a diverse and perfectly compact weapon”. As his family commitments grew, Stephen’s racing appearances diminished, though not his enthusiasm for the sport which ran alongside his love for his family and his overall zest for life. And of course the laps of the Park continued. Here’s John Bryant, an Oxford Blue and former Editor of The Daily Telegraph: “I remember him best from the endless laps he used to run in Richmond Park. I usually ran anti-clockwise, Steve clockwise - and sometimes we would see each other many times. He would approach with that shy, almost gawky style, his head to one side. We would pass with a nod of recognition, sometimes a wave - that acknowledged that we were doing the same thing, for the same reasons; sharing the same pleasures, and often the same pains. Occasionally, we would pause and chat. Sometimes, when injured, Stephen would be on a bike, and we would swop views about how effective (or useless) training on a bike was. Other times we would update each other on our latest injuries, sympathise over broken bones and broken dreams, that runners know all too well. It seems trite to say that I shall miss him in the Park. But Stephen was a fixture there. We shared a mutual respect that only hardcore runners understand - it needed no explanation, no justification. When I got smashed up in a road accident and tried doing laps on sticks in the Park, he would always stop. His words of encouragement meant much to me then. And I knew I was getting back to normal when we would pass each other, running again, with just a nod. I shall miss those nods in the Park”. The last word goes to Jim Forrest (who encouraged him to join Ranelagh): “Stephen was utterly delightful in every way; a wonderful companion”. Our sincere condolences go to Shelley, Florence and Arthur. Above: Huw Elwyn Jones. Huw Elwyn Jones 1943-2009 (BB 1957-1961) Huw Elwyn Jones, who has died aged 65 after a brief illness, was a highly respected and experienced solicitor in North Wales. His grandfather was the Reverend E. Tegla Davies, a well-known Wesleyan minister, fine preacher, and prolific author. His father was Sir Elwyn Jones, another highly regarded local solicitor who died in 1989, knighted for his services to the cause of the North Wales quarrymen. Like his father, Huw Elwyn, had a strong sense of public duty. Stephen completed 66 mob matches for the club and won the club 20 miles championship twice with a best time of 1:59.20 in 1987. When the Saturday morning UK Time Trials / parkruns were instigated in 2004 Stephen was a regular attender from the outset, firstly in Bushy Park and latterly at the Richmond Park event. He was last year’s winner of the annual Richmond Parkrun points competition and held a clear lead in this year’s before his death. The trophy for the points winner was donated by Ranelagh and it has been presented this year to Shelley to keep. Ranelagh will then donate a replacement to be known as the Stephen Instone Trophy. From Westminster, Huw Elwyn went to Christ Church, Oxford, where he studied law, intending to go for the Bar. However, his father’s illness brought him back to Bangor in the late sixties. Initially he had intended to return to London, but enjoyed the work so much that he stayed and developed his father’s practice, Elwyn Jones & Co., which he built up substantially to include a number of partners and assistants. Stephen was published on Homer, Virgil and Greek athletics as well as Pindar and his latest research centred on Greek personal religion (his book on this subject was published in October) and on sound-effects in Homer. The ScienceLive website includes a lecture by Stephen on the latter, in which it is easy to discern Stephen’s deep passion for his subject: www.sciencelive.org Huw Elwyn’s diligence and concern for others, for both established and new clients, was proverbial. He had that invaluable quality in a lawyer of being able to see the strengths and weaknesses of both sides of a case. He was able to give objective and forceful advice so as to obtain the best result for his client. He was a man of the utmost integrity and even-handedness and totally ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 71 committed to his community, in which he had such deep roots. During his years of practice he became a Deputy District Judge. He was President of Bangor Rotary during the centenary year of 2005 and was also President of the Gwynedd Law Society, which he helped establish. He followed in his father’s footsteps when he became treasurer of Bangor University, a position which he held until he died. Huw Elwyn is survived by his wife, Anna, his children, Sara, Angharad and Edward, and his sister, Carys. Huw E Huw Peter Hugh Jefferd Lloyd-Jones 1922-2009 (AHH 1935-1940) Professor Sir Hugh Lloyd-Jones, the former Regius