May - Old Scarborians
Transcription
May - Old Scarborians
1 Summer Times is the Journal of the Old Scarborians Association Members of the Association are former pupils and members of staff of Scarborough High School for Boys Volume 43 May 2003 Old Scarborians Association Web address: http://oldscarborians.org 2 = = David Pottage International Golf Course Architect A Complete Service from Project Appraisal through Detailed Design to Turnkey Development 70 Whitesmead Road Old Town Stevenage Herts. SG1 3JZ Tel: 01438 221026 Fax:01438 229271 e-mail davidpottage@ntlworld.com Member European Institute of Golf Course Architects 1 PRESIDENT: PUBLICITY Mick Bowman, 9 Ilkley Grove, Guisborough, Cleveland TS14 8LL Tel: +44 (0)1287 634650 E-mail: mjwb@supanet.com Please send photographs for scanning for the web site, from UK addresses, or publicity items, to: Mick Bowman, 9 Ilkley Grove, Guisborough, Cleveland TS14 8LL Tel: +44 (0)1287 634650 E-mail: mjwb@supanet.com SECRETARY/MEMBERSHIP Peter Robson, Forge Villa, High Street, Ebberston, North Yorkshire. YO13 9PA Tel: +44 (0)1723 859335 E-mail: Peter.Robson@btinternet.com Assistant Secretary/Membership Colin Hurd (01723 870597) E-mail: colinhurd@yahoo.co.uk FINANCIAL, SPORT & MAGAZINE ADVERTISING Chris Found, Pinewood Cottage, Silpho, Scarborough. North Yorkshire. YO13 0JP Tel: +44 (0)1723 882343 E-mail: DFound@ukf.net SUMMER TIMES EDITORIAL Please send all items for the next Summer Times, (by e-mail, CD or floppy disk if possible; otherwise on single sides of paper), to reach me by 15th August 2003: David Fowler, “Farthings”, 56 Prince of Wales Apartments, Esplanade, Scarborough, North Yorkshire. YO11 2BB Tel: +44 (0)1723 365448 E-mail: osa@farthings.org.uk Associate Editor John Mann (01948 662943; M: 0799 0787089) E-mail: john.e.mann@ukgateway.net OSA WEB SITE http://oldscarborians.org Please send all items for the web site, to: Bill Potts 1848 Hidden Hills Drive Roseville California 95661-5804 USA Telephone: +001 916 773-3865 E-mail: osa@wfpconsulting.com CONTENTS 2 3 4 6 6 6 7 13 18 23 25 26 26 27 28 31 33 35 36 36 36 37 42 43 45 47 48 51 58 58 59 60 60 Editorial Presidential Secretarial Treasurial Sporting events OSA web site report Committee Profiles From here & there Obituaries Memories– a Girl at SBHS More Memories – Myton-on-Swale Dinner at Myton Memories of Stod Further Imperfect Memories Recollections Seconds Out Bill Kendall Remembers Flotsam & Jetsam Graham School Appeal The World’s Easiest Quiz Peter Robson visits Australia Chewing the Fat School Photo 1925 Connections Hov’s War Memoir – Preamble Hov’s War Memoir – Response 5000 Miles – Hov’s War Memoir Casey’s Continental Capers– Part.1 Answers to The World’s Easiest Quiz Crossword Solution November 2002 Crossword No. 3 Late News; Forthcoming Events Postscript 2 EDITORIAL digested.” I was browsing idly through a copy of The Scarborian. A musty aroma tainted with mildew percolated the air and dust flew everywhere as I flicked the pages. The magazine fell open at the Old Scarborians’ Association page. Now, 60 years on, we send 638 copies of Summer Times world wide - but twice a year. This surely says something about the strength of our Association when the school closed some 30 years ago. The mustiness was hardly surprising. The magazine was issue 29 - published in 1943 and 60 years old. I thought there would be few connections between 1943 and 2003; until I read that editorial: “Last year 600 copies of The Scarborian were sent out to Old Boys serving in the Forces at home and abroad. The Magazine made its way to all parts of the world, and even as the new Magazine goes to Press, letters of acknowledgment are still being received. There is no doubt that the Magazine was welcomed, and the reward for the trouble in sending it has been not merely thanks, but unstinted and enthusiastic praise of the contents. A typical letter is one from India: “It was really a treat to get the School Magazine. When I received it I put all things aside till I had read it from cover to cover.” Another writes: “Just a line saying how much I appreciated reading the School Magazine again this year. Mention of some of the names in it brought happy memories of Schooldays.” A naval wanderer writes: “I’m very grateful for the assortment of news it gives - especially that of Old Boys. I may say that several of my fellow officers have all been very impressed by the variety of activities it covers.” And finally, a “Desert Rat” hits on the explanation of the warmth of its welcome: “I thoroughly enjoyed reading it, and could visualize those end-of-term meetings when the Magazine did not take on such a sentimental value as it does now. I received the last one in the thick of the June ‘show,’ and under trying conditions it was eagerly Now, 60 years on, we receive comments which indicate the magazine is still as welcome now, as it was in 1943. Now, 60 years on, the “Desert Rats” again are at war. However, there is one other, much more striking connection. As I write this Editorial early in April, some of our troops are approaching Baghdad. 60 years ago, in 1943, the year that musty, mildewed magazine was published as a new, crisp copy of The Scarborian, Major George Reginald Hovington, (better known as Hov), was fighting for King and Country. Today we start to serialize his Memoir, and I quote from Chapter 6: “On our way through Baghdad, we were astounded to see Hedley Verity. He had caught amoebic dysentery in India and was sent to the hospital in the city for treatment before being repatriated. How he knew our company was to pass through Baghdad I do not know but there he was, like a hitch-hiker, stopping our leading truck.” Connections indeed! To bring us back to the present, thank you to all contributors and advertisers, thank you to John Mann who is now Associate Editor (another name for part-time typist but I’m breaking him in gently between his many holidays!), thank you to proof-readers Adrian Casey - get well soon Adrian - and Peter Robson, and, above all many thanks to all of you, whether contributors or not. Without your support there couldn’t be an Old Scarborians Association. David Fowler (1949-55) Editor 3 PRESIDENTIAL I was honoured to be elected President of the Old Scarborians Association this year and very pleased to be the first son to follow his father in the position. I first attended an AGM ten years ago and I discovered that attendance automatically made you a member of the committee. If memory serves me right there were nine old boys there. Amongst them were Frank Bamforth, Geoff Nalton, Jack Layton and Peter Emms and his father. Since then there have been many changes to the association and the attendance at AGM’s has now reached the point were there has to be a vote for committee membership. Although I cannot remember anyone wishing to participate being turned down! In fact as the work load has increased the Secretary and Magazine Editor now have assistants. Although regular thanks are given to the driving forces behind the association I would like to take this opportunity to bring the enormous amount of work done for members by Peter Robson, David Fowler, Chris Found and Bill Potts to your attention. Each of these spend many hours involved with association tasks and without their commitment to the Old Boys the dinners, magazines and web site we enjoy would not be there. On behalf of the membership thank you, gentlemen. The annual Christmas Dinner at the Palm Court seemed to be it’s usual success and I have no doubt Peter has given details in his report. The only point of contention appeared to be about which bar members should meet in before arriving at the Palm Court. On Boxing Day I drove down from Guisborough with my brother-in-law, John Walker (1958-65), to watch the annual rugby match between the Old Boys, now renamed The Exiles, and the Rugby Club. Although the years are long past when you could see up to thirty Old Scarborians slogging it out on the pitch I was amazed at the links still there. Barry Beanland, who first played in the fixture in 1969 has been involved ever since either as a player or team organiser, Peter Emms who started school in 1951 led the team out and obviously has learnt nothing in his many years of rugby as he still plays in the madhouse positions in the front row. This of course is the view of a person who spent all his time in the backs! Also playing was the gentleman reported as the youngest old boy on the membership list, Nigel Wilson who started school in 1972. Much to my amazement the links did not end there. Richard White had his two sons James and Jonnie playing, Roger Gilbert had a son Richard playing and another son Chris hobbling with a broken foot and unable to turn out, Chris Found’s boy Richard was also involved. While presenting the trophy I was told that the Chairman of the club, Colin Adamson, and the Club President elect, Colin Rennard, are both Old Boys. Barry also told me that Bash Howes, who was a great supporter of the Rugby Club, left a considerable amount of money to the club on his untimely death. The club used it to start a development fund, which is ongoing and might be considered for donations from old boys who have enjoyed the sport and social life offered by the club over the years. If any of the names or details mentioned are wrong or I have missed anyone out, I apologise now and put forward the defence that I was enjoying the club’s best bitter while gathering the information. On the topic of the rugby links can I raise a couple of questions? The trophy played for is the Marsden Trophy and was presented in 1936. Questions: When did the Old Boys v The Rugby Club fixtures start? Has the trophy always been for rugby or was the school a soccer school in the 1930’s? 4 Does anyone out there have any memories of past games, funny or serious or historical fact? Where did all the school’s rugby players go? Clive Hopkins and Henry Bell became founder members of Guisborough Rugby club, Geoff Dowson went on to captain Yorkshire, Norm Hopkins played at Scarborough along with many others, Dave Watson vanished to the wilds of Lancashire and strange teams in the west and I think Mick Cammish played Rugby League. If you have any memories or details, funny, serious or historical let either David Fowler or myself know and we will publish the relevant fact or fiction. Do not be put off because you feel your piece might be too short or unimportant. It might just spark others off so generating a history of Scarborough High School Rugby. I was very pleased to be part of a considerable Old Boy’s presence at the 80th birthday party for Bob Watson. Besides the members present it was good to see Jack Speight again. There were people present from many organisations as well as ex pupils, ex colleagues and many friends. The “old guy” is certainly an example to us all. I only hope we are as active as he is at 80. Congratulations Bob. Having seen Bob and Jack I was asked by one or two members if we could track down more ex teachers and encourage them to attend one or other of the gatherings. Do you know the whereabouts of an ex member of staff? Let David or myself know if you do and we will “knock on their door” and ask if they would like to see what the eager young boys they sent out into the world turned into. The next event is the London Lunch and I hope as many members as possible will try to attend. Tickets and details are available from Peter Robson as usual. Mick Bowman (1954-61) President SECRETARIAL At 16 February 2003, the OSA had 638 members versus 616 at the time of my last report (August 21st 2002), an increase of 22. Thus, we continue to recruit new members albeit at a slower rate than in the recent past. As usual, I ask all members who have kept in touch with their contemporaries to inform them about the OSA and to refer them to the web site which gives a lot of detailed information about the OSA and includes an application form for Life Membership. Each year we gain members but sadly we also lose them. In the past six months I have had the deaths of the following reported to me:Ray Ashford (1942-47), Derek Bielby (1934-39), Peter Toy (1928-32), Brian Speak (1936-41) John Yeadon (1945-53) and Denis Saunders (1936-43) The past six months have been relatively quiet following the high activity of the Centenary year. We had an excellent Scarborough dinner attended by 82 members and we are in the advanced planning stage for the London Lunch. At this time it looks as though the latter will be attended by about 50 members slightly lower than last year. Even this attendance depends on the response to a reminder about the lunch which has gone out to all the members with an e mail address. There has been a small response to the question which I raised in the last issue of Summer Times, about the wisdom of continuing with this event. Everyone who responded was in favour of keeping the lunch so we go ahead on that basis. As usual, we had the AGM in November and the principle events were the election of Mick Bowman (1954-61) as President, and of Jack Layton (1936-41) and Doug Owen (1935-40) as Honorary Life Vice Presidents. The latter two have retired from the Committee following 5 A Home from Home with Qualified Nursing Care A family run home with the emphasis on a gentle and loving approach. Our home provides comfort and privacy when desired and long or short respite stay; private or funded are all welcome. There is a smoking lounge for relatives and residents, and two south facing sunny day rooms. Even though we are in a rural location, a private transport service can be arranged for people, if they find visiting their relatives or friend a problem. You are welcome to visit our Nursing Home anytime, for more information please call our Matron: Judy Roddison 8-14 Primrose Valley Road, Filey, North Yorkshire YO14 9QR. TEL: 01723 513545 Proprietor: Capt. E.J.Baines M.N.I M.R.I.N. 6 many years of faithful support and we thank them for their efforts and hope to see them as usual at out events. SPORTING EVENTS This year we will have an additional event. The Old Girls Association of the SGHS have invited us to a joint dinner on the Saturday 27th September at the Palm Court Hotel. This event will be open to spouses as well as members of both Associations. You will find an application form for tickets in this issue. The golf days for 2003 are as follows:Dr. Meadley Thursday 5th June One of the benefits of being your Secretary is that I get to correspond with many of you. You have interesting stories to tell about how you have translated the broad education that you received at the School into a rewarding career. Wherever possible I pass these letters and communications on to David for inclusion in Summer Times. Please keep the letters coming! Peter Robson (1945-53) Secretary TREASURIAL There is very little to report on the financial front since the last edition other than that we are still solvent and that subs are still trickling in albeit at a slower rate. A small profit was made on the Scarborough Christmas Dinner and the running expenses of the organisation continue to be very minimal. Golf Competitions - 2003 T.A.Smith Thursday 17th July For the latter event the first tee has been reserved from 2.30 to 3.30 p.m. and we are hoping that all entrants will agree to start during this time, wherever possible, so that playing fours can be pre-arranged by the organisers. Chris Found (1951-59) Golf Secretary OLD SCARBORIANS WEB SITE REPORT Owing to other commitments, I have made very few changes or additions to the web site since the last edition of Summer Times. There are still a number of photographs of prefects, drama productions and some sporting events in the backlog. One significant addition, however, is the 1942 school photograph, for which Eric Thomlinson (who now lives in Cambridge, Ontario) kindly provided a fairly wellpreserved original. We have recently lost three of our regular advertisers in Summer Times and if anybody knows of any possible replacements we shall be grateful if you will let us know. The cost of a full page in any edition is £50 and £30 for half a page. Graham Rew has scanned and sent the 1958 school photograph, which I may have added by the time you read this. Based on the years I was at the school, I had been under the impression that whole-school photographs were always quadrennial events. Given that we now have both 1958 and 1959 photographs, I realise that hasn’t always been the case. Chris Found (1951-59) Treasurer If you have submitted photographs and are still awaiting their appearance, please accept 7 my apologies for the delay. For the technically inclined, I am gradually converting the site to use cascading style sheets. For pages for which I have done this, loading is marginally faster. However, selfinterest is my main motivation, as the time required for site maintenance and additions will be considerably reduced. Those who are not technically inclined should feel free to ignore this paragraph. Bill Potts (1946-55) Webmaster COMMITTEE PROFILES Mick Bowman (1954-61) B. Phil. Newcastle My formative years were spent at Crossgates, which in those days was a long three miles from town. I was educated for a short time at Lisvane before returning to Seamer Primary where I was one of four boys, Eddie Wilmore, Alan Haig and Martin Wilson (later my Best Man), to move on to the High School. The first five years, 1954-59, were spent at the old school where my father, George, and two Uncles, Douglas and Kenneth Coe, had been educated. I was surprised as a first former to discover how many of the staff had taught them and were still there. I also met and played rugby with Peter Taylor whose father had been at school with mine playing soccer together in the days before rugby was established. My sixth form years were at the new school where I received an invitation to the Opening Ceremony. This was as a member of the Caretaker’s cleaning staff; I had spent the summer holidays working with them preparing the new building. On leaving school I went to what is now Shef- field University and later to Newcastle University before spending thirty seven years working in secondary schools in Cleveland. I hope to celebrate thirty eight years of marriage to Vivien this summer having met her at college. We have a son and daughter and a grandson and granddaughter. At the moment I am enjoying the freedom of retirement and am spending a lot of time on golf courses taking pleasure in the exercise but suffering extreme stress when confronted every few yards by a little white ball with a mind of itʹs own. Ron Gledhill (1936-44) After leaving school in 1944 I joined the Royal Corps of Signals and served in India, Malaya and Thailand as a Wireless Operator. In 1948, and until 1951 I studied at Hull Technical College, qualifying as a Graduate Member of the Institute of Electrical Engineers, and in due course became a full Member and a Chartered Engineer. From 1951 to 1957 I was employed by Yorkshire Electricity in Hull, initially as a Graduate Trainee, and subsequently with the Engineering Staff. Between 1957 and 1965 I was with Blackburn Aircraft Ltd., later to become Hawker Siddley Aviation; later still to be known as British Aerospace. I worked on Buccaneer aircraft as an Electrical Design Engineer and was eventually promoted to the post of Chief Electrical Design Engineer, based in Brough. From 1965 to 1968 I lectured in Electrical Engineering at Hull Technical College. It was there that I discovered just how much I did NOT know. It is true to say that the best way 8 to learn a subject is to teach it. I moved to Sunderland in 1968 and lectured there until retirement in 1989. Upon retirement I returned to Scarborough, my hometown. I have been involved in sport all my life and have enjoyed Soccer, Cricket, Tennis, Squash, and latterly, Golf. I have never excelled at any of them, but playing sports has always kept me fit. In my bachelor days in Hull I often played Squash eight or nine times a week, and I, and after a game, the Hull Brewery Company, both benefited. I still play Golf, to use the word loosely, with my handicap going from 2 to 22 in recent years. I still hit them fairly straight, though not so far. John E Mann (1950-56) At the last AGM of the Association Peter Robson turned his baleful gaze upon me and reminded me that I had not yet fulfilled my obligation, as a new Committee