Professor of Greek at Oxford University, who died on 5th October aged 87, was a gatekeeper for a particular style of traditional scholarship and one of the foremost classical scholars of his generation; his imposing output of scholarly works ranged across the fields of Greek epic, lyric, tragedy, comedy, Hellenistic literature, religion, intellectual history - and beyond. Among other achievements, Lloyd-Jones edited the fragments of Aeschylus, Menander’s Dyscolus, Semonides’s Satire on Women, the Supplementum Hellenisticum (with Peter Parsons, his successor as Regius Professor of Greek), and the plays of Sophocles with the companion Sophoclea (both with Nigel Wilson). He also published an annotated translation of Aeschylus’s Oresteia as well as The Justice of Zeus (1971). But it is for his trenchant articles and reviews that he will probably be best remembered. Lloyd-Jones was the product of a type of rigorous philological training in Latin and Greek which was uniquely characteristic of the best English schools in the pre-war period. To this he added a thorough knowledge of the classical tradition and the history of scholarship; expertise as a papyrologist and textual critic; and a thorough grounding in ancient Greek religion and culture. Thus armed, for most of his academic career he engaged in an almost personal war to protect the soul of Classics from the modern age. Much of Lloyd-Jones’s work can be seen as a reaction to prevailing opinion, and he was at his best when probing the unexamined assumptions of others or challenging fashionable beliefs. He opposed applying any intellectual, religious or psychological system to literature as a substitute for thinking critically about each text. Thus, in a famous article in the Journal of Hellenic Studies, “Zeus in Aeschylus” (1956), he challenged the view, fashionable among American scholars, that Aeschylus was a profound religious thinker whose tragedies offered a vision of the Almighty far more sophisticated than that 72 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 of Homer and tending towards Judaeo-Christian theology. A common approach was to see the change between the vindictive Zeus of the Prometheia to the more majestic figure of the Oresteia as evidence that Aeschylus’s god evolves during the long years of Prometheus’s suffering to become a more just and benevolent deity. Lloyd-Jones’s approach, set out in the article and elaborated in a series of lectures published as The Justice of Zeus (1971), was to deny that there was any contradiction between the Zeus of the Oresteia and the Prometheia. Prometheus is finally released from his torments in exchange for the secret that threatens the supremacy of Zeus, and Orestes is spared by the Erinyes in exchange for a permanent home in Athens. In both cases Zeus is not involved in the arrangements, which are engineered by subordinates - Athena and Heracles. Aeschylus’s conception of Zeus, Lloyd-Jones concluded, and his conception of divine justice, contained “nothing that is new, nothing that is sophisticated; nothing that is profound”, and could be understood only in the proper context of Olympian religion with its “belief that the whole nature of the universe is necessarily adverse to human aspirations”. “The Greeks,” as Lloyd-Jones once wrote, “were not tolerant of the well-meaning idiot.” Neither was he; and he never allowed diplomacy to temper the pungent expression of his views. “Who but a bigoted nationalist, and one grossly deficient in aesthetic sensibility, would have argued that Creon and Antigone represented moral viewpoints of equal validity?” he demanded to know in one diatribe. In a review of the German HJ Mette’s attempt to reconstruct the lost trilogies of Aeschylus, Lloyd-Jones advised the author to take to heart two lines of Catullus: “Miser Catulle, desinas ineptire, et quod vides perisse perditum ducas” (“Wretched Catullus, you should stop being a fool and consider lost that which you see has come to an end”). The attack had a dramatic sequel when the two scholars met at an international classical symposium in Bonn. During a “friendly” get-together on a Rhine pleasure steamer, voices were heard raised in anger on the lower deck. Peering over the rails, a group of astonished German and British students saw the two scholars doing furious intellectual battle, Mette in fluent English and Lloyd-Jones in fluent German. In fact, Lloyd-Jones had considerable admiration for German scholarship, a respect that found expression in learned essays on Goethe, Nietzsche, Humboldt, Wagner and (surprisingly) Marx, as well as on more recent scholars such as Reinhardt, Maas, Fraenkel and Pfeiffer. His barbs were more frequently directed at transatlantic scholars who attempted to impose Freudian or LeviStraussian theories on Greek myth and literature. “To acquire a smattering of Freud, usually untainted by the smallest admixture of modern psychology, has been one way of solving the perennial problem of how to publish work on Greek literature and not perish, without knowing any Greek,” he declared. And he had a good nose for the killer quotation: “Freud’s contention that ‘the myth of Prometheus indicates that to gain control over fire man had to renounce the homosexually-tinged desire to put it out with a stream of urine’ is not often mentioned even by his loyal adherents.” His most emphatic put-down, however, was always: “But he doesn’t know Greek!” Peter Hugh Jefferd Lloyd-Jones was born on September 21 1922 and educated at the Lycée Française in South Kensington and at Westminster School. He began his undergraduate studies at Christ Church, Oxford, in 1940 and resumed them in 1946 after military service with the Intelligence Corps in the Far East, graduating with Firsts in Mods and Greats. As part of his wartime work, Lloyd-Jones had learned Japanese, and noticed how it was impossible, or at least difficult, to express certain Western concepts in that language. When he returned to Oxford, he set out in an essay for his tutor to refute St Anselm’s ontological argument for the existence of God by showing the difficulties of expressing it in Japanese. It was this, perhaps, that convinced him of the dangers of imposing anachronistic thought structures on the work of ancient writers. He found in postwar Oxford a “somnolent beauty which was slowly awakening from the clerical slumbers of the previous century”. None the less, in 1948 Lloyd-Jones moved to Cambridge, where he became a fellow of Jesus College and assistant lecturer, then lecturer, in Classics. But he returned to Oxford in 1954 as fellow and EP Warren Praelector in Classics at Corpus Christi; then from 1960, Regius Professor of Greek and Student of Christ Church. Lloyd-Jones began publishing in 1949 - with a review and his career spanned the development of postwar classics. He professed himself a “conservative with very little intrinsic belief in the goodness of human nature” and blithely ignored currents in postwar social analysis, literary criticism, cultural history and politics. Instead his work was always informed and stimulated by an abiding and deep awareness of the larger picture of Greek culture. As a teacher, Lloyd-Jones was encouraging, demanding and sometimes waspishly indiscreet about his academic colleagues. Despite the passion of his own intellectual convictions, he was always tolerant of his students’ wild ideas. From Edward Enfield (RR 1944-1948) There must still be a handful of us who remember the day when the exciting news rang through the school: “LloydJones has won the Ireland!” For most people it just meant that we got a late play, but for us in the Classical Seventh it meant more, because we had had the inestimable privilege of being taught by him. ‘ There must still be a handful of us who remember the day when the exciting news rang through the school: “Lloyd-Jones has won the Ireland!” ’ There was a gap in the teaching staff, due partly to the illness of the headmaster, J.T. Christie, and this was filled temporarily by Hugh Lloyd-Jones. He had been demobbed from the army and was to go back to Oxford in October, so he came and taught us for, I think, two terms. It was a revelation. Until then I had tackled the Greek and Latin languages in the spirit in which one approaches a difficult crossword puzzle - one can get some satisfaction from cracking the code and getting to the right answer, but that was about all. It was Hugh Lloyd-Jones who opened my eyes and, I am sure, the eyes of others to the enormous literary riches and possibilities of these languages. I remember particularly his bursting into an impromptu recitation of the most famous poem of Sappho, the words of which meant nothing to any of us at the time, but the performance sent me to the Oxford Book of Greek Verse to read all the early lyric poets. He himself later wrote of J.T. Christie and Eduard Frankel that “what made them great teachers was their enthusiasm for literature and their eagerness to help others to share the pleasure they derived from it.” He could have been talking about himself. I never met him afterwards. The Telegraph obituary suggests that he may have become a little prickly in later life, but in his short time as a schoolmaster he was friendly, encouraging, enthusiastic and immensely learned. He also gave us pleasure with his slightly mischievous jokes, such as when he took a bunch of schoolboys into a cafe, ordered tea and buttered buns, and solemnly assured the waitress that they were having an El Alamein reunion. He was knighted in 1989. Hugh Lloyd-Jones married first, in 1953, Frances Hedley; they had two sons and a daughter. The