Member, to pen a history of my life. For a moment I thought that he was about to condemn me to a period of detention for my tardiness, but my abject apology saved me from this fate. In preparation for this piece of autobiographical journalism I first re-read the glowing pages of past issues of Summer Times and it quickly dawned upon me that there was no possibility whatsoever of my being able to compete with the many and various luminaries whose histories had already graced these pages. After all, my name was not engraved on any cup or shield, nor was it gilded on any Honours Board. Who could possibly be interested in the life story of such an average student? Why on earth would anyone wish to waste his precious time read- ing of the exploits of a boy who resided in the bottom half of his form for most of his High School career? However, bear with me. After all, we do need to fill 64 pages of each edition! My first, and purely personal, claim to fame is that I am the only student that I am aware of, who both sat and passed the 11-plus examinations twice. Originally I sat it whilst my family and I were living in the West Riding. At the end of the summer term we moved to Scarborough and when my success in the exam was published I duly applied for a place at Westwood. The North Riding Education Committee, in its wisdom, advised my parents that at the age of 10 years I was too young to attend such an illustrious establishment and so I was condemned to spend a wasted year at Gladstone Road Junior School in the clutches of a fearsome harridan named Miss Binns. However, the Boys’ High School was not to escape its responsibilities so easily and I duly took and passed the paper a second time. In September, 1950, therefore, I presented myself at Joey Marsden’s emporium for further education. With a new haircut, a freshly scrubbed face and a blazer two sizes too big for me (so that I could grow into it) I entered that imposing building. My first day was a revelation. I was bushed twice and went home sporting a brand new tear in the pocket of my brand new blazer. Needless to say, my parents were none too pleased and I was not overjoyed at the thought of going back to school for a second day. During the following 6 years most of the Masters worked hard, without much success, at trying to educate me. In retrospect I realise that I succeeded in those lessons where I had some affinity with the individual teacher, and have fond memories of Les Brown, both Rice and Price, Costain, Pike Richardson, Taylor, Hov, Gerry Hinchliffe and dear old Pop Francis. Both Zenner and Dai Liddicott were dismissive of my paltry 9 attempts at Physics and Chemistry, I was extremely wary of Bradley (with good cause) and so fearful of Bon that I refused to take German in the Second Year. Kate Liddicott, Dai’s youngest daughter is a good friend to my wife these days. She is a lovely lady, with a wicked sense of humour. I wonder where that came from? Must have been her Mother! I enjoyed cricket, but was not very good at the game. My slow, left arm bowling was wayward and served only to improve the averages of my opponents. When batting, I was physically incapable of keeping my eye on the ball, so generally I did not bother the scorers too much. I was not fond of the blistering hot, followed by ice cold showers after Rugby on Oliver’s Mount, so tried to stay away from the ball and marauding forwards as much as possible. To no avail, of course, as Jock would insist upon my being first scalded, and subsequently chilled to the marrow, before being allowed back down the hill to school. Recently, Mick Scott reminded me of one of our escapades when coming down from the Mount. We both agreed that late afternoon that we would attempt to get back to school on our bicycles without either peddling or braking. We made it to Filey Road without mishap and tore through the traffic lights at Ramshill Road, they conveniently being on green. Unfortunately, lower down Ramshill Road a lollipop lady decided to step out into our path. There was no way that either of us could have screeched to a halt in time, so, screaming “Banzai” we flew past her, one on either side of the horrified lady and carried on, at speed, over the Valley Bridge and down the slope to school. Our plan had succeeded. Neither of us had peddled nor braked. The following day we were called into Joey’s Office and duly thrashed. The lollipop lady had had her revenge. The only other sporting memory is of the time that I tackled Jock. As usual, I had been spending the afternoon as far away from the action as possible, when, horrified, I saw Jock, ball tucked tightly into his armpit, racing up the pitch, heading for the touch- line. Even though I was some way away from this charging Highlander, there was no one closer. I pretended that I was unaware of his thundering approach, but some idiot screamed at me to do something. Dreading the thought of getting anywhere near Jock, but more afraid of my compatriots’ rage, I made a slanting run across the field and into Jock’s path. It was the best, the purest tackle, my arms tight around Jock’s thighs, my shoulder hard into his buttocks. We crashed to the floor, the inevitable try saved. Jock picked himself up from the floor. “I didn’t know that you could tackle like that, Mann,” he said. I was swollen with pride, even more so when congratulated by my Captain. However, it was a big mistake. From that day on Jock played me in every position, had me kicking for conversion, and was continually screaming at me to run faster and tackle harder. I actually began to enjoy my rugby, but continued to attempt to escape those showers. Towards the end of my school career Joey commanded me to his office. “Now then, lad,” he said, sucking on his pipe. “What do you intend to do with yourself when you leave school?” I hadn’t the foggiest idea! He shook his head, sorrowfully. “Why don’t you become a teacher?” This took me completely by surprise. Me? A teacher? He must have mistaken me for someone else. “I think that I could get you into St. John’s,” he opined. Regretfully, I declined his offer. “Then what about the Law?” For a moment I saw myself in powdered wig and flowing cape, condemning the guilty and freeing the innocent and beautiful widow. “Do you think I could really pass all those exams, Sir?” I wondered. Joey was obviously startled by this remark, but slowly the penny dropped. “Nay, lad,” shaking his head sadly. “I didn’t mean a lawyer, I meant a policeman!” The Mann who fell to earth! Joey suggested that I sit the Civil Service Examination, which I did, leaving school in 1956, and subsequently, working in the Reading 10 Room at the British Museum. The library employed, seemingly, at least two men for each and every job. Subsequently, there was little for me to do, and I quickly learned that if I volunteered to work in the private rooms and studies or the most distant galleries I would be left to my own devices for the day. I spent the next 9 months or so reading first editions, studying rare manuscripts and getting very drunk on scrumpy in the pubs in South Kensington, Chelsea and Earls Court. I earned a pittance and could afford to eat lunch in the Museum canteen infrequently, being forced to supplement my diet with Sandwich Spread sandwiches. Patrick (Lou) Henry, a chum from school, was a neighbour, and, together, we would, on occasion, frequent Ronnie Scott’s and other havens of academia in Soho. Boredom set in and, knowing that I would be called up for National Service, I volunteered for The Royal Air Force, resigned from the British Museum and spent the late summer awaiting my call-up living in Paris and working in the kitchens of the Hotel George Cinq. Thanks to Les Brown my schoolboy French quickly improved, although many of the phrases learned were not in any FrenchEnglish dictionary, particularly those delivered by the chefs. The vin ordinaire was freely available in the kitchens, but no matter how much was guzzled down, no-one ever appeared the worse for wear; it was so stiflingly hot in those kitchens and the pace of work so frenetic that the wine simply oozed out of your pores and into the soupe du jour! I do remember, however, on one occasion, a souschef chasing a waiter with a threatening meat cleaver, but that was simply a difference of opinion. I joined the RAF in the autumn of 1958, did my basic training at Bridgenorth, volunteered for aircrew and went down to the Isle of Wight for selection. My application was, regretfully, turned down. I just did not have the necessary aptitude to be entrusted with such a piece of valuable machinery as an aeroplane. I trained in Air Traffic Control at the Royal School of Navigation at Shawbury, and on completion of training was posted to Hong Kong. I soon realised that there were numerous opportunities available to enable me to escape the drudgeries of Service life. Sport was one. I volunteered for both the rugby and cricket teams, and, occasionally, when they were desperately hard up for players I was selected. These forays not only took me to other Army and RAF installations in the Colony, but also to Singapore, Malaya and Korea. I learned to sail, sub-aqua dive and, for relaxation, took A-levels. Every now and then, of course, I had to work, but even then it was with the civilian Air Traffic Authority at Kai Tak airport where I learned to play wickedly serious Poker. I had a wonderful time and was horrified when I realised that I would soon be returned to Blighty’s sunny shores. Fearful of this I signed on for a further year on the clear understanding that I could spend it where I was. And the RAF agreed! During the next months I visited both Japan and the Philippines courtesy of the USAF and countries that don’t even exist anymore; Siam and Indo-China, now of course, Thailand, Laos and Cambodia. One evening, walking down Nathan Road in Kowloon to catch the Star Ferry to Victoria Island where I was to meet a very attractive redheaded nurse from the military hospital on The Peak, I bumped into Keith Watson (1950-55), walking in the opposite direction. We had not seen each other since Keith had left school. We passed each other by with only the briefest of greetings, no more than a brief hello. Callow youth! I never saw Keith again, but have become a good friend of Gary, Keith’s elder brother, who now lives in New Zealand. Anne and I were in Melbourne in February of last year and had hoped to meet up with Keith who was living there, but Keith sadly died. That makes this story somewhat more poignant. The last few weeks of my RAF career were spent at Acklington, near Newcastle upon Tyne, firing either green or red Very flares at 11 aeroplanes from the runway caravan. I missed! You have to have been in the RAF in those days to know what I am talking about! Having left the Service I was at a complete loss. I had no idea what to do with myself. I called upon the old school. Joey was not at all surprised when I told him that I had no clear concept of what I wanted to do with my life. “You haven’t changed much, then,” he mused. I tried all sorts of jobs; Local Government, the Scarborough Hospital Management Committee, the Michelin Tyre Company, and, in between jobs, the Cricket Club Members Bar, The Scarborough and Whitby Brewery, etc. etc. etc. It was during one of those inbetween times that I took a temporary Christmas job with Fosters Wine Merchants in Newborough, 6 weeks work only. I stayed with the Group for over 30 years. Only days before I was due to, once again, become unemployed the Area Manager asked me if I would like to join the company’s Management Trainee Scheme. My now wife and baby daughter thought that this would be a good idea, so off I went to London again. Management in Newcastle and on Teesside followed and whilst living in the North-East I attended Newcastle-upon-Tyne University where I studied for the Wines and Spirits Association Education Trust examinations. After qualifying four years later, I was promoted to Area Manager in North London. A year passed followed by a move and promotion to East Anglia, living near Newmarket and running an office in Bury St. Edmunds. Somehow I came to the attention of the Group Marketing Director and he suggested, and was instrumental in forging, a new career path for me. The following 25 years or so were spent in Brand Marketing and Sales, culminating in my being appointed a Director of two of the companies within the Group. Somehow, I had stumbled upon a job that I enjoyed, and which both challenged and stretched me. Even better, I was able to travel extensively and quench my thirst on quality wines, all at someone else’s expense. A few years ago Grand Metropolitan, (my company) and Guinness decided to merge to form the then new super-group, Diageo. There was an obscene wealth of senior managers and executives in the two companies and buckets full of money swilling around in the early retirement pot. I took full advantage. Now retired and living in Shropshire with a second home in Scarborough, married for over 40 years to the same lady, with a daughter who studied the Law and is now with a practice in Oswestry, and a granddaughter of 11 who is extremely bright and is committed, even at that early age to becoming a vet, I consider myself very fortunate. Without that background of Grammar School education, even though I did not take full advantage of it, I would have been totally unprepared for the opportunities that arose for me in my months at the British Museum, my years in the RAF and my subsequent career in the Wine Trade. I look back on those schooldays somewhat regretfully, but with many happy memories and gratitude for the grounding that Joey Marsden and his team gave me. Some years ago, at June Blakemore’s retirement party, Norman Stoddard remembered me and asked what I was doing for a living. “I always knew you would make something of yourself,” he said. “In spite of yourself.” Thanks Stod. That’s one of the nicest things that anyone has ever said of me. Maurice Johnson (1941–46) After leaving school my first job was in the legal profession with Geoff Nalton at Bedwell and Hoyle in Queen Street In 1951 I left for London. Allegedly, the streets were paved with gold. From 1951- 53 I was employed by the Rank Organisation in Theatre Management. 12 Maritime Motifs Southley Road South Molton North Devon EX36 4BL Tel / Fax +44 (0)1769 572727 We are pleased to provide quality Sweaters/ Pullovers in 100% Lambswool or Wool/ Acrylic to members of the Old Scarborians Association worldwide. These bear the OSA emblem. Please contact us for details and prices. In 1953 I joined Schweppes and was involved in National Sales through regional contract packers. In 1955 I joined Unigate Foods, in London, as a Sales Manager. From there, in 1960, to The Milk Marketing Board where I stayed until 1966 as Marketing Manager for cheese and yoghurt. From 1966–96 I was with the Swiss Cheese Union, starting as the National Sales Promotion Manager, becoming Marketing Manager and finally Managing Director for the United Kingdom, Eire and Scandinavia. I retired in 1996. Later in 1996 I joined Retainagroup, one of the major names in car security and registration as Marketing Director for two years, and am now a non-executive Director. During these years I have been an active Freemason, a charter member of Dunstable Lions and am now a member of Scarborough Lions. I have been a Freeman of the City of London since 1975 and a fellow of the Institute of Directors since 1991. My only claim to fame at school was when I played 2nd witch in the production of Mac- Farthings Web Design... ...for web sites out of this world ...at prices to make your eyes twinkle! (01723) 365448 info@farthings.org.uk http://www.farthings.org.uk beth. The other two witches were, I think, Leslie Craggs and Laurence Poole, but, regrettably, I believe that Laurence has now died. I attended school during the war years, which was a vastly different experience to school in peacetime. There were no School trips, no Rugby, and, at least 5 lady teachers. Griggs, Morley and Andrews were three of those that I remember. Most of the male teachers were of a certain maturity! I wonder if anyone has stories to tell of these wartime ladies. They were heroines in their way. Colin Hurd (1952-58) I started playing rugby at Scarborough in 1958 and played mainly for the first XV until 1968. I was then persuaded to play for the veterans team for a few years and finally retired in 1975. After that I was Secretary of the club from 1973 to 1979 and President in season 1988-89. Since that time I have done very little because of work com- 13 mitments. I played cricket for Scarborough from 1967 to 1981 mainly in the second team but some seasons in the first XI. From 1975 to 1979 I captained the second team in the East Yorkshire Cup Competition. I was mainly a batsman and scored over 5000 runs during my time at Scarborough. I served on Scarborough Cricket Club main committee from 1977 to 1998, a continuous stint of 21 years, ending up as vice chairman mainly to do with the cricket side of things. Before that I played at Cloughton and have now returned there as Secretary. After I retired from Scarborough Building Society I took a temporary seasonal job at the Town hall helping in the cash office counting and banking the cash from car parks etc. I am married to Kate and have a daughter Nicola and a son Richard. (Editor: Further Committee Profiles will appear in future issues) FROM HERE AND THERE Geoff Pugh writes from B.C. Canada (1933-43) I thought that you might be interested in learning how Don Potts’ and my own paths have crossed over the years. After we both had left the Science 6th Don went into the RAF and I, after an intensive, but short Engineering course, joined the RNVR After demob it was up to St. Catharine’s College, Cambridge and then 12 years working in Trinidad. In 1963 my family and I immigrated to Canada, finally settling down in Calgary, Alberta in 1969. Our 13-year stay there was spent in complete ignorance of the fact that Don was also living in Calgary. After I retired and had moved to the beautiful Okana- gon Valley in British Columbia, through a mutual friend, we met again. Since then we still get together on occasion and e-mail each other regularly. Unfortunately, I am unable to travel much these days. The May ’02 issue of the “Summer Times” has an interesting memoir by Les Hartzig on the Chamonix 1938 school camp. That wonderful 3-week camp remains strong in my memory and in 1949 I returned to the campsite whilst touring France by motorcycle. The water trough, so vividly remembered, was still there and still full of glacier-cold water. It is many years now since I last visited Scarborough. Sorry to say, I am doubtful that I will be able to return and attend a reunion Dinner, but please relay my best wishes to all Old Scarborians. Graham Rew writes from Lockerbie (1958-60) I only recently came across the OSA website and have enjoyed reading through the numerous articles in the recent editions of Summer Times which have stirred quite a few old memories. I was at SBHS from 1958-1960, starting at Westwood and leaving just over a year after the move to Woodlands, when my parents moved to Scotland. After finishing school in Girvan in 1965 I joined the Royal Bank of Scotland starting in Irvine. During my banking career I worked mainly in branches in Ayrshire, Glasgow and Dumfriesshire and finally opted for early retirement in 2000, while Manager at Lockerbie, where I moved with my family in 1988. Having seen the Whole School Group photograph of 1959 in which I am featured I realised after finding my own copy that I have another version taken at the same time. In my copy Frank ‘Billy’ Binder’s arms are almost unfolded (sad that he was not able to enjoy a long and well deserved retirement). The strong sunshine on the day caused 14 many eyes to close hence the reason more shots were probably taken. I have meanwhile sent attachments to Bill Potts of the school photograph taken at Westwood in 1958. I often wondered if anyone from my class of 2A ever managed to convince Norman Stoddard, our Form Master at the time, that the colour of a ‘red pillar box’ was in fact red. I always remember him for introducing me to a Russian gentleman by the name of ‘Isoverof’ to whom I often refer when calculating percentages. Although my time at SBHS was short it created a lasting impression and I realised in later years that I had to consider myself fortunate to have experienced what was a great institution. My application for OSA membership is on its way. Mrs Eileen Wood writes I would appreciate any information you can give to me regarding an old pupil, Donald Stephenson OBE, CBE. I am researching the possibility that he was a friend of TE Lawrence. I would be very grateful for any information that you can let me have. Andrew Straughan writes from Easingwold (1959-65) As a new user ʺon-lineʺ, I must say what a true delight it has been to view the school photoʹs on the OSA website. It is hard to imagine one left nearly 37 years ago - the pictures recall vivid memories, all the names come flooding back. Many thanks to those who have put so much effort into creating this splendid pool of information. I wonder, do you happen to have a list of who is doing what, in my year? John Fielder for example? It would be good to know how they all fared. If one could have part of life over again my choice would be SHBS - and to make much more of it second time around. P.S. Yours truly is standing immediately behind HWM in the ʹ59 school photograph! Richard Stevens writes from Kirk Michael, Isle of Man (1963-70) Good to receive the latest Summer Times. The Alchemist photo has caused much interest it seems - I have a copy of the programme for the performance - I will send you a copy should help identify the remaining people. The tall one on the right is me - so you can at least remove one question mark. I also have some old rugby team photos that I will try to send one of these days. There seems to be a disappointing level of contribution from my era at SBHS - 1964 to 1970 - rarely any messages or articles - I recognise only one name from the list of emails published. One of these days I will pen a contribution. Mike Lester writes from Staintondale (1949-57) Congratulations on a another stunning magazine. Have not had time to explore thoroughly as yet, but will eventually. Is the Christmas Dinner members only or are wives and sweethearts invited? (Editor: Members only Mike. But other members have suggested opening up functions in future years. There seems to be a minority in favour at present – but you will be pleased to hear that there will be a joint dinner with the SGHS this year to which spouses may be invited – see the enclosed order form) Geoffrey Wilson writes from Birmingham (1953-61) I have kept in occasional touch via my elder brother, John D Wilson (circa 1944-51) who has been a member for many years; thought it was about time I started to ʹlook backʹ! 