marriage was dissolved and he married secondly, in 1982, the American classical scholar Mary Lefkowitz, with whom in later life he lived at Wellesley, Massachusetts. Reprinted from The Telegraph, 5th October 2009 ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 73 I look back on our short acquaintance with warmth and Richard gratitude. Cameron Low him to Westminster. Peter Louis Michael Sherwood 1941-2009 (QS 1954-1959) Richard Low (known as Dick) died on 17th February 2008, six weeks before his 80th birthday. After prep school at St Felix in Felixstowe he entered College in September 1941 at Whitbourne Court, Worcester, the home of College during the evacuation. He developed a deep affection for Whitbourne during his four years there, and would always revisit the Bromyard area whenever he had the opportunity. He was delighted to return to Westminster in 1945 for his final year and to be involved in the re-establishment of the School in its own home and its connection with the Abbey. Louis Sherwood was chairman of HTV, the West Country broadcaster, and a director of the Halifax Building Society, which became HBOS and is now part of the Lloyds Banking Group. He was also chairman and chief executive of Gateway Foodmarkets, the supermarket bought in one of the most infamous corporate takeover deals of the early 1990s. 1928-2008 (KS 1941-1946) He was for several years in the Cricket XI and the Football XI and was Captain of Cricket in 1946. Despite winning an exhibition to read Maths at Trinity College, Cambridge, on leaving school he entered the RMA Sandhurst and was commissioned into the Royal Artillery, with postings to Tripoli, Trieste and Germany. In Tripoli he was selected to play for the Divisional Cricket XI. After a period in BAOR with the 2nd Regiment Royal Horse Artillery he decided to seek a new career in the insurance business. He was with the Northern Assurance in the City for four years and then joined the insurance brokers Glanvill Enthoven, who appointed him to open their West Africa branch in Lagos, Nigeria. The next six years were a great experience for Dick and his family. Starting a company virtually from scratch was a massive task, but after a few problems all went well, and when he returned to Head Office after six years the company was on the way to becoming one of the most successful insurance brokers in West Africa. Dick returned to London in December 1963, and maintained his connection with Nigeria as well as becoming involved with Glanvill’s activities in Spain, Ireland and Israel (an opportunity for some memorable holidays). In 1979 he was head-hunted by the then Midland Bank to set up an insurance broking facility. In 1983 Dick took early retirement and moved to Wiltshire. He became involved in local activities - as churchwarden and member of the PCC, treasurer of the Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum, treasurer and chairman of the Salisbury branch of the Leukaemia Research Fund, and a vice president of the Chalke Valley Cricket Club. For 28 years he was a member of the Board of Management of the British Home and Hospital for Incurables at Streatham. He also pursued his interest in genealogy and family history, which inspired him to write his book The Tigress and the Rose. He married in December 1951 Sheila Pary, daughter of Robert Jephson Hilary (first Housemaster of Busby’s) and his wife Nita (College Matron 1941-1961). To his great delight his son Charles and grandson Robin both followed 74 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Gateway was the subject of a hotly contested takeover tussle not long after Sherwood joined the company. A buyout team operating under the name Isosceles, beat off rival bidders, and opposition from a Gateway management team including Sherwood, to make the £2 billion acquisition. It was one of the first large deals completed by a small team of professional money men, using a company created for the specific purpose of launching a takeover. Isosceles funded the acquisition with large quantities of borrowed money and methods that resurfaced in the hedge fund and private-equity-fuelled mergers and acquisition spree of the early years of the new millennium. Having bought Gateway, Isosceles ran into dire trouble as the debt burden proved heavy and trading suffered in the recession of the early 1990s. It became one of the more infamous examples of financial excess, and failure, of the period. Peter Louis Michael Sherwood was born in Hammersmith, London in 1941. He was educated at Westminster School, New College, Oxford, and went to Stanford Business School, in California, on a Harkness scholarship. After three years with Morgan Grenfell, the merchant bank, he turned to retail business management. He became a director of various companies within James Goldsmith’s