15 Denis Cooper writes from Thornton-le-Dale (1944-49) I would like to support the message from Len Plaxton. A visit to the old school at Westwood is a very good idea. Perhaps it would be possible to arrange one for next spring? Stan Halliday writes from Stowmarket (1949-54) Congratulations on the latest Mag ; who said nostalgiaʹs not as good as it used to be? So far, Iʹve had a contact from Ted Lancaster, but no writ from Pete Hough. Should have liked to have attended the dinner next week, but a previous engagement in Munich will prevent same. ( as you suspected, something to do with national security, but canʹt say anymore, you understand ) David, in a previous message you talked about a way to obtain back numbers without the tedium of down-loading. Could you run that past me again, when you have a minute ? Many thanks. (Editor: Stan refers to the CD version of Summer Times which contains all issues since 1999 together with instructions, computer software and an Index – all for £2) Gerald Harrison writes from San Diego, California (1939-45) Many thanks for the Centenary edition of Summer Times. It is just great! Congratulations to all involved in its publication. Jean and I had fully intended to attend the Centenary celebrations last June, but unfortunately I have had a severe health set back which has prevented me from any travel for some time. I have recently been in communication with John Knighton, George Kent and Stephen Day. It’s great to get in touch with other Old Boys once in a while. Would it not be possible to publish a mem- bership list? Anyone who did not wish to have their details listed could be omitted, but I would think that there would be very few of these. You could make a small charge for printing and distribution costs. Such a list would be invaluable for members, enabling them to get in touch with each other, if they so wished. Also, has the idea of a joint Boys and Girls association been considered? I still think that that would be a great idea. (Associate Editor: A list of e –mail addresses was published in the November 2002 edition. The Old Girls Association is now up and running and increasing its membership every day. We hope to hold joint functions with the Ladies from time to time) Ray Muir writes from Cayton (1936-41) Hearty congratulations on the November issue of Summer Times. I received it upon my return from Bristol having visited my son there. Whilst I was down there I used his form to apply for tickets to both the Palm Court and London events. We discussed the points raised in your report about the continuance of these two dates. Personally, I think that the present format is about right, and although there may be merit in various regional events one has to remember that access to such venues is possibly more restricted than to London, which is accessible from all parts of the country. I have always enjoyed the London Luncheon and have usually managed to combine it with a weekend break. This also suits my wife very well. There has been criticism of the cost of the meal, but major cities are not far behind London prices. It must also be said that the meals themselves are par excellence, in fact the last two, at the East India Club and Mossiman’s were most enjoyable and I thought very good value. 16 On the question of support for local events throughout the year, I think that this depends upon their nature having regard to the age range. At my age I am very happy with the two main events as they are at present and I will continue to support them as long as I am able. John Hunter writes from Brampton Cumbria (1941-46) Once again, my congratulations to the Committee on the excellent work that they all do for us. Thank you for your invitation to join the Old Scarborians and for the latest issue of Summer Times. What a great read! Ronald Hutchinson writes from Malvern (1945-53) The article about the Chess club brought memories flooding back. I was not a great player nor was I able to attend after school on a regular basis, as I had to collect the evening papers from the Press Office and take them to our shop for the evening deliveries. I did, however, learn the basics. Frank Binder was my form master in my last year at school. Having been Head of History in a school whose Head was GR Hovington I became Head Master of Hanley Castle Grammar School in Worcester, which I turned into a Comprehensive and discovered that Les Brown had taught there. I retired from the rat race in 1991. I have a holiday home in Normandy where I spend half the year, and am still very happily married. (Editor: Ron’s article appears on page 44?) John (Dave) Hudson writes from Llanelli (1958-63) Although I still return to Scarborough four or five times per year I have lost touch with all my old friends. If anyone remembers me and would care to get in touch my address is:ERW DEG 32, Greenfield Terrace Pontyberem Llanelli, SA15 5AW A brief resume of my life since leaving school: 1963-69 An engineering apprenticeship with Rolls Royce in Derby. Qualified as Design Draughtsman. HNC Mechanical Engineering. 1969-71 Bishop Lonsdale College, Derby (Nottingham University). 1971-76 Teaching at Parkfields Comprehensive School, Derby. (B..Ed) 1976-2001 Teaching at Ysgol Rhydygon Special School in Camarthen, South Wales for children with behavioural difficulties. (I should say that most of my teachers at SBHS would have said that I was eminently suitable for this kind of work!) Margaret, my wife, and I both enjoyed the Old Girls’ Reunion Dinner and look forward to the next time. (Editor: See enclosed booking form) My membership is long overdue, but my cheque will cover for a tie and CD. I am impatient to explore previous copies of Summer Times. Mike Hunter writes from Edinburgh (1959-66 ) For Mr Potts You must have been my physics teacher in the 1960s, for which many thanks. I have two strong memories: you had degaussed minesweepers and told us that colour TVs, then a marvel, needed degaussing too; I contested with you that it was possible for a car to decelerate at more than 1g. (Bill Potts replied: As David Fowler says, in his reply, Iʹm old (67 today, as it happens), but not that old. If my father were still alive, heʹd be looking forward to his 98th birthday next May. The fact is that he fell apart (medically 17 speaking) at the end of 1975 and died within a short period (early January, 1976). His widow (and my stepmother), Priska, eventually married Jack Speight, whose own wife died a few years after my fatherʹs death. They still live in the house at 32 Lady Edithʹs Avenue where I lived as a child (with an eight-year gap from 1941 to 1948). Jack Speight (who I sometimes refer to as my step-stepfather) is now 81; Priska is 80. The house was built in 1935 by my Uncle Jack Fell [my motherʹs first cousin] and occupied in early 1936. The price was £1400! Its market value today is probably more than £150,000. Unlike my father, I agree with you that a car can decelerate at more than 1G (not g, which is the SI symbol for gram). It happens all the time in head-on collisions. Incidentally, Iʹm one of a handful of Old Scabs who went to university (Imperial College, in my case) and then dropped out. Notwithstanding that, I became a Fellow of the British Computer Society in 1969 (while living in Canada). Iʹm one of very few people to have achieved that status from outside Britain. with a combination housekeeper/babysitter, whom he found recumbently entertaining an American serviceman on the sofa late one evening, he sent my sister and me to live with our maiden Aunt Mabel Cromack (of Scarborough Corporation Catering Department Fame) on Throxenby Lane. That was early 1943. The Fowler family (parents, plus David and his sister, Phoebe) lived on Throxenby Grove. I was 7 and David was a precocious 4-1/2. We both joined in street games with other kids in the neighbourhood and I remember one particularly memorable picnic organised by Davidʹs mother.) David Andrews writes from Leicester (1958-63) Update on my situation. Taking early retirement from Ordnance Survey after 39+ years service on 31st March 2003. Next appearance in the dole queue, (not ready for the pipe and slippers yet!) Rowland Bruce writes from Adelaide, Australia (1949-54) Iʹm pretty sure you must be the D G Fowler, with whom I vied for Chemistry marks before I left to live in York in December 1954 If so, fancy getting in contact? Unless I suffer a deceleration of many Gs, I expect to live much longer than my father did. He suffered from asthma (as you may remember) for most of his adult life. I canʹt know for sure, but I suspect his poor medical condition (heart, kidneys, liver, all in bad shape) leading to his death may have been brought on by his fondness for a patent medicine he took daily for his asthma, even after it had apparently (and spontaneously) ceased to be a problem. For a physicist, he made a surprising number of irrational decisions. You tried to persuade me to turn the metal wire clothes line into a dipole and reflector. David Fowler and I go back a very long way. While my father was doing his war work, degaussing ships, my mother died. After a somewhat disappointing experience I married in 1965 and we set up in Leven near Beverley. I was now a medical rep with Beecham Laboratories. Had a son there, b1966, moved to London in mid 68 when I (Editor: after the above approach from the Friends Reunited web site I contacted Rowland and he replied:) You have it right. I lived in Heworth until I went to work in Huddersfield for ICI in 1957, but my parents lived in that house until 1972 and I used to go ʺhomeʺ most weekends. 18 became responsible for Harley Street and the London teaching hospitals. Had a daughter there born 1969. Pam and I emigrated to Adelaide in 1971, another daughter that year, who now has 3 daughters of her own. Rob is unmarried and doing well in Sydney with Telstra, Kate is divorced and no kids, and is in the marketing department of one of our local football teams, which plays in the cup semifinal on Saturday. I got my licence, the equivalent of the G8 vhf one, in 1972, and my full one in 1974. (Editor: Radio Ham licence). I seem to remember you had an Eddystone 640 receiver. I must admit that I have lost interest over the last 12 years after disillusionment with the way things were going. I did my best to be involved, being the Federal Councillor for the VK5 division of the Wireless Institute of Australia, the RSGB equivalent, and also the VK5 president for several years, but it was terribly political, and after a feud between WA and NSW over the direction of the WIA I resigned in 1993, and have not bothered since. I have had heart valve replacement surgery twice, 1983 and 2001, the latter to replace the first replacement, and am now retired and trying hard not to lose too much on the stock exchange! My sister still lives near Ravenscar, and Pam and I were last there in September 2002. I sometimes wish we had stayed in London until retirement. Our house in Harrow is up for sale at the moment and they are asking £310,000. A nice tidy sum to return to Yorkshire and buy a replacement there! If it rings any bells, I used to knock around with Ian Hunter, Ricky Ford. Pete Dawson, Mike Barker. Dave Pottage will probably remember me. We played chess together. I thought his cousin, (female) was the most gorgeous thing I had ever seen when Arthur Costain had us sing in some combined school choir event. I see Valerie Berryman is a member of the Old Scholars. Not sure how that would come about, but anyway, she attended the same church and youth club as I, St Columbaʹs in Dean Road. Billy Binder used to come and visit me at Scholes Park (Nathan Sheen lived around the corner. Heʹs younger of course, but his sister was our age. I think she married Peter Emms,) when I was ill with rheumatic fever, (hence the heart trouble,) and Jock Roxborough was most upset that it interfered with my blossoming career as a prop forward just as he decided I was good enough for the U 14ʹs. That puts me in with Richard Hartley and Graham Thornton, I suppose. I notice Gerald Hinchcliffe is still going strong. He tried to teach me Latin, the only subject out of 9 that I failed at GCE O level. (Editor: I telephoned Gerald Hinchliffe – now 81 – in Nottingham as I could not recall him teaching Latin. He told me that when Latin masters left the school there was usually a gap before a replacement arrived, and in those gaps Hov was “asked” by Joey to take senior Latin whilst Gerald was “asked” to take the 2nd and 3rd years. By the way, Rowland, I see from our records that you’re not yet an OSA member. Life membership is only £10 Stg) OBITUARIES Raymond ASHFORD (1944-47) Beryl M Ashford writes I am sorry to advise you of the death of my husband on February 14th 2002 just short of his 72nd birthday. His health had been failing for some time, the end coming very suddenly after a visit to the theatre. He made it back to the car and died, appropriately, in the driving seat. Mercifully we had not set off! Ray attended Scarborough High School for Boys from 1944-47, then, after a spell in the Royal Navy, he did a teacher training course at St. John’s College York, graduating in 1954. Specialising in Physics and Maths together with a knowledge of Radar gained from his Navy days, he was drawn into the world of TV and Radio and taught the apprentices at 19 York Technical College. His own interests led him into the start-up of the computer revolution and he ended up being a lecturer in Computer Studies who knew the science as well as the art of his subject. A 2 year sabbatical in the early 70’s was spent in Libya with UNO helping to set up technical education in Benghazi; a wonderful experience for all the family. On his return, he resumed his career and studied with the Open University, gaining his degree in 1978. He retired from teaching at 60, but was prevailed upon by the NYCC to continue running, on a part time basis, a small service department for schools all over North Yorkshire, helping them to keep their computers going. This grew into what became a very successful business, and Raymond was in his element. However, retirement came at last, with many long days and nights spent at his new computer. Then one day, whilst visiting his sister in Nottingham we saw a copy of the OSA magazine. (brother-in-law, John Crabtree, was a member). Ray was thrilled to read of the doings of the Old Boys and staff of his era. Tales of Billy Binder & Co. were repeated endlessly with great enjoyment. He joined the Association, bought the tie and looked everyone up on the Internet. I am sure that you will be glad to know how much enthusiasm was raised at this address from your excellent publication - a veritable treasure chest of memories for my dear husband during his last year or so. I apologise for missing the deadline for the 2002 editions with this obituary, but I could not face up to writing it until now. I realise that it is of rather a rambling nature but I expect that you will exercise your editorial privilege and treat it accordingly. William Horsley BARKER Known to his friends as Bill, he died in February aged 98. He owned a bus company called Horsley’s in North Marine Road but sold it after the Second World War. He was a founder member and secretary of Scarborough Flower Fund Homes before retiring in March 1987 and a Rotarian for many years. He leaves a widow and two sons. Derek BIELBY, DFC (1934-39) We were advised of Eric’s death but have received no report. We understand Derek was from Pickering and a retired dentist. Pierre GANGUET (1964-65) Stuart Marriott writes... Old Scarborians and members of staff who were at Woodlands in 1964-65 will remember our French assistant of that year, Pierre Ganguet. They will also be saddened to hear of his death, in 1999, at far too early an age. Pierre came from the University of Grenoble where he had been a member of the university ski team, hardly the most appropriate training for the North-East of Yorkshire, but he loved his time in Scarborough. He lodged with me at our house in Falsgrave Road. We used to go fishing and walking together, but much of his spare time was spent with those other freewheeling teachers, Gordon Wood and Mike Owen. He was also a great favourite with some of the younger staff members at the Girls High School. Pierre topped off his year by joining staff and sixth formers on the Lyke Wake Walk. We remained in touch until the end. On our visits to France we always had to take a supply of Guinness, Dublin bottled, which Pierre held in high regard. In the late 60’s, after qualifying as a teacher of English he married Sophie Sarazan. His first “posting” as a teacher was to Givet, where, he claimed, they lived on apples and whatever fish that he could catch in the River Meuse. Eventually they settled in Orleans, but Pierre 20 never lost touch with his home village of St. Bonnet in the department of Hautes Alpes. He never lost his passion for fishing and hunting, French style. Methodist Church for upwards of 40 years. He also enjoyed watching cricket and was a Life Member of the Scarborough Cricket Club. His wife pre deceased him but he leaves 4 children, one of whom, Phil, is a member of the Association. We knew that Pierre was showing signs of diabetes but was coping. Then, in the summer of 1999, we learned that he had developed cancer of the pancreas and that it had defeated all attempts at therapy. Denis SAUNDERS (1936-43) Graham JONES (1936-44) Sandy, as he was always known at school, passed away on 16th February 2003. Graham Jones died on 4th October, 2002, and leaves a widow, Marjorie (nee Atkinson). The funeral took place at the Church of St Nicholas, Ganton on Friday, 11th October, 2002. He attended school at the same time as Past President Ron Gledhill (1936-44) and was involved in running the GBL restaurant - at one time in Huntriss Row. John MACKENZIE-ROLLINSON John Mackenzie-Rollinson died in March 2003 aged 49. He attended Northstead Primary School and the High School for Boys. He was a solicitor at Medley Drawbridge before working at Bedwells solicitors from 1981 to 1987. He later ran a telecommunications firm which installed telephones in offices, schools and homes. He leaves a widow, who is daughter of a former Mayor of Scarborough Liz Mackenzie, and two sons. Brian SPEAK (1936-41) Colin Hurd writes Brian Speak was born on the 1st May 1924 and attended the High School between 19361941. He died suddenly on 17 January 2003. After serving in the Fleet Air Arm during the war he joined Scarborough Building Society as a cashier in 1948 and progressed to Chief Executive in 1972. He retired in 1984 although he remained a Director until 1992. He was very much involved with St John’s Road Ron Gledhill writes I first encountered him in the Infants of Gladstone Road School; I was nearly 5 years old and he would be 6. He was a year ahead of me as we progressed to the Juniors, and I then caught up with him in 1936 when we both went to the High School. As a youngster he was a keen ball player – tennis, cricket, rugby - but his first love was soccer at which he excelled. If a ball was being kicked around in the playground you could be sure that Sandy would be there! He played in the school teams, and was selected to play for the England ATC team in 1943. Sandy then went into the RAF in 1944 and qualified as a Sergeant Signaller – and played a lot of cricket and football! In 1945 the demand for aircrew dwindled and Sandy went on an MT course. He told me a hilarious story about when he was reversing a 3 ton truck. He was leaning out of the open driver’s door, and he said with his quiet smile, “I fell out of the bloody thing. The MT Sergeant was not very pleased.” On demob he went up to Oxford where he was awarded a Blue after only 10 weeks. He was also appointed Football Captain. Whilst up at Oxford he contracted TB but recovered to gain another Blue. After graduating he taught Geography for a short period at a school at Westcliff-on-Sea, and then moved to Malvern College, where he eventually became a House Master. 21 He married Eileen Thomlinson in 1952, who regrettably died in 2002. After “retirement” from Malvern College Denis was appointed Soccer Principal at the School of Excellence at Lilleshall and was there for 4 years. The highlights of his soccer career were an England Amateur Cap, a brilliant period in University football, and then Captain of Pegasus. This superb Amateur team won the Amateur Cup twice; in 1951 and 1953. His latter years were marred by ill-health and losing Eileen in 2002 was a bitter blow. He was one of Scarborough’s famous sons and will be sadly missed. Footnote from Ron Gledhill: My wife & I attended the funeral at Malvern on 25th February 2003 – I went as a friend and as representative of the OSA. Eric Thomlinson writes Thank you most sincerely for your condolences and updates. Glad you have the obituary from the Telegraph re Denisʹs Golden years in Soccer. My reminiscences of Denis are the upward looking view of a fourth/fifth grader regarding this Tall, Handsome Ace in both Sports and Academics. Very popular with the girls… Dancing slowly and gracefully in the centre of the floor at the Royal or the Spa… We did have several very enjoyable meetings over the years with them both in Malvern and in Florida. He was a fine Man , a Gentle Man, a Super Sportsman, my Brother in Law. He will be missed by many!! from the Daily Telegraph Denis Saunders, who has died aged 78, was one of the last of the Corinthian-style schoolmaster footballers. He twice captained Pegasus FC to victory in the FA Amateur Cup, in 1951 and 1953, the only occasions when an amateur club drew 100,000 spectators to Wembley. The team, drawn from past and present Oxford and Cambridge players, enjoyed a brief but meteoric existence after the war. Saunders, a slim, strolling wing-half, appeared in its first match in 1948, and in its last in 1963, when Pegasus played against Marston United in the Oxfordshire Senior Cup. Dennis Fowler Saunders was born on December 19 1924 and went to Scarborough High School, where he was a keen rugby player. He trained as a navigator for the RAF, with which he started to play football seriously; but the war ended before he could see action. Saundersʹs enthusiasm for football was fuelled when he went up to Exeter College, Oxford. There he joined a group of relatively mature undergraduates, including the centrehalf Ken Shearwood, as well as Tony Pawson and John Tanner, who, like Saunders, were to gain amateur international caps for England. These four were to be cornerstones of the new club, which reflected those ethical standards which the Corinthians amateur club had established at the beginning of the century. A scratch team, playing in no league and unable to get together each season until after the university match in December, Pegasus had a precarious existence from the outset. Yet Saundersʹs equanimity and benign discipline were a key factor in an astonishingly rapid rise to the forefront of the game. In their first season, Pegasus reached the Amateur Cup quarter-final, losing to Bromley. When they won the cup two years later, Saunders was carried off the field on the shoulders of his team after their 2-1 victory over Bishop Auckland. Some considered the performance, masterminded in midfield by Saunders, James Platt and John Dutchman, to be technically superior to the FA Cup Finalʹs professional encounter a week later between Newcastle 22 and Blackpool. In those days there was little incentive for outstanding amateurs to turn professional for a maximum wage of £15 a week. Saundersʹs Wembley prominence earned him his only cap a month later, in a 3-2 victory over the full Finland national side. Two years later, Saunders led Pegasus to a record 6-0 victory over Harwich. By then he had become a geography master at Malvern, where he also took charge of football training. His influence was immediate. The school went unbeaten in four seasons, and, between 1956 and 1978, the Old Malvernian side won the Arthur Dunn Cup nine times. The winning team of 1957 included Ian (later Lord) MacLaurin who, in his memoirs, recalled playing as a schoolboy against Oxford Centaurs; following a goal, MacLaurin had run to embrace the scorer, only to receive Saundersʹs sotto voce rebuke: ʺDonʹt ever do that again, or Iʹll cut your hand off. Youʹre there to score goals, not to make an exhibition of yourself.ʺ MacLaurin observed that, while he would never have been much of an academic, ʺI did learn a lot from sport. If anything helped to shape my future, it was two masters at Malvern, George Chesterton (a cricketer for Worcestershire) and Denis Saunders.ʺ Such was Saundersʹs reputation that, in 1984, he was invited by the Football Association to be academic headmaster at their new school of excellence at Lilleshall, Shropshire, in partnership with Dave Sexton, the director of coaching. His proteges there included Andy Cole. In his history of Pegasus, Ken Shearwood wrote that he never knew a player with a calmer disposition than Saunders: ʺHe seemed to have all the time in the world to collect and do what he wanted with the ball.ʺ For many years Saunders contributed schoolsʹ football match reports to The Daily Telegraph. Denis Saunders, who died on February 16, was predeceased by his wife Eileen. He is survived by a son and daughter. (Editor: In the accompanying 1943 SBHS 1st XI photo Denis Saunders appears 3rd from left, front row, next to HW Marsden) 23 Peter TOY (1928-32) Doug Owen writes Peter Toy, who died recently at the age of 88, was a gregarious character who spent his entire career, with the exception of his war service, in the Post Office. He started as a messenger boy and graduated to counter clerk. Like most Post Office personnel in the 1930’s he was in the Territorial Army. When war broke out in 1939 he was called up into the Royal Corps of Signals, commissioned and sent to France with the British Expeditionary Force. Peter was evacuated from Dunkirk and after several years service came out of the army with the rank of Captain. Returning to the Post Office he transferred from the postal business to telecoms as a Sales Representative in the Bridlington area. He has various subsequent appointments, some in Lincolnshire. Peter’s final appointment was as Chief Sales Superintendent in the North Area of London, where he and I met up again and for many years enjoyed both the OSA London dinners and Midlands dinners together. Besides being a keen golfer he was an ardent cricket enthusiast, member of MCC and Middlesex County Cricket Club and, not least, Scarborough Cricket Club. He came to Scarborough regularly for the Cricket Festival and we enjoyed many a drink in the pavilion bar. As a boy Peter had been in the ELO (Earl of Londesborough’s Own) Scout Troop and he loved to reminisce with other former boy scouts of the troop. A bachelor, Peter lived for many years in a private hotel in Muswell Hill until his retirement when he bought a flat in Enfield. Towards the end of his life he moved to North Wales to be near his sister, but when his illness became more severe he moved to a pri- vate nursing home in Llangollen where he died. Peter Toy had many friends throughout the country and will be sadly missed. Bernard CROSBY (1922-26) We are advised of the Reverend Crosby’s death. An obituary will appear in the next issue. John YEADON (1945-53) We were advised of John’s death but have so far received no obituary. MEMORIES MEMORIES OF A GIRL AT THE BOYS’ HIGH SCHOOL by Gwyneth Foster My father (A.E. Jones, M.A.) taught at the Boys’ High School from 1944 to 1958. He was born on 23rd October, 1895 and died on 2nd May, 1974, the same year as Joe Marsden. A few months before he died he appeared on ITV’s “This is your life, Vic Feather,” whom he had taught at Hanson High School for Boys in Bradford. In 1932 my father was made a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. These are some of my memories of our time in Scarborough. The first Christmas that we spent in Scarborough we were surprised on 23rd by a large group of sixth formers singing carols. It was an impromptu choir who serenaded the staff one night and, on Christmas Eve as many of the town hostelries as possible. They were collecting for the Lady Mayoress’ Benevolent Fund and asked my friend and I to join them. We were made very welcome at all the houses and were generally offered refreshments. There was one objection, though, when we discovered that the Methodists at the front were refusing alcohol on behalf of the whole group, but some gentle elbowing resolved the problem. Bon Clarke was visited each year, but we were never offered the 24 cold cocoa for which he was famous, nor a game of table tennis. He always asked for “Nazareth,” but as we never had time to rehearse anything our rendition was never very good. Some years later I made a point of learning the carol and dedicated it to Bon’s memory. We would sing “Christians Awake” at the stroke of midnight on the South Cliff and then wend our weary way homeward. I remember a fish and chip supper which Joey had provided in the Dining Hall after a performance of “Hamlet”. After supper we are asked to help with the washing up. There were dozens of plates to wash but we enjoyed the evening so much that we turned up for duty for both the Saturday matinee and evening show. We had a marvellous time. “H.M.S. Pinafore,” under the direction of Mr Costain, was a great success, but three evening performances and a matinee was quite something even though, at the time, it seemed effortless. When Cossie put on a production of “Merrie England” at The Open Air Theatre, the first post war performances there, they got the priorities right when they opened the first scene with, “Thank you Master Shakespeare, thank you Mr. Costain.” I was rather shy of the Costains, but when invited to tea by them, he smilingly said, “Do you like Father Brown?” and switched on the Light Programme. Ferdie Freeman was tutoring me at Maths as I had carried a “class exam” for two years in a three year Chemistry course and couldn’t afford to fail again and so lose my degree. Coming from his home one evening, and whilst waiting for the bus to Ayton I overheard a group of boys swopping accounts of their recent experiences at Juvenile Court. One worthy, in a strong Scarborough accent declared, “He says now I’m going to fine you four and thrupence and he bangs the table with his little toffee hammer and says, and don’t you go and do it again. I wonder what they do with all those fines? I’ll bet the Mayor and the whole Corporation go down on to the Foreshore and blow it all on shrimps and winkles!” Pike Richardson, unfortunately, suffered from my clumsiness. One day, after Speech Day, we were invited to tea with the staff. Whilst holding a cup of tea I was introduced to Pike. Small as he was he had a mighty handshake, which resulted in my spilling the entire contents of the cup all over his best suit. I was so embarrassed! We always marvelled at Joe Marsden’s strong constitution. He always found the hard and tasteless school pies quite digestible, even though everyone else always left them uneaten on their plates. Joey’s tact, or lack of it, was quite legendary. One boy who always came to school on a motor cycle and who had sight in only one eye, and was therefore, deemed to be at some risk, was asked by Joey, “…..er, is your eye glass?” To Mr Freeman with his arm injured by gunshot wounds and supported by and fastened to, a large metal frame, was asked, “Do you think it’ll have to come off?” Another classic! Commenting on the suitability of the stage blocks being used as scenery for the Captain’s soliloquy in Act 2 of “H.M.S. Pinafore,” “Get those things moved! It looks as if Appleton’s sitting on a damned bucket.” MEMORIES OF A GIRL AT THE GIRLS’ HIGH SCHOOL by Joy Hodgson (nee Youle) On a recent visit to my step-brother John Corradine (1949-54) in Wroxham, I was very interested in his collection of Old Scarborians magazines as they brought back many happy memories. I attended SGHS from 1939-46 and I enclose some photos taken at the harvest camp at Myton-on-Swale in 1943. A small group of girls attended, principally to assist with domestic duties, but I remember many occasions when we were delivered in an open-backed lorry to the fields to pull carrots and flax, collect potatoes and stook barley sheaves. In 1943, I think, boys and girls rehearsed and presented 25 a play, whose name I cannot remember, though I do recall my character was called Poppae! Mr Isherwood was in charge and Mr Marsden visited, as shown in the photograph. Another activity in which we were invited to join the boys was a ballroom dancing class, held after school in the hall at Westwood and conducted by Mr Isherwood. His partner for the demonstrations was Mrs Rice and the music was always Victor Sylvester! Best wishes to your magazine and to many friends from “the old days”. (Editor: I’ve done a little research Joy. Below are the names of those attending, together with a piece, “Dinner At Myton”. I’ve also found an article on this particular camp . We don’t have room to reproduce it here but a copy is on it’s way to you.) List of Myton Campers Form VI: Davison, Davies, Witty, Armstrong, more, Pittam, Dunning. Form VL: Capes, Stead, Whittleton, Wood. Form VU: Bray. Form IVL:_Appleton, Barrett, Foster, Hall, Fewster, Thomlinson, Knox. Form IVU Bradley, Christian, Pennock, Ayress, Read, Pearson. Form IIIL: Bagshaw, Francis, Mercier. Sharp, Form IIIU: Allaker, Cooper R. V., Enevoidsen, Grime, Hewett, Smith P., Willis, Winspear, Scriminger. Form IIIA: Jefferson, Partridge, Temple. Form IIL: Feather, King, Melton, Nickson, Parish. Form IIU: Appleby, Clayton, Daniel, Hargrave, Reay, Sothcott, Liddiatt. Girls’ High School: Vivien Young, Wendy Ramm, Joy Youle, Rita Lancaster, Sheila Showers, Flora Miliner, Sheila Rayner, Barbara Atkinson, Enid Sykes, Kathleen Williams, Eileen Cousans, Audrey Watson, Margaret Williamson, Betty Sewell, Pamela Langstreth. Girls’ High School Staff: Misses Driver, Howells, Higgs, Adcock, Mrs. Boyes. And also Misses Cameron and Stephenson, of Newcastle Domestic Science College. SBHS Staff: Mr C Isherwood (Master in Charge), Messrs Marsden, Freeman, Johnson, Taylor, Rossington, Liddicott, McNicol, Hanes, Stoddard, Wallhead, Mr and Mrs Wilmut, Mrs. Rice. DINNER AT MYTON The backroom boys had thought up another paying ramp, They rounded up Scarborough’s schoolboys and stuck ‘em in a camp, It was raining every evening, so we dined out in the damp, It was lovely down at MYTON on the farm. They brought two domestic students from Durham on a course, They made good Yorkshire pudding but some seniors grabbed for yours, So when we wanted dinner, why we dragged ‘em back by force, Above: The Myton-on-Swale Harvest camp to which Joy Hodgson refers, and, right, Cyril Isherwood 26 It was lovely down at MYTON on the farm. There was a funny fellow there, I think they called him Joss, And when the farmer saw him he was really at a loss, So he bunged a halter on him, ‘cos he thought he was a hoss, It was lovely down at MYTON on the farm. But life down there at MYTON wasn’t really bad, They brought a bevy of High School girls and we felt very glad, If you cursed ‘em down your table you were a frightful cad, It was lovely down at MYTON on the farm. We had a bearded chappy on the camp, called Isherwood, And in “One Night at Nero’s” there it was indeed quite good, But when he served our dinner it got mixed up with the pud, It was lovely down at MYTON on the farm. We worked hard in the fields all day, it really was a bore, But on sitting down to dinner it weren’t done to ask for more, For they blamed every shortage on this tantalizing war, It was lovely down at MYTON on the Swale. MEMORIES OF STOD by John Rice (1947-56) His relentless cheerfulness may have been, on occasions, irritating to his colleagues, but Norman Stoddardʹs many virtues were readily acknowledged, and for us boys there was never a dull moment when he was around. He didnʹt take us for Maths, but he filled in from time to time for Pike, and when this happened even those who werenʹt much good at the subject perked up and enjoyed themselves. The secret was, of course, the humour. While other teachers tried their hardest to amuse, with Stod you felt it always came naturally. Some of his jokes were straight out of the gag-book. He had a good supply of riddles too, and there was one he would invariably trot out when the subject was logarithms (it was mentioned recently in Summer Times). As far as I remember, it had something to do with sines and cosines: ʺWhy does a mouse when it spins?ʺ I knew the answer to this one, because Iʹd come across it in the same book that Stod must have had, and its pointlessness had struck me in much the same way it must have struck him. The answer, as no doubt every Old Scarborian of that vintage will know, is, ʺBecause the higher the fewer.ʺ No, it doesnʹt make any sense at all, and presumably it isnʹt meant to. But Stod thought it a useful aide-mémoire. One of the extra-curricular jobs that Stod undertook, quite apart from games, camps and other outdoor pursuits, was helping to run the tuckshop. One day a rumour went round during the morning that there would be a delivery of doughnuts straight out of the bakerʹs oven in time for the mid-morning break. Ferdie Freeman was selling them off a trolley in the corridor, but for some reason we didnʹt notice him and so queued up as usual at the tuck-shop. ʺDo you want doughnuts?ʺ asked Stod. ʺTheyʹre selling like hot cakes outside!ʺ When he realised what he had said, he was beside himself with laughter. During my time in the 6th Form, Jock Roxburgh decided that it was pointless forcing those of us who actively disliked the game and werenʹt any good at it to play rugby. So he introduced shinty, reputedly a Scottish form of hockey played with unsophisticated sticks and a really hard ball. On one occasion when Stod was refereeing our game, this ball struck one of our number in a highly sensitive area of the anatomy. The poor chap was felled and lay on the ground, writhing. Stod rushed over and, having ascertained that he wasnʹt crippled for life, turned to the rest of us and said, ʺThatʹs called a cannon in another game, isnʹt it?