AngloContinental Group and when Goldsmith acquired the Grand Union Group in America, Sherwood took charge of development. His final four years were spent with the Great Atlantic and Pacific group, where sales topped £10 billion and of which he was appointed group president in 1985. Returning to the UK, Sherwood moved, with his wife Nicole and their young family, to Bristol and began a short career running the Gateway supermarket chain, which was the third-largest food retailer at the time. Freed of association with the unfortunate corporate story of Isosceles because he was on the losing side of the Gateway bid, Sherwood began another career as a non-executive director, at businesses as varied as Clerical Medical, the investment and insurance company, Wessex Water and the maintenance and construction group ROK. As chairman of HTV from 1991 he helped the company to stave off financial difficulties and in 1997 led its sale to United News & Media, which itself was later absorbed into today’s ITV commercial broadcasting company. Sherwood’s association with Clerical Medical led him to serve as a non-executive director of the Halifax, when the former was bought by the latter in 1996. Sherwood served as a non-executive director of Halifax until 2001, when it (in English) and the LSE (in Social Anthropology) by the age of 22. A brilliant intellect, Paul decided that his parents’ academic path was not for him-at least, not at first. Instead Paul followed his artistic and intellectual passions outside a conventional career. A voracious reader, as a teenager Paul had fallen in love with George Orwell’s Down and Out in Paris and London and fearlessly hitch-hiked around Europe. In his twenties he settled in London and turned his hand to fiction, writing several unpublished novels-comedies of alienation set in a brittle, middle-class world of overeducated, underemployed Londoners. After his mother Elaine returned to the United States, and his brother Andrew moved to Israel, Paul spent several years in the USA. He pursued library science and avidly represented the library workers of Brown University in their contract negotiations with management. Paul then pursued creative writing; travel; his love of languages; and teaching academic English to non-native speakers. Above: Painting of Louis Sherwood by Philip Lambe. merged with Bank of Scotland, to form HBOS. Sherwood started every morning at 6am in his study to, as he said, “rustle his papers”, read the Bible and prepare for the day before his morning run and devouring newspapers. His disciplined life benefited many in business, schools, hospitals, charities, and cultural organisations. He assisted cultural initiatives such as At-Bristol, which he helped to launch in 1995-96, and the Bristol Cultural Development Partnership, where he was a director. He was a leading proponent of the ultimately unsuccessful bid to develop a new showpiece concert hall for the city. He became Master of Bristol’s Society of Merchant Venturers in 2003, and used the position to pursue an active modernisation agenda for the city which emphasised the contribution of women, and acknowledged that the professions, financial services and the academic institutions add as much wealth and wellbeing as traditional industries. In later years, Paul explored the culture, politics and economics of the EU. At the Jagellionian University in Krakow, he wrote a master’s thesis on variance in European birth rates as a reflection of cultural differences. As he traveled Europe, supporting himself mostly by teaching, Paul approached life as an undercover cultural anthropologist. He relished quirkiness wherever he came across it, from American swimming pool protocols to how Polish pedestrians passed each other on the sidewalk. Paul was a private man with a gift for friendship. His friends cherished his “gentle gaiety,” his warm-heartedness, his (sometimes exasperating) argumentativeness, his gift of mimicry, and his sense of fun. From his father Cyril, Paul inherited playfulness, whimsicality, and charm; from his mother Elaine, a deep appreciation of art, music, and literature. Paul enjoyed children and family and was a magical uncle to his nephew Julian. But he loved best of all to engineer a good evening of wine, humor, and disputatiousness amongst friends. Paul is survived by his mother, Dr Elaine Sofer, and by his younger brother, Professor Andrew Sofer. Andrew Sofer He is survived by his wife, a son and two daughters. © The Times, 28th May 2009 Paul Martin Sofer 1963-2009 (LL 1976-1979) Paul Sofer died on 14th February 2009, when he was struck and killed by a train in Lodz, Poland. Paul was a lecturer in English at Lodz University’s English Institute. Paul grew up in Cambridge, the son of South African and American academics. Paul studied at King’s College School and at Westminster-where he came in second on the entrance examination-before earning degrees at Oxford Hugh Francis Brady Symons 1916-2009 (AHH 1931-1935) Throughout Hugh’s life, sport - cricket, tennis, golf, but above all, soccer - was his abiding passion. This love of sport kept him young in spirit and made him an inspirational figure who touched and enriched countless lives. A doctor’s son, after leaving Westminster, where he excelled at cricket and football, Hugh followed his father into the medical profession, graduating from St Mary’s Hospital in 1942. From 1943 to 1946, as a captain in the RAMC he saw service in the Middle East. At one point he ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 | 75 had to flee for his life after awarding a contentious penalty kick when refereeing a highly-charged cup final between Arab and Egyptian teams, watched by a huge crowd of their ultra-volatile following. After being demobbed, from 1949 till 1981 Hugh was first assistant in physical medicine at the Middlesex Hospital and consultant rheumatologist at St George’s, then at Hyde Park Corner. Many were the injured footballers who came in to seek Hugh’s expert diagnoses and so popular were the ministrations of his team of attractive physiotherapists that some injuries tended mysteriously to linger on. His tour de force came when he was consulted by the Fulham winger Trevor ‘Tosh’ Chamberlain, who was injured and out of form. So efficacious was Hugh’s treatment, both physical and psychological, that in the very next game ‘Tosh’ posted a hat-trick against the then mighty Newcastle United. As he told a national Sunday newspaper ‘It’s all down to the Doc!’ For a number of years Hugh lived in Kensington, on one occasion standing as the Liberal parliamentary candidate for what is now Kensington & Chelsea. With the Royal Parks in close proximity, he was able to give free rein to his keen interest in ornithology. As his parents’ health began to fail, Hugh returned to the family home in Streatham, which after his parents’ demise he shared with his sister Zai who predeceased him by a few months. A generous and loyal friend, Hugh was the hub of a small circle that met regularly in London for lunch, and he was never less than lively and entertaining company. As a footballer, Hugh could grace any pitch with his silky ball control, acute football brain and an unerring eye for the chance. He had acquired the soubriquet of ‘Tank’, as on his day he was virtually unstoppable. Hugh played with great distinction for Wimbledon, long before the days of The Crazy Gang and the subsequent morphing into MK Dons and AFC Wimbledon. He led the Old Westminsters to a memorable win in the Surrey AFA Senior Cup final against Carshalton Athletic. Happily, he was able to watch the comparatively recent Arthur Dunn Cup final between the OWW and Old Carthusians. He was also adopted as an honorary Old Malvernian and frequently played for and toured with the OMs. As if all this was not enough, Hughie also founded and was the leading spirit behind a Sunday morning side, Sunday Strollers aka London Hospitals. For their home fixtures, the team was fortunate to be able to play on the immaculate hospital pitches at Cobham (now home to Chelsea FC’s state-of-the-art training complex). The team played an eclectic variety of opponents ranging from London Probation Officers and United Banks to the District Line and National Car Parks. Two of the most eagerly anticipated fixtures were those versus the BBC commentators (John Motson et al) and the Chelsea Casuals captained by the journalist and broadcaster Brian Glanville who could call upon an array of talented players. The games, though keenly contested, were played in a very good spirit, with enjoyment of the game always 76 | ElizAbETHAN NEWSlETTER | 2009/2010 Above: Hugh Symons. paramount. Unfortunately, the same could not be said of a two-season foray into the Surrey Sunday Friendly League whose title belied the ferocity of some of the encounters! A GQ magazine article dubbed Hugh ‘A legendary figure in Sunday morning soccer circles’ and quoted him as saying ‘soccer is the best and most beautiful game to watch and the most enjoyable to play’. Just what you would expect to hear from a man who at the age of 79 scored a scintillating hat-trick and who even aged 82, had not totally hung up his boots. I feel greatly privileged both to have played, as did my son, alongside Hugh and have counted him, as godfather to our daughter, among our closest family friends. There is sadness that we will in all probability never see his like again. But we can look back and reflect that from the frozen wastes of Gunnersbury Park to the quagmire of Hackney Marshes, when Hugh had the ball there was always a hint of magic in the air. James Woodford (GG 1949-1954)