ʺ Incidentally (this has nothing to do with Stod), I later realised that the game Jock had introduced us to was an irregular form of shinty, if indeed it was shinty at all. I was inter- 27 viewed for a place at Queenʹs College, Oxford, by a fearsome Scot named McDonald, who questioned me about the games at SBHS. When I described our winter activity, he turned puce and exclaimed, ʺShinty? Thatʹs not shinty!ʺ I never did discover what it really was. Stod left SBHS for a time to become Headmaster of the Friarage School. As can be imagined, he was a popular Head, a fact that I was able to verify at first hand, since I spent a couple of weeks there as part of my teacher training. Some of the staff used canes (there was nothing against that in those days), but to his credit Stod exerted his authority by force of personality alone. He was so attached to Scarborough that when the Friarage closed he wouldnʹt leave the town in search of another Headship, but chose to return to SBHS as an assistant master - much the best way for a man of his talents to be employed. FURTHER IMPERFECT MEMORIES by Peter Newham (1954-61) In the 1950s, when black and white television and the occasional trip to the Odeon represented the ultimate in teenage excitement (at least to one who had previously led a sheltered life) the annual School Camp seemed to represent a whole new spectrum in adventure and experience (although often more in anticipation and retrospect than in reality). Whether character-building or genuinely educational should perhaps be left for others to judge but my memories of Torridon in the later 1950’s (memory fails me as to the exact year) certainly fall into the primitive at the time but retrospectively enjoyable category, particularly to those of a then wimpish disposition (to which I plead guilty!) In fact, subsequent life long aversion to porridge owes much to the memories of large containers of glutinous and nutty flavoured (whether deliberately or accidental I know not) slurry reposing in a hay box overnight, to be dispensed in semi solid form the next morning as a nutritious and certainly filling breakfast! The only other memory of Torridon, apart from the wild and beautiful scenery, (to which I have vowed many times to return but never achieved), and which is graven on my mind is my one and only experience of the digging (and subsequent use) of latrines: use of which at night in the absence of any illumination, demonstrated the need for feats of acrobatic skill in balancing whilst simultaneously holding a torch which I have never before or since attempted. My recollection of subsequent Camps (even Cairngorm with a similar porridge resembling the slough of despond) was, as I recall, tempered by civilised toilet blocks and proper washing facilities, irrespective of whether these were used as frequently as intended. As an aside, the highlight of the Cairngorm camp was perhaps our assisting at a forest fire in the Rothiemurchus Forest, rather than the ascent of Cairngorm itself, which was surprisingly rounded and unmountainlike, and which now with chair-lifts and major development has no doubt changed completely. On another theme – two under-rated teachers who seemed to have attracted little attention in Summer Times, but who with hindsight were significant influences in our allegedly formative years, were “Spike” Jones and Mr. Giblett (the latter of whom I cannot recall being honoured by a nickname). The former, mentioned in the previous Magazine in respect of his dictation of interminable notes, alternated between a requirement for an essay one week and a drawing 28 from the book on Greek/Roman history the succeeding week. The educational value of these drawings still eludes me, and I have a significant recollection of Baz Howes proudly passing around his version of a drawing of the statute of Adonis so ludicrously and exaggeratedly well- endowed as to attract Spike’s red ring round the offending area, giving nought out of ten as a mark and a demand for a further deflated version. My other recollection of Spike was personal and intended at the time to embarrass me into submission, in that having forgotten my homework I was marched up and down before the Class in a headlock, reciting the pressing need to not to repeat this transgression. Discipline of this nature (which may now offend the Human Rights legislation) was not unusual, though whether it contributed to our long term education or character is debatable. I can however still recall the embarrassment. However, the interest created by Spike in terms of attention to detail and interest in history hopefully survived, an entirely different style to Biff Smith, who continued our historical education in an altogether different vein. Mr. Giblett, whose seemingly quiet and selfeffacing manner concealed both firm discipline and considerable communication skills (aIbeit that I did not appreciate this at the time) did inspire attention. This was particularly the case with Physical Geography and our exploration of Ordinance Survey sheets of a number of areas in the British Isles, from Malham Tarn to the Dorset coast, although my arrogant assumptions as to the detailed knowledge acquired as a result of this was seriously deflated by subsequently seeing that in real life these settings bore little resemblance to my essays and imagination. He had, also, to my recollection, a keen interest in photography, demonstrating photographic landscapes in class, and occasionally explaining about the related developing and printing of these, and I can recall his encouragement at my first attempt at contact printing from nega- tives, in respect of which I belatedly wish I had paid more attention at the time. To me, this A-Level Geography represented an area of particular interest, apart from my History and French, but a Degree in Geography appeared then only ultimately to lead to a career in teaching, possibly becoming a Town Planner, or perhaps branching into Geology, a subject far too scientific for me! In my wisdom or otherwise Law appeared to offer a more interesting perspective – albeit then a total stab in the dark - which brings me back to 21st Century reality and where I am now! RECOLLECTIONS by Derek McNaney (1952-60) The arrival of the November 2002 OSA Summer Times has finally spurred me on to write of some of my memories of the High School and what I have been doing since. My start at the High School was somewhat ignominious. I recall Joey Marsden bringing out a cardboard box every assembly in which were lost property items. I had only been at the school as a lowly first former for about two weeks when Joey reached into the box and held aloft a cap. In his inimitable mumble he stated” Here’s a cap belonging to McNancy would he please come and collect it”. Naturally for months after I was dubbed “Nancy”... not a good start. Other major recollections are: • • • when the ‘bad boys’ from 5A got their own back on Bon Clarke and turned everything upside down in his classroom., desks, blackboard etc. dropping in to the Ramshill pub on the way up to Oliver’s Mount to play rugby. the time when Dave Chapman baited Biff Smith to the point where Biff Smith charged up the aisle between the desks towards Dave who then had to make his escape out of one 29 of the back windows and step out on the very small ledge outside. • having chess lessons in the first year with Billy Binder whose frequent replies to requests to go to the toilet were, “stick a cork in it boy”, or “tie a knot in it boy.” I wonder how this reply would go down nowadays? • the times when my frequent merriment at Billy Binder’s famous mannerism “uh huh” got me in “chess gang”. This happened so often that I eventually began to like the game, and this led to my only real claim to fame, that of Senior Chess Champion in 1958. My prize, a book on chess, is still one of my prize ;possessions. Incidentally Billy always used to comment when I was playing that my style reminded him of Sutton, a past chess player in the club. I often won- dered what Sutton was like, and lo and behold 45 years later whilst reading Michael Rines’ account of Billy Binders chess write-ups I found out. Sutton was “sticky, close and dour who delves in Tarrasch to the eyebrows and conquers by sheer weight of study”, - so I am left wondering whether this comment was a compliment or not! In the previous issue, I notice that Fred Crosby mentioned the Castle Quartet, with Fred on piano, Frank Leppington clarinet, Ian Hunter on trumpet and myself on drums. We used to play at the Mere Social Club even when our repertoire was about half a dozen numbers. I was also interested to read of Mac’s Jazz Club as mentioned by Chris Found. This took place in the basement of Cromwell Hotel, my parents’ establishment. This band was composed of: Ian Hunter on LEFT: L to R: Derek McNaney- drums; Mick O’Neil -piano; Mal Moore - banjo; Frank Leppington - clarinet; Ian Hunter - trumpet RIGHT: L to R Back: Peter Dawson, Rod Green (deceased), Ian Gofton; Peter Simpkin; Front: John Brinkler; Derek McNaney; Derek Price; Richard Hutton; Bern Lake. 30 trumpet, Frank Leppington and Dennis Hitch on clarinets, Mick O’Neill and Mike Barmby piano, Mat Moore banjo, and myself on drums. We even made a couple of LP’s over the few years we played there and individuals still remind me of the club. Not every parent would have allowed fifty or so kids to congregate downstairs with the accompanying din and I am eternally grateful to them. After leaving the High School, I attended Alsager Training College with Pete Simkin and Bern Lake, then went on to teach in Leeds for five years, playing in most of the jazz clubs at night. I studied for a further year at Worcester Training College, then stuck a pin in the Times Educational Supplement and applied along with my new wife Ann to a place called Foremost, in Alberta ,Canada. At the end of eight days on the liner from Liverpool and a further three days by train, we finally arrived in Foremost. This town boasted 500 inhabitants, had mud sidewalks, tumbleweed bowling down the main street and a temperature of 95 degrees. Quite a change from Leeds. We really enjoyed our time there in a beautiful modern school. The catchment area stretched down to Montana in the States. Over the ten years that we spent there, I became vice-principal and took two degrees at the University of Lethbridge, a city seventy miles distant. We returned to Scarborough so that our two children could spend more time with family. We spent the next five years in Scarborough, and although we had wonderful friends we found we were unable to settle. We returned to Canada where I taught for two years then undertook post-graduate studies at the University of Alberta. I decided to enter private business and although I had vowed never to become involved in the catering business I took ownership of Mr. George’s Submarine, a fast food business in Red Deer. We became well known for subs and periodic jazz sessions. (Editor: See Vol. 39 page 62) Two years ago the business was sold and I returned to teaching university entrance biology in a private school. Presently I am enjoying work as a rehabilitation practitioner for Catholic Social Services. I still play at the local jazz club, The Vat, and enjoy restoring Austin Healey 3000 sports cars. My wife still teaches part time . Our son Robert works as a telecommunications technician. Our daughter Claire is a teacher. I would like to thank David Fowler and all involved in producing Summer Times, as I know that this has brought such a lot of happiness to Old Scarborians around the world. (Editor: Derek phoned when he arrived in Scarborough and we arranged to meet – only 48 years since the last time. “I’m in a rush. I’ll only be with you half an hour”, he said. At least two hours later we were still reminiscing but had to break off as Derek’s brother-in-law was waiting to collect him. One name which cropped up was that of Chris Yates who was last heard of in Gateshead in the late 1970’s. Does anyone know where Chris is? Derek then passed me a Christmas Card he had received from a (non OSA) friend. I quote from the card: “I attended a reunion. We were sitting on a table with a senior Silk and it emerged that he was brought up in Scarborough, so you can obviously envisage the ensuing conversation. “Did you ever come across this bloke from Manor Road...” I said, “who played drums?” “Did his Mum let him run a Jazz Club in the cellar?” he said. It turned out he knew you well. A small world! Steve Williamson wishes to be remembered to you. He spoke very favourably of you – and the Jazz club.”) 31 GERALD HINCHLIFFE REMEMBERS SECONDS OUT I first met Bill Nicholson – of Tottenham Hotspur, England and Scarborough Boys High School fame – in 1943. I was stationed in an infantry-training unit where Bill was a physical training instructor. He was a hard taskmaster. One day he decided to hold a Unit boxing competition, and on the basis of “you, you and you” I was detailed to take part. I had done a little boxing at school, but it was largely of the hit and miss variety and I was not really a competent boxer. The day of the competition duly arrived. The whole unit sat around waiting to witness the slaughter of the lambs. My contest was late on the bill and, whilst waiting, was able to discover my opponent. His name was Lawrence Biss. We chatted and agreed that we would put up a good show, but not hurt each other. A little shadow boxing, a few feigned left jabs, mixed with the occasional clinch would suffice. In due course the bell rang, the seconds departed and away we went. We pussy-footed through the first round and retired to our corners unmarked and without having broken into a sweat. I was relaxing in my corner when Bill Nicholson appeared at my elbow, obviously none too pleased by our efforts. In icy, menacing tones he informed me that if I did not start fighting in the second round he would have me on a “fizzer”. My feet would not touch the ground and he would ensure that I was on “jankers” for all eternity. He then walked across the ring and delivered the same ultimatum to my opponent. It had its effect. As the bell rang we bounded from our corners and began to belt all hell out of each BACK L to R: Gerald Hinchliffe; Hurrell; Flinton ; Williamson; Chapman; Sedman; CENTRE L to R: Unknown ; Roche; Leng; Pitts; Reeve; FRONT: Mann (Colin? John Mann says certainly not him!) ; Horrobin. (Editor: Can anybody name the unknown? 32 other. The adrenalin flowed. There was no finesse, no feinting, nothing at all fancy. With the crowd roaring and baying for blood we went into non-stop battle. Soon enough, blood there was, almost exclusively mine, although Lawrence was sporting the beginning of a black eye. He was declared the winner. Afterwards, Lawrence and I became firm friends but within a year he lost his last fight and was killed in action in France. Many years later Bill Nicholson visited the High School, (he was a friend of Brad’s) and along with others I was introduced to him. There was not a flicker of recognition. Why should there have been? Along with Hov and Stod we talked reverentially about Bill’s illustrious career in football. He still had the same smouldering, saturnine look which I recalled from years earlier. It was no wonder that he became such a successful football manager. In a strange, paradoxical way after my illstarred bout with Lawrence I became interested in boxing. Hov, shortly after my arrival at the High School, asked me if I would like to help him with the boxing club. I agreed. We met each week after school in that small gym downstairs with about twenty boys. I believe that we all enjoyed those evenings. Hov and I were aware of certain basic techniques, (indeed we both eventually qualified as boxing judges) and it was pleasing that so many boys developed skills way beyond whatever we had taught them. I suppose that we justified the activity as being character building. Certainly, being in the ring with an opponent is a severe form of selfexamination, and that, at least, is a factor in selfdevelopment. Mainly, though, it was an enjoyable activity, which fostered camaraderie. We held fixtures with other schools and, invariably, we won. There were some notable stars like Malcolm Dunwell who reached the finals of the National schools boxing tournament in London. There was “Alfie” Leng who sniffed as he boxed, but combined bravery and determination with great technical skill. I recall another boy who was technically brilliant but rarely won his bout, because, as he put it, he did not like to hurt people. “Alfie” Leng went out to Australia where he became professor of Animal Husbandry at the University of Newcastle, New South Wales. He beat the Australians at their own game, becoming an international authority on sheep. There were few Aussies who could counter his left jab. The highlight of the boxing year was the interhouse boxing tournament for the Le Peton trophy. (Who, I wonder, was Le Peton?) A boxing ring was acquired from Burniston Barracks, some soldiers came along to erect it in the Hall, and the whole school foregathered around it. In some ways this foreshadowed the days of Theatre in the Round that were to follow. Joey Marsden always had mixed feelings about it all. Scarcely anything of his fingernails would be left by the end of the afternoon. Pride in what was taking place was subordinate to his fears of what might happen. At the end of it all, as he presented the trophy to the winning team, he would beam, and then retire to his room with a sigh of relief. The finals produced many memorable contests but annually the one to savour and admire was the one between Stephen Williamson and John Pitts. Two able (in every sense) and courageous boys, they were well matched. John, who was a southpaw, created many problems for Stephen who had an orthodox, upright stance. The outcome scarcely seemed to matter; it was their display, which remained in the memory. Stephen later became a distinguished criminal lawyer, John a lecturer in music. I had the pleasure of meeting them both again many years afterwards. At the end of the afternoon the soldiers moved in, the ring was dismantled and returned to Burniston. The tumult of the day succumbed to that end of school silence which Harry Johnson, the caretaker, once told me often made him feel rather sad. Finalities do have that effect, but without wallowing in nostalgia, we can now look back with a great deal of pleasure on our days at the High School. They remain very much a part of us. GEORGE W (BILL) KENDALL REMEMBERS (1947-1955) SCHOOL Generally late so always ran or cycled to school from Trafalgar Square on the North Side. Entering by the playground door, hopefully unnoticed. Morning assembly was more enjoyable as one got older with ‘Biff Smith knew my father’ a popular choice and rhubarb proved fruitful at times. I did read the lesson one morning from the dais. Forays to the beach were popular towards the end of the summer terms. TEACHERS Bon Clarke Most boys seem to mention him and I am no different. He gave us French tests marked one to four. The mark one got had to be announced out loud when called and woe betides me if I only got 2, as we had to give the mark in French, and my “deux Monsieur’ was never acceptable. On one occasion a trip to Joey Marsden who was all knowing, and occasionally an enforced visit after school to that well-known chess club. I had the same problem when trying to pronounce the Arabic for “land of a million martyrs’ for my Arabic teacher whilst in Kuwait. His reaction though was always to laugh at my serious attempt. The human side. I shall always remember the occasion when Bon’s wife was leaving by train one day and the whole class was asked to lean out of the windows and wave handkerchiefs at a certain time so that his wife would know that we wished her well. Later in the 6th form I was part of a group that did a years translation of German, in one of the rooms in the area at the end of the school. Here I believe we got to know each other a lot better and the translation was useful in later life. I found it a lot easier to say two beers in German whilst on National Service. GA Costain conducted our weekly music 33 class, which consisted of singing songs for the whole period. I did impart a little comic (serious?) relief by persuading Alf/Ron Leng to stand with me as we sang “The Red Flag”. Costain gave a surprised half smile but did not comment. Here I have a complaint. In retrospect I think the period was wasted, as we could have been involved in some other aspects of music. Neale Marshall’s invitation to listen to music especially “Carmen” started my interest in music. ED Colenutt gave me a ticket to hear a recital, which I can still remember and after which I thanked him. AJ Perry was the woodwork master with whom I made two stools, one with a raffia seat and the second, a very beautiful(!) piece - all of wood GR Hovington and G Hinchliffe our English teachers, seemed to keep us busy most of the time. ”Ode to a Nightingale” and “Ode to a Grecian Urn” are still remembered. CH Bradley and R Giblet for their height. WC Potts Everybody else’s stories about him are true. C Isherwood, our class went to his funeral, or memorial service. DJ Price did I dissect frogs for him? N Stoddard and RJ Roxburgh both in sports in which I was involved. Maths Teacher Now I can’t remember who that was, possibly because I had my head down working hard! It must have been worthwhile, as we retirees now seem to spend all of their time trying to make money on the share market. HW Marsden My mother thanks him and I thank him, for talking my mother and I out of being a Marine Engineer. I ended up at Leeds doing Mining Engineering and eventually went into Exploration Geophysics. 34 CAMPS Robin Hoods’ Bay where we got rained out. Wensleydale going for long walks. Cairngorms, the best of all, walking through the heather and the mists, through valleys and along tops of mountains. SPORTS Cross Country Always seemed to have fun, never remember if anybody won or whether we were actually supposed to race on cold and wet Oliver’s Mount. Shinty A couple of games of Shinty with a primitive type of hockey stick. Cricket I did get 5 wickets for 4 runs or similar in a house match. Never really got into cricket at school although I keenly follow it now with the mighty Aussies. On the 6th April 1986 I played in a charity match with the likes of Jeff Thompson, Ashley Mallett, Doug Walters, Frank Tyson, Max Walker, Greg Chappell, Rod Marsh, Dennis Lillee and David Hookes to name a few, on the Adelaide Oval, South Australia. Names to conjure with. I was hit for a number of sixes. Tennis Was always envious of Hargraves and Hodgkinson who were able to leave the school grounds and play tennis. Athletics I think we had a few meetings but apparently I didn’t shine, as I don’t remember them. Basketball Used to enjoy the few games we played in the gym. A pity we couldn’t have played more. Played for the company team in Adelaide but was interrupted by a wellflighted ball breaking my little finger. Boxing As a result of a fight in the top playground I was ‘volunteered’ to join the Boxing Club where Ron Leng was in his element. After a bit of practice I was ‘volunteered’ to fight Henry (Ding Dong) Bell in the school hall. Henry is in the Rugby Team photos, a muscular nuggetty type with muscles of steel. The boxing session was highlighted by, and I distinctly remember, those whirling dervishes Leonard Norton-Wayne and John Moorhouse as noted in their ‘Times’ report. It may have been on the same bill where Henry and I sparred around for a while pretending to be boxers when suddenly Henry and I swung and hit each other at the same time. I think Henry hit me harder than I hit him but even so the rest of the fight was at arms length. Gymnastics Was never keen because as soon as I was upside down that was unknown territory. Rugby Best left ‘til last. Played throughout my time at the school as George/Barrie Jubbs entries in the photo fashion stakes show. Barrie Jubbs and I used to compete for positions in the scrum. I remember one day when Jock had Barrie and I run the length, or half, of the rugby field and picked me for some reason, I think to play Sevens. The away games were always a worry to me as I was a poor bus traveller. Games at Oliver’s Mount, school or inter school, were occasionally a problem as I would have to leave my greengrocery delivery run, in reasonable weather, to cycle to the Mount only to find an enveloping mist and I was the only one there, the game had been cancelled. Still don’t know how the others got to know. ARTS Note, not too much emphasis on the Arts although enjoyed the school plays. Did a bit of painting. Costain’s singing classes. Extra activities. The school, it seemed like the whole school, had a mock election. There must have been a General Election due. I was somehow elected as the Labour candidate. At the time there was a major national strike or situation, which nobody could solve. Of course eventually at each meeting some smart Alec would ask me what I would do to remedy the situation. I would bluster through trying to get onto another subject. Nowadays the answer for every- 35 thing, would be, that we would have a Royal Commission. I remember doing a lot of arm waving and all had a good time. I don’t know if we voted. My politics now are more Liberal as Unions largely control the Labour Party in Australia and they always seem to overspend, putting the country into debt. Also during the time at school there was going to be a heavyweight world championship boxing match. Well, I ran a book on it giving the boys the option to pick the round in which there would be a K.O. - winner takes all. We all knew it was going to be a knockout decision, so never thought of giving the option for going the distance. Yes you’ve guessed it; it went the whole distance and yours truly, by default, won. Celebrating with Ron Leng at the end of the school year. Memories only for Ron (now an Emeritus Professor and eminent Australian, holder of the Australia Medal award) and I. Bill Potts responded: One note on our friend Marshallʹs name -itʹs Kneale (or, in full, Kneale Thomas). His mother was a fan of Kneale Kelly, whose orchestra played at the Spa, so she named him after the great man. Although there are many people with Kneale as a surname, Iʹve never heard of anyone else with that spelling for the first name. I had a call from Kneale a few years ago. He was on the faculty at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey (and is now almost certainly retired). As that was only a 45-minute drive for me (from San Jose), I drove down one Sunday and had brunch with him and his wife at the Monterey Hyatt Hotel. He has a house with a gorgeous view of Monterey Bay. FLOTSAM AND JETSAM rooms on the upper floor at around 7 am each day. Twice he was walking along the corridor towards a particular room when, ten or twelve paces in front of him, he saw a figure reaching forward as though to open the door – and then disappear. The happenings were a few months apart, and after the second of these nothing more untoward occurred. On both occasions the corridor was well lit and the reader is very clear about what he saw – a figure in a gown and mortar-board who was tall enough to have to reach down for the door handle. The room concerned was used as a chemistry lab. In the author’s days at the school in the 1940’s there were certainly no tales within the school of any such strange happenings – they would have gone around the 500 or so pupils like wildfire, but one thing does puzzle me about the description of the figure. Although masters almost always wore academic gowns, mortar-boards were worn, if at all, on only one day in the school year, on speech day, and that was not normally held on the school premises. The question is, has anyone else had, or heard of, such ghostly experiences, and, if so, perhaps they would like to share these in future pages. From the Scarborough Evening News A dance for teenage pupils of Scarborough Girls’ and Boys’ High Schools, the Convent Girls’ Grammar School and Scarborough College was halted by teachers because of trouble – caused, according to one report, by gatecrashers. From a Scarborough Evening News article by Mick Jefferson Police, called to the Girls’ High School, off Stepney Road, broke up a crowd of youths and girls outside, demanding their money back. A reader who told me of some odd happenings at the Westwood school had the job, a few years ago, of opening up the lecture (Editor: Was any member at this event? Come on; be honest! What do you remember 36 of it?) From the Fiji Times, 14th January, 2002 An overweight passenger caused heavy delays on a busy British Rail network after he became stuck underneath a table. An Arriva spokesman said that the man, who was travelling from Scarborough to Manchester Airport was thought to have dosed off and slipped from his seat underneath the table. When he awoke at Manchester Airport he realised that he was stuck beneath the bolted down table and had to ask for help from train staff. Train workers tried to free the stricken passenger but eventually called in the Fire Service who took 45 minutes to remove the table and free the man. THE WORLD'S EASIEST QUIZ To pass requires 4 correct answers AND no cheating! (Remember Bon’s tests?) 1) How long did the Hundred Years War last? 2) Which country makes Panama hats? 3) From which animal do we get catgut? 4) In which month do Russians celebrate the October Revolution? 5) What is a camelʹs hair brush made of? 6) The Canary Islands in the Pacific are named after what animal? 7) What was King George VIʹs first name? 8) What colour is a purple finch? 9) Where are Chinese gooseberries from? (Associate Editor: Obviously over indulged at the Old Scarborians’ Dinner. Included for the source, rather than the content!) The answers are on page 59 GRAHAM SCHOOL APPEAL December/January 2002/03 OSA Member Chris Coole (1955-62) writes May I pass on information from the current Graham School.? The school is preparing a bid to become a Science Specialist School and we need to raise £50,000 from the school ʹcommunityʹ before our bid can go forward. If anyone would like more information about our bid or would like to make a financial pledge to support us, (no money is required at this point), please e-mail your request or pledge to: admin@grahamschool.co.uk Thank you in anticipation of your support. (Editor: Chris Coole is Chairman of Governors of Graham School as well as an OSA member) PETER ROBSON VISITS AUSTRALIA Having spent a fair proportion of my working life on aeroplanes, when I retired in 1997 I vowed to avoid as far as possible flying again. The offer of tickets for the Boxing day Test Match in Melbourne was, however, decisive in making me break my promise. Further, the advantage of being retired allowed my wife, Muriel and myself to make a leisurely visit to parts of Australia that we had not visited before . We had a great holiday even if the cricket was disappointing. While I was there, I had a long phone conversation with Paddy Ireland (1944-52) who lives outside Canberra and keeps himself busy with language teaching and translation. We may see him in Scarborough, when he attends his College (Gonville and Caius, Cambridge) 37 year reunion in 2004. Muriel and I were entertained to dinner by Ken Beadle (1946-54) and his wife at their home in Beaumaris in the outskirts of Melbourne on Christmas Eve. Ken is involved in civic duties as well as being involved in the Australian Institute of Chemical Engineers. He comes back to Scarborough regularly as both his parents are still alive and in their nineties. Ken gave me details he had found on the internet of Professor Alfie (or Ronnie to some) Leng (1947-55) who lives in Queensland and lectures and consults in Animal Husbandry in Australia and abroad. He is said to know more about sheep than most people in the world. I later called Alfie who didn’t remember me at all but followed up with a email to Ebberston apologising after he’d consulted his Rugby photos. He gave me the details of another Rugby player, George (Bill to some) Kendall (1947-55) who graduated in Mining Engineering at Leeds and is now retired in Queensland. George has subsequently joined the OSA and sent details of the OSA to David Pulsford who lives in Sydney. During our visit to Perth, I hoped to talk to Richard Stear but unfortunately he moved house recently and I couldn’t get his new phone number out of the system. CHEWING THE FAT An e-mail exchange between Roger Beaumont and Ted Lancaster (1949-54) RB: Hi Ted Following my undistinguished period at school, I worked initially for a firm of building contractors in Scarborough and signed on at night school to re-sit the subjects I failed first time around. I managed to pass three more subjects to add to the three I left school with. TL: And I always thought you were a brainbox at school. Now it seems you were no brighter than I was. I too managed no more than a miserable three ʺOʺs. It wasnʹt until I was in the Royal Navy and had to knuckle down that I discovered I had the semblance of a brain after all. My parents retired to Bournemouth in the spring of 1955 so I left my poorly paid job with the builders and went to work for Jaconelliʹs who agreed to pay me enough to live on while I completed my night classes. I always considered the Jaconelli family as good friends, especially Peter, Alfie, Gemma and Gina. They were always there for me whenever I needed help while growing up and for many years after, as they were for many of our generation. While working at the builders I was introduced to the profession of quantity surveying which I found interesting so I decided to make that my career. While working on the local talent after leaving the Royal Navy, one of whom was a student teacher, I thought ʺI can do that. All I need is twice as many ʺOʺ‘s as I have now and a couple of ʺAʺ‘s. ʹShouldnʹt take long.ʺ - and decided to make that my career. I moved to Bournemouth in September 1955 to join my parents. Brother David had moved to Bournemouth the previous year but had not returned to live with parents. I was lucky and quickly got a job with a local builder as a trainee quantity surveyor and signed on for more night school doing ONC and HNC building studies. That lasted for five years. Realising that the teaching profession may not be absolutely clamouring to get me on board and just on the off chance that I might never make it I considered alternative career options. Iʹd discovered I had a flair for the sciences and so applied to ICI Wilton, Nylon Laboratories as an analytical laboratory assistant. While working 38 there I topped up my qualifications at Longlands College in Middlesbrough, actually gaining a scholarship to do A-level maths and physics. Joey and Bill Potts would have been proud. From there to the City of Birmingham College of Education and Teacher Training. I managed to scrape through on a little work effort while mainly concentrating on the rock music band that we were forming. After college I taught in Birmingham schools for a short time then went fully pro in pursuit of the elusive ʹbig timeʹ. We had the same recording manager and sound engineer as Manfred Mann. Unfortunately none of our efforts ever made it. However we did have the privilege of working alongside some big name entertainers as their supporting band including Ben E King, Dusty Springfield, Tom Jones, Lulu, The Barron Knights, The Move, The Bonzo Dog Doodah Band, The Everly Bros, Chuck Berry, The Tremeloes and The Pedlars whom I think were Luluʹs old band, The Lovers. After this faded I ran a pub in Smethwick, made enough to start a business, childrenʹs boutique, got so badly ripped off in a scam by the vendor that I was on the verge of bankruptcy, went back into showbiz to pay off my creditors, formed the rock and roll duo, Mark Arran and Stevie Lee, fabulous girl drummer (actually the wife,- game girl), got to the finals in the Mitchells and Butlers Talent Extravaganza at the Wolves Molyneux Ground Social Club. Solvent again, went into special education, read for the degree of Bachelor of Philosophy in the Psychology of Childhood Emotional and Behavioural Disorder at Birmingham University. Took a further qualification in clinical hypnosis and psychotherapy, opened and ran the Dudley Hypnotherapy Centre from 1984 till 1998. My next job was on the original part of the M1 motorway as a Quantity Surveyor that lasted about a year. Two or three times a year we travel up from Worcestershire to visit friends and family all over the North East. From now on we will have a new respect for the M1. I returned to Bournemouth and have spent most of the rest of my life here, working for various firms of builders and professional quantity surveying firms. My only other period away was in 1984/85 when I went to work in Bermuda as QS for a firm of builders. I got that job through a Bermudan friend who I met when he was in the UK studying to be a building surveyor. Good fortune enabled me to retire in November 1999. The Bermudan episode sounds great. I truly envy your experience. Never knew why but Iʹve always had a fascination with Bermuda and the ʹtriangleʹ, (or is it a ʹrectangleʹ now?) but never went there. It may stem from my deep interest in the paranormal on which I have conducted a fair degree of ʺamateur sleuthʺ investigative work. My first marriage took place in 1962 and lasted until 1986 when we separated, we were divorced in 1988. We had two children, one of each. My daughter is now forty and is married with two children, both boys. My son is nearly thirty eight and is not married but has a partner (female), no children. I re-married in 1991. My wife has two daughters, one married and one divorced, both with two children (each have a boy and a girl). Pat and I met at night-school in Middlesbrough in the biology class. We married two years later and are still going strong, two boys, two girls, seven grand-kinder. That more or less concludes the story of my life so far and Iʹll leave you to assess the answer to the second question in your email. (ie. What have you been up to for the last 50 years, owt or nowt?) My brother, Dave, was a chef and spent the whole of his working life in the Bournemouth area. He was head chef in various hotels and had his own business for a time. He has also retired and has recently bought a property in 39 France where he and his wife plan to live most of the time. They are there at the moment. I have not been there yet but will probably be going there early next month to help them move some of their belongings. I remember Dave well. I wish him luck. Are you in touch with any of our other class mates? Since joining the ʹOld Scabsʹ, I have been in touch with a handful of old boys, Stan Halliday, Pete Hough, John Mann, David Fowler, Bill Potts (the physics masterʹs son.) You should have a look at the web site on http://www.oldscarborians.org.uk It is fascinating. Give it a try. Do you now live in Scarborough? We are living in Stourport on Severn in the valley about a mile from the river on the edge of the Nature Reserve. Itʹs a beautiful place and I doubt we will move again even though we did hanker to be back in Yorkshire. Are you still working or are you retired? Since my retirement from teaching in 1987 it appears that Sandwell Education are finding it difficult to cope without me and I have gone back into special ed. on a part time basis working with excluded difficult behaviour varmints. Remind you of anyone? I am hoping to visit Scarborough sometime this year and would love to meet up with you. Let me know if that could be a possibility. Our next visit will be around half term or possibly Easter, weather dictating. I will let you know when our plans are more set. I had always remembered that you were going to join the navy, with the intention of being an artificer, when you left school and had often wondered where you finished up. That was, of course, before I saw your notes on friends re-united. It was Joeyʹs idea that I join the Royal Navy as an engineer (artificer). I had always wanted to join the Mercantile as a Navigator. I was absolutely, totally useless at the practical aspects of engineering, failing almost every practical test. I was of average ability but was horrendously slow. Each hourʹs overtime on a test job examination cost a mark and a half deduction. As I was usually ten to fifteen hours adrift, the fifty to sixty percent result I attained was knocked down to a failing mark. I was given several second chances to catch up but was eventually consigned to the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve, to be served in civvy street except in the case of a national emergency when I would be required to go and save the nation. However by this time I had learned that I was not quite the mental dullard I had presented at school. I became quite a high flier academically in maths, applied maths, engineering theory, sciences and English. Also represented the navy college at gymnastics. I was particularly fortunate in securing the extra curricular activity of shipʹs ʺsound reproduction equipment operatorʺ The SRE-Op was the forerunner of what we would term ʺdisc jockeyʺ. Now, having received your email, I have to say, I am impressed! What a varied and interesting life you have had so far. Your history makes mine seem positively mundane and boring. I think itʹs always a case of ʺThe other manʹs grass.ʺ I am most envious of your achievements of a more lasting and useful nature and of the time you have spent living and working in Bermuda. I was very surprised that you even contemplated, let alone pursued, a career in teaching. Memories of our treatment of some of our teachers, particularly of ʹMaulerʹ Manfield (French), would have put me off that idea completely. Funny you should say that. Have a look at 40 the Old Scarborians website on the notice board section. Thereʹs quite a few comments about ʺMaulerʺ, aka ʺMickeyʺ, following a query I popped in a few months ago. Also I had no idea that you had musical talents! Did Mr Costain (the school music teacher, if I recall correctly) know ? I think Arthur followed the same format as most of the staff. Forget individual leanings. Treat ʹem all the same. I had done a lot of stage drama work in junior school and was the teacherʹs pet in all acting productions. None of this surfaced at SBHS under Sam Rockinghorse. Not until College did I become involved in acting, stage management, directing, producing, eventually finishing up at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre in 1983 for the Citizensʹ Theatre Group in a two hander called ʺAlas Poor Fredʺ. The list of people you worked with is very impressive and you must have some great memories and stories to tell. What was the name of your band ? We started off at City of Birmingham College of Education just for a laugh playing rubbish at the college hops. Free entry was offered to the student who came up with a catchy name and for years we were ʺThe Vacant Lot Beat Bandʺ. As the group became more adept we accepted a residency at ʹThe Rum Runnerʹ nightclub in Broad Street Birmingham, the same venue from which Duran Duran sprang about a decade later. Here we became ʺThe Rum Runner Katzʺ or just ʺKatzʺ. Tentative early records were made under this name including EP ʺKatz Live at the Rum Runnerʺ. Did you ever appear on TV? We passed the audition for the Hughie Green Show but for some unknown reason it was axed. or were any of your your bands records ever played on the radio? Some air time was given on Radio One but The Palm Court is a 3 Star Hotel with a superb central location and guaranteed free covered parking, minutes to the beach, town centre, theatres, Spa. All 47 bedrooms en-suite with colour television, tea / coffee facilities, telephone. Ideal for the discerning conference delegate offering in-house conference facilities in the hotel's purpose built conference suite. The elegant Rosedale Restaurant offers full traditional English breakfast, Table D'Hote and A la Carte evening dinner. Adjacent is the Troutsdale Ballroom which is available for private functions or a conference suite seating up to 200 guests. Other facilities include Indoor heated Swimming Pool, Cocktail Bar, Lift to all floors, Weekend, midweek, weekly breaks all year, Saturday Dinner Dances, Christmas and New Year breaks. Rates: B & B £28.00 - £46.00 41 mainly the group were known on the hospital radio circuits. Sales were always disappointing. Do you still have any of your records? Records were made under the name of Cinnamon Quill and are still available as special collections on the Morgan Label. By the time the name was Cinnamon Quill, I had left. My records have gradually been ʺborrowedʺ over the years without trace except for reel to reel tapings. Your attainment of a B.Phil is also impressive! I never even took the professional quantity surveying qualifications. It never seemed necessary as I never had to look for work. Once I got started in Bournemouth I was always able to move from job to job through personal contact or recommendation. The only job I actually had to apply for was to work for John Laing Construction on the M1. I had since I was very tiny had an interest in hypnosis when I first read up about Freudʹs attempts to use it followed by my mum taking me to a stage hypnotism show at an old church on Longwestgate about 1948. The B.Phil was an educational psychology based degree without the rigors of an Ed Psych proper. Not only did this open up possibilities of school based advancement but it offered the chance to follow up with a further qualification in clinical hypnosis and psychotherapy. I opened the Dudley Hypnotherapy Centre in 1984 working from time to time in Midland hospitals and even having a surgery in the Helios Health and Leisure Centre which was the site of the Health Club in the old TV series of ʺCrossroadsʺ. Iʹm surprised you ever imagined that I was a brain box! I did start off doing very well for the first couple of years but went down hill rapidly after that due to being absent through illness and injury quite frequently. I can not accurately remember when the various events occurred but the first was because I had to have an operation to remove my appendix. A few months after that I managed to fracture my skull by riding, head first, into the back of a lorry whilst cycling back to school after the lunch break. Perhaps it was your early academic efforts that I remember. I do vaguely recall your encounter with the lorry and your scarred and shaven head in the aftermath. Iʹm impressed by your overcoming the set backs of such a difficult period. My failure to strive and thrive at school was simply a case of chip on shoulder bad attitude. I then had meningitis on two occasions, a few months apart, and following tests and x-rays it was discovered that when my scull was fractured a membrane in my scull was punctured which was causing the meningitis. The cure for my problems was not available at Scarborough Hospital so I was sent to a hospital in Newcastle-on-Tyne. The first operation they performed was unsuccessful and I was re-admitted for a second attempt. Fortunately that was a success ! I think that all the forgoing occurred during the second and third years. Immediately after the final operation I had to go to Scarborough Hospital for treatment three times a week, first thing in the morning. As I was late for school on these occasions my mother always provided me with a note which I dutifully handed in to Joey Marsden. After receiving a substantial number of notes he told me not to bother bringing any more! As my number of visits to the hospital decreased I had, and used, the opportunity to stay away from school for the first period many times when there was something I wanted to avoid. I had missed so much school time that it was impossible to catch up in some subjects and Joey gave me the opportunity to opt out of some subjects to enable me to try to catch up in others. I gave up chemistry and physics and biology to concentrate on geography and history. I was allowed to study in the hall on my own. Enough of my school life. My self imposed experience was similar yet 42 opposite to yours. I sidestepped history and geography to concentrate alone in the hall on Physics, Chemistry and Biology, the subjects where I had at least a miserable chance of success, eventually caught, interrogated and sentenced to eternal damnation by Biff Smith. In reply to your second email, I would have no objection to you using my email for the purpose suggested, if you think any one would be interested in reading it. When would you want to submit it? David has asked me to slip in a few lines by the end of January, I shall try for that deadline. It just seemed on the spur of the moment that a series of email correspondences between two old mates of fifty years ago would be a novel way of sharing a bit of ʺchewing the fatʺ. Herbert Dennis had it published in the Scarborough Mercury in January 1975. It created a tremendous amount of interest – letters came from all over the world – including one from Harold Denton in Pietersburg. He is an accountant who served his time with Robinson, Coulson and Kirkby in the 1920’s. Another letter was from Sep Brown in the Isle of Man – now retired from being Surveyor with Stourport RDC – and lots more”. A second inscription in different writing is as follows:“ July 18th 1985. Mrs Tom Laughton, widow of the late Herbert Dennis, kindly gave the photograph to William Leslie Swinney, as he had shown interest in the photo, as guest at dinner during Herbert’s lifetime”. Bon voyage. Have a good ʹun. Bill Swinney, who supplied many of us with our school uniform from his shop in Aberdeen Walk, died a year ago and it seems reasonable to assume that the photo somehow survived the clearance of the contents of his home. (Editor: Roger, why not become a member? Life membership is still only £10) It is a marvellous object in pristine condition and an important addition to our archive. SCHOOL PHOTO 1925 CONNECTIONS We have just decided that we want some winter sun and warmth so we are going to Lanzerote on Thursday for a week. by Peter Robson (1945-53) Peter Emms (1951-56) is a partner at Goodall’s Estate Agents in Scarborough. While surveying an empty house which he had been commissioned to sell, he found a framed photograph of the staff and pupils of the SBHS dated June 1925. The first thing he noticed was that his father was in the front row of the assembled school. Naturally, he took possession of the photo and passed it on to the Old Scarborians’ Secretary. The photo has the following handwritten inscription on the back:-. “This picture was in the possession of Joe Hopwood for 45 years in Simonstown, South Africa. It was given to Herbert W Dennis when visiting South Africa in 1974. Joe said it would give far more pleasure to people in Scarborough, Yorkshire UK. by Ron Hutchinson (1945-53) I was delighted in October 2002 to receive a letter from Peter Robson suggesting I join the OSA. Apart from being a VL class-mate, Peter and I had also been members, along with Don Barnes and Maurice Pennock, of a Table Tennis team called the “Quads”. Attired in maroon coloured shirts bearing the logo “QUADS”, we had played in the Scarborough and District Table Tennis League. I suppose that technically I have “rejoined” the OSA, as I remember being a member while at university, and on one occasion going to a dinner at the English Speaking Union in London. After National Service in the RAF in Germany, and then 4 years at Queen’s College Oxford - a college at which many Old Boys both before and after me have studied - I went into teach- 43 ing as a History master. I want to use this article to mull over OSA connections so won’t bore you with a lot of career details. Let it suffice that I got to the top of the greasy pole and for 17 years was Headmaster of a Comprehensive school - Hanley Castle High School in Worcestershire. In 1991 I took early retirement, and have never looked back. I am happily married, and live in Malvern. The lucky break in my career came, I must confess, as a result of “old school tie” connection. My first teaching post had been a pleasant co-educational Grammar School in Derbyshire. After only two years and two terms, an invitation came from out the blue to apply for the post of Head of History at the Manor Grammar/Technical School, Mansfield Woodhouse, Notts. As some of my readers will have already guessed, the Headmaster was a Mr. GR Hovington. It seems that Hov had been on the grapevine to Joey about a suitable candidate from the SBHS Old Boys, and my name came up. And the Scarborough connection continued because when I left after six happy years my successor was Graham Thornton. The Manor School was a brand-new, state of the art, building, and Hov was brilliant at man-management, organisation, and discipline. No doubt he drew in part on his war service as a Major in the Green Howards. I saw quite a different Hov from the man who had taught me A level English. I thrived at the school, and became a House Master, which helped me in my next career step to become a Deputy Head. The Houses were called after some insignificant medieval locals (Stuffyn, Wolfhunt, Kirklynton). Although the administrative frame work was up-dated, I could detect a pastoral lineage from Arnold, Kingsley, Ruskin, and Carlyle at the SBHS. I note from the Magazine that Mike Rines is working on Hov’s wartime diary. (Editor: See next article) Here is an anecdote. Hov and I had taken a school party to Belgium, I think it was 1966. It included Hov’s wife, Jean, and their two small children. Hov and I, for some reason I cannot remember, were alone on the quay at Ostend. He recounted to me how during the last days of the war (May 45) his unit was pushing deeper into Germany and they were meeting bitter resistance from teenage members of the Hitler Youth, who were fighting far more fanatically than the average German soldier. Hov said that he and the rest of the men had a funny feeling about how stupid it would be to get killed in the last days of the war by a bunch of schoolboys. Hov also recalled that when one of the youths was captured, he spat defiantly on Hov’s battle dress. My next contact with the SBHS came in 1974 when I became Headmaster of Hanley Castle Grammar School in Worcestershire, tasked with turning it into a Comprehensive. I wrote full of pride to Joey to let him know that one more of his pupils had made good. Although his life was almost at an end, he wrote me back a kind letter, which I still treasure. I think that we are all agreed how incredible Joey’s memory was in its ability to recall generation after generation of Old Boys. For good measure this letter also included the information that Les Brown had began his teaching career at Hanley Castle Grammar School in the 1930’s before moving to the SBHS. I found Les Brown’s records and they showed that he had been at Hanley Castle 1933-36, after which he had moved to Scarborough. His salary was £250.00 per annum less 10% (during the Great Depression of the 1930’s the Armed Forces, Civil Service and Teachers all had to take a 10% cut). I also found a HMI Report, which spoke highly of the young French master - he was full of energy and had a refreshingly modern approach with plenty of spoken French. I took photo copies of the relevant documents and got in touch with Les. There then began a most wonderful friendship with him which lasted until his death. My wife and I visited Les and Betty several times at Barmoor Manor where we were always greeted with delicious home made scones and cakes. On one occa- 44 sion Les paid a nostalgic visit to Hanley Castle. Although at school my favourite subject was History, I always had the greatest respect for Les as a teacher of French, and contact with him in later life made me realise what a kind and thoughtful human being he was. If I may quote from a letter he sent me you will see what I mean: “I thank you both for your kind letter and for the most interesting enclosures about the school (Hanley Castle), for the HMI’s Report of 1936, and the photostat. I can hardly say how deeply grateful I am to you for at last giving me an opportunity to see what I should have been allowed to see fifty years ago. When I arrived, I was merely told to get on with it and to create my own discipline. For three years I used to sit down almost every evening and think back to my own school days and say: ‘How should I have liked this to be taught to me?’ In the First Form it needed simplicity, humour, and as much connection with their day to day life as possible, and as much spoken French and simple accompanying actions as possible. It would have been most helpful to know in detail what the HMI’s thought of my efforts. However, I now know, and the knowledge of it gives me a deep sense of satisfaction.” “The French Connection” now takes me to the present day. Reading the Centenary Edition of the Magazine, I saw the article by John Hall, writing from Notre Dame de Cenilly, France. Two years ago, my wife and I bought a holiday home, or maison secondaire, at Carentan, a small town about 30 miles south of Cherbourg. Fierce fighting took place here just after D Day involving the American 101st Airborne Division. (You can see one version of the events in part 3 of Steven Spielberg’s blockbuster “Band of Brothers”). Anyway, John Hall’s home is just 20 miles from Carentan. I have been in touch, and hope to visit him next time we go over. My final reflections concern Bon Clarke, for I too experienced the gentle side of the stern Gauleiter of Stalag 10. I was one those invited to 8b Oak Road to play table tennis and borrow books. I remember discovering Sellar and Yeatman’s “1066 And All That”. Some of its humour stood me in good stead years later as a History teacher. I also recall that Bon used to tease his cat with an imitation mouse called Joe Lewis made of black insulation tape. Another thing about Bon Clarke was that he had a “gammy leg”, and he rode to school on a bicycle on which only one pedal went round. There was a rumour that he had been wounded in the First World War, but 1 never heard him talk about it. Now comes an attempt at a final connection. Ever since my school days I have been interested in Military History. In retirement my wife and I made a pilgrimage along the Western Front in our motor caravan. Starting at Ypres, we moved southwards to Vimy Ridge, the Somme, Chemin des Dames, and on to Verdun. I have read many books on this haunting subject. One I possess is “The Western Front” by Richard Holmes. Before appearing as a book it had been a BBC Television Series in 1999. Some of you may have seen Richard Holmes on Television presenting also the War Walks series. Anyway, in the book Richard Holmes when recounting the 3rd Battle of Ypres (1917), often called Passchendaele, writes as follows: The battle looked different to participants. Lieutenant Firstbrooke Clarke of the North Staffordshires wrote ‘I suppose to people at home it was a fine victory. Well, so it is but they don’t see the dead and wounded lying out and they don’t have 9.2’s bursting 10 yards away, machine-gun bullets scraping the parapet. I lost 17 of my platoon (4 killed) besides casualties in the rest of the company. I was so sick of it that I cried when I got back.’ Can any Old Boy confirm that this was Bon? The Christian name Firstbrooke is so unusual that there can surely be no one else? Those of you who studied German will recall that we used a book which he had written. It was called ”German Grammar for Revision and Reference” by Firstbrooke Clarke. For some 45 arcane reason when talking to us, he called it “Mudpie”. horrified that he had risked sending the only copy this way. Having made this start, I hope that in the years to come, many contacts with friends, both old and new, will develop. He had crossed out one or two passages, and gave me his blessing to try to get it published before his death. However, I have felt justified in restoring almost all of the deletions now, since I believe that would have been his wish. (Editor: I recall hearing that Bon served in the First World War. I have skipped quickly through the 7 editions of Summer Times I have edited but have found nothing definitive. However, Bon’s son attended SBHS between 1936 and 1941 and is a member of the OSA, and his name is John Firstbrook Clark) HOV’s WAR MEMOIR A PREAMBLE by Michael Rines (1941-52) Hov’s war memoir probably reveals the true nature of war. It is as much about cockups, improvisation, luck and sheer drudgery as it is about heroism, bloody sacrifice and well-planned strategy. It is a riveting read, but it came to light almost by chance during a conversation at the last of the annual Mansfield lunches he attended before he died. We were talking about the joys of writing, and he told me about his memoir, written some time after the War. He said he did not want it to be published until after his death, because it might upset some of the people mentioned in it. He added that he had lent the only copy to an old friend who was terminally ill with cancer. I was very concerned that when his friend died his relations might not realise the value of the story, so I wrote to Hov pointing this out. Not long afterwards, I was surprised to receive the typescript through the post – and The memoir is very self-effacing, and I suspect Hov played a much more distinguished role than emerges from it. His refusal of the offer of the MC is typical. According to Captain Tony Watkins, one of his few surviving Green Howard colleagues, he was well loved in the Regiment. Watkins was only 19 when he was sent out as a junior officer to Italy, and he says: ‘I valued Hov for his friendship, and for the concern and help he gave me as an older officer for a very young and inexperienced one, and I am always grateful that he guided me to an appreciation of literature.’ He also tells how, during a tough time in Italy, Hov ran the Anzio Turf Club, which was a great morale booster, and in the History of the 5th Division there is a photograph of him, pipe firmly gripped, presenting the CQMS with his winnings. Hov’s daughter Sarah has kindly provided me with some documents and newspaper cuttings about her father, which tells us of his life before SBHS, and I think provides useful background to his war memoirs. I had never heard him talk about his earlier life, and it came as a surprise to me to find what a brilliant all-rounder he was. We knew that he had been educated at the Coatham School in Redcar, but we did not know that he had been head boy, and had won both a State Scholarship and a County Bursary, which took him to Jesus College, Oxford. We knew that he played a good game of rugby, and was an elegant batsman, but we didn’t know his first love and favourite game 46 Drabble & Co Solicitors Old Rose Cottage 409 Scalby Road Newby Scarborough North Yorkshire YO12 6UA Tel: 01723 507508 Fax: 01723 500540 DX 61806 SCARBOROUGH was soccer. At Oxford, he was elected a Centaur, the exclusive club for the top soccer players at the University. For his college, he was not only captain of both soccer and cricket teams, but also played hockey and rugby. We knew he had some musical ability, because he produced the school’s Gilbert & Sullivan performances. But I, at any rate, did not know he played the piano, let alone that he had a song, for which he had written both words and music, published while he was at Oxford. And when he left with a good degree in English, the Principal of Jesus said he had ‘definite literary and dramatic interests’. His first job was teaching English and Latin at Ashby-de-la-Zouche Grammar School, and while there he played rugby, cricket and football for local teams, with some distinction to judge by reports in the local papers. ‘Grammar School Master’s Big Score For Ashby Town’ was one headline, when he got 97 not out. He came to our school in September 1939, but my first memory of him is seeing him bat for Scarborough at North Marine Road, and being impressed by his refreshing and cultured style. When he taught us in the Sixth Form, some of us thought at the time that his attitude was a bit dilettantish. But, looking back, we could not have been more wrong. In addition to his teaching, he was deeply involved in the school’s rugby, cricket and boxing, and he did the Gilbert and Sullivan in alternate years. At the same time, he was involved in amateur dramatics in the town, and continued to play cricket. For a time, he ran his own Sunday team, composed mostly of Scarborough CC players, but sometimes including his old Green Howards friend, Norman Yardley. He also played a more bucolic kind of game, for Gristhorpe, where he lived. But most astonishing of all, he got himself a law degree in his spare time. Some dilettante! What we had regarded as an overly casual 47 approach was in fact one of Hov’s great strengths: he was what would today be called ‘laid back’. When so may other teachers had nervous breakdowns, nothing disturbed his equilibrium, and it was one of the things, which by all accounts, made him a great headmaster when he moved on from Scarborough, and which must have served him well in the Green Howards. He remained proud of his Yorkshire roots, and his daughter says: ‘He always remembered his days at the High School with great fondness. I think it was quite a time for Dad – free, single and into sports, pints and pipes!’ And he did, apparently, date a succession of school secretaries. A lot of us owed him a lot. A RESPONSE by Peter Robson (1945-53) I was never taught by Hov so my experience of him was through his work as coach of the first fifteen and as a cricketer against whom I played occasionally. I am left with the conclusion that Hov was a gifted scholar and sportsman who preferred an amateur approach to everything he did. In other words he eschewed any professionalism, either in preparation or in actual performance. I would have said he was lazy but having read of his achievements, I am more inclined to say he was gifted and able to do things instinctively and without great apparent effort. This gave him a certain detachment and hence the ability to avoid being too caught up in the crisis. As a consequence he was able to think more clearly and act in a calm and sensible way. This gift was the source of his easy authority. Thus, he was not a great rugby coach. He didn’t hammer the basic skills into people but had the ability to draw from his players, the maximum contribution that they could give within the limits of their ability. He was able to extract a major contribution from several boys who were on the verge of being problems in the school. What coaching he did, was done through his match reports where he was very analytical and hard but fair in his criticism. His comments were rarely resented. Thus, his players, lightly coached, played as he himself would have played. He would not have fitted at all into the modern game, with the apoplectic coaches and self indulgent displays of triumph from the players when things go right. He was not greatly involved in school cricket. I remember him being responsible for the Under 14 cricket team in the year I played in it but I believe he wanted to have the time to continue to play the game himself. He played no role in the coaching of the first XI though he was a close follower of what was happening. I saw him play both Rugby and Cricket and was not mightily impressed. He ran in short steps in a very stuttering and unathletic way. However, I believe he had suffered a major injury soon after his arrival in Scarborough playing for the Scarborough first XI. At this time he was a fast bowler and I think was bowled repeatedly when he was not fit or was injured. He once commented to me along these lines. Incidentally it was the Scarborough cricketers who gave him his nickname Gerry which was derived from his initials GR But though he gave up rugby, he continued to play cricket for Gristhorpe until he left the School and the town in 1955. Here I’m sure he fitted in perfectly well with the country characters who played for Gristhorpe at that time and whom I knew well, because my Aunt lived in the village and was one of the characters herself. In conclusion, Hov had lots of natural ability, both intellectually and athletically, an easy authority, great modesty even diffidence and a dislike of flamboyance. These were his strengths and his weakness. Along with many members of staff at the School he failed to inspire many gifted boys with similar abilities to believe that they were something other than bright young men from an educational back- 48 water. He probably believed that like him, their abilities would be somehow rewarded in their professional life as they had been in School life. Some sponsorship from Hov, some advice and a good shove in the right direction would have been invaluable for many boys who had to compete in a world where the gifted amateur didn’t always rise to the top of the heap. We were lucky that he passed through Scarborough on his effortless way to the immortality. At his funeral, though it must have been 20 years since he retired, the church was full and people of all ages and generations were there to pay their last respects. I had the clear memory of that grin decorated with the spittle hanging from the pipe. A fine man; I wish I‘d known him better. FIVE THOUSAND MILES The World War II experiences of an infantry officer by Major George Reginald Hovington (Edited by Michael Rines) CHAPTER 1 1940 World War II started on September 3, 1939, but my call-up was deferred to September the following year, because I was a schoolmaster, at the Scarborough Boys’ High School. Then there was a further delay, because I had attended a school camp at Bromsgrove in the August, picking raspberries for the war effort. I was quarantined for a month, because one boy who had been on the camp died from polio and another was left a cripple. As a result, I was not called up until 17 October. I was posted as a private soldier to the York and Lancaster Regiment at Pontefract, for basic training. The only memories I have of this initiation into soldiering were the coarseness and filthy habits of some of our intake, the endless drill, the bullying by ignorant NCOs and the soul-destroying daily task of polishing buttons and boots. After being there only a few weeks, we were all called out in the middle of the night to extricate dead bodies, or parts of them, from houses in Sheffield, which had suffered a heavy blitz from German bombers. After three months, I was sent to an Officers’ Corps Training Unit (OCTU), which was like a rest haven after Pontefract. The previous commander of the unit had been sacked for intimating to the press that grammar school boys were incapable of accepting strict discipline and would never make good officers. The new commander, therefore, took care to relax the discipline and adopt a much more personal and pastoral approach. Fillet steak and chips for breakfast, and rough cider at four pennies a pint in every pub made us all put on weight, the more so because drill parades were seldom held, and then not taken seriously. When cricket started, I was made captain. We did not lose a match, and I think this was why I was appointed head cadet at the end of the course. I little knew that this meant I would be in charge of the final parade. Nobody gave me any instruction for it -– I was just expected to ‘know the drill.’ Two hundred cadets were marched on to the parade ground, where I stood on a raised platform, isolated except for the bristlymoustached RSM, standing behind me with his cane and breathing into my buttocks. From the side, the brass hats, including a general, looked on with as much interest as if it were a heavyweight fight. Fortunately, the RSM was like a mind reader, and corrected whatever mistakes I was going 49 to make, before I made them. So any damage to the dignity of the Army was deflected, and he had the courtesy to say to me as the parade was dismissed, ‘Not bad! I’ve seen worse. SIR!’ CHAPTER 2 1941 – 42 NORTHERN IRELAND AND ENGLAND After a week’s leave, during which I was measured for and received my officer’s uniform, I set out with one pip on my shoulder to join the 1st Battalion, the Green Howards, which was stationed at Omagh, in Northern Ireland - train to Stranraer, ferry to Larne, and a long slow train journey to follow. The battalion headquarters, where the troops were quartered, was in a former asylum, but the officers were billeted in requisitioned private houses. I was given a room next to the monocled the Honourable George Howard, of Castle Howard, whose ancestors had founded the regiment. I found him pleasantly correct, but at first uncommunicative, probably because he had two pips to my one. However, I warmed to him after a drunken party when he invited me into his room for a nightcap, and I discovered it was lined with Greek and Latin texts. He told me he read them in the original for light reading! More later of the Honourable George, who, sometime after the war, became Chairman of the BBC. Almost all the officers were regulars and there was among them an almost professional disdain for us amateurs, who included Norman Yardley and Hedley Verity, both international cricketers. Bob Tanner, one of the company commanders, was an exception. He came from a line of naval commanders, but, being colour-blind, had no option but to make do with the infantry! His life was full of escapades, self-made. In Omagh, the night before the hunt met at the town hall in the middle of the street, he had put down a trail of aniseed, and the hounds raced round and round the building, causing utter confusion. When we were in Egypt, he went to the Naval Club in Alexandria, sporting on his arm a tag ‘England’, which he had painted on, because, he said, ‘Everybody I’ve seen has got some other bloody country’. For his pains, he was put under close arrest by an admiral! I met him again in 1952 at King’s Cross Station, and asked whether he was a general yet. He replied that he had been cashiered. He had borrowed £100 from the Mess Account at Stanmore to go to Ascot races, and had won £800. At the mess dinner that night he had boasted to the General about it and told how he’d borrowed the money. He was once again put under close arrest. Life in Omagh was full – nowhere to go except the ‘Gentlemen’s Club’, where the only drink was draught Guinness, so we made our own fun. Unfortunately, the Colonel thought the officers needed smartening up and inflicted on us for a week a Guards’ RSM, who took us for drill on the square. We got tired of hearing him shout ‘You’re idle, SIR!’ and, on one drill, we decided we’d all be deaf. As we marched into the parade ground, he shouted ‘Left turn!’ We marched straight on, across the square, over a fence and into a field, still keeping perfect formation while his hysterical shouts of ‘About Turn!’ gradually faded. Of course, we all got a severe ‘rocket’ from the Colonel, but the RSM disappeared the next day. Four days a week, we either did route marches or took part in company, battalion, or brigade exercises, which involved 15-20 miles of marching. This was followed by the digging of slit trenches, in which we spent the night, fortified by stew and rice pudding sent up in trucks. During the exercises, we were perpetually hungry, but we were saved by the Irish peasants -- if the definition of a peasant is one who lives in a small cottage 50 with sheep, goats, pigs and cows in the next or sometimes the same room, eking out a living from two acres of potatoes, some root vegetables and a strip of corn. They would come to their doors, on hearing the approach of the marching columns, and offer tea and delicious soda bread. I never met one who was not kind, generous and patriotic - there were more Union Jacks on display in one village than all the rest of Britain, I should say. After six months, we suspected we were about to leave. Officers, surplus to the establishment were being promoted and posted elsewhere. The Colonel, having played for the Army at cricket, saw to it that no cricketer was posted. We had a splendid side, which won on most Saturdays against Northern Irish towns. Then we heard that there was to be a farewell ball - after which we were bound, via England, for India. The Green Howards was a battalion in the 5th Division, which was the imperial reserve, to be sent to support forward troops when necessary. This time we would be stationed near the east coast of India, in case the Japanese invaded. The final ball, as formal as any in the Nineteenth Century, was held in the Asylum, and all the local notabilities and their wives were invited. Booze was limited, which was because the Honourable George, with his pal Tremayne, had been sent in plain clothes to Dublin to buy some gin and whisky. They had got into a fight, lost the money, and had returned crestfallen. The penalty for George was promotion to captain in the Indian Army, while Tremayne was sent to the Glider Pilot Regiment – he was killed at Arnhem. The dances were old-fashioned, and each officer had had his dance card marked beforehand by the colonel’s wife, so we all spent a fruitless evening trying to avoid the toes of fat matrons. There seemed to be only two females under the age of 21, but they were horseyfaced and not worth ‘saddling,’ even if their names were on your card. It was a relief to go on leave. CHAPTER 3 1942 THE JOURNEY TO INDIA After spending a few weeks at Tadworth, Surrey, we entrained for Southampton docks and boarded the SS Samaria, an 18,000 ton liner. Accommodation for the officers was crowded – six in a cabin meant for two -- but nothing like the mess decks below the waterline where the men had to live, crowded together like ants. We dined in mess kit, the first night in port – five courses and three wines! The troops had their usual stew and rice pudding plus an orange. The next day, we set sail with one destroyer escort to the Clyde, where we stayed two days – no shore leave – waiting for the whole convoy to assemble. When we reached the open sea, the convoy was so large – liners and cargo ships and even tramps – that it stretched almost as far as the eye could see. On the horizon were 12 destroyers, buzzing about like London taxis, and in the middle of the convoy a battleship and an aircraft carrier. Later, two cruisers appeared. About every half an hour, at a given signal from the flag captain, the whole convoy veered right or left. Occasionally, there were angry lamp signals from the flag captain – an obliging sailor translated them to me – that either a ship was belching out too much smoke or it was falling behind. The greatest culprit was the ‘Clan McDonald’, of about 2,000 tons, whose captain, finding his ship always in the rear, had had the boilers stoked to their maximum so that the smoke from its funnels was like that from old blast furnaces. Eventually, after two days, the ship was so far behind it was not visible. We heard later that a destroyer had stayed with it for a day till summoned back to the convoy, after which it had been sunk by a submarine. We never saw a submarine or a torpedo, but every day, we heard sounds of depth charges 51 and saw, on the horizon, fountains of water. 800 burials. After travelling across the Atlantic, we returned to dock in Freetown for fuel. After a day, when we were dying to get on dry land, but were not allowed, we proceeded, less half the convoy, to Cape Town. The docks there were thronged with white people, who almost fought each other to ‘adopt’ a soldier for the week’s stay. (Editor: Further chapters will appear in our next issue) Norman Yardley, who knew most of the South African cricketers, and I stayed with one of these, and the hospitality was overwhelming. We had been allowed to take with us from England only £5, which was soon exhausted on the boat, but I had no difficulty in cashing a cheque for £5 in one of the banks. Nothing was too good for the English troops! I was a member of “the class of ‘51ʺ from September 1951 only to August 1956. Three days after school broke up, I then ‘left’ and set off to attend Das Katharineum zu Lübeck in Lübeck, West Germany, until 22 December 1956. Established in the 14th Century, this school was coeducational and was said to be one of the twelve best schools in Germany. After all of nine days back in Scarborough, in the 1957 New Year I set off for Paris and Lycée Lakanal, in the suburb of Sceaux, Seine, for a term. Lakanal was a boarding school with local day students and was all male at that time. (There was an elderly nun who I believe taught religious matters to the first years but I saw no other women there.) Useful though the experience had been, by the time I returned to SBHS after Easter I had missed so much of my weakest subjects, Literature in English, German and French, that I decided to spend a further year in Modern 6B. Thus, in September 1957, I became an adopted member of “the class of ‘52ʺ! We set sail, with some regrets, bound for India but, to our surprise, a few days later, we docked at Mombassa, a hot sticky place, where we were able to take our platoons for a walk. On it, I spotted a chap in uniform of the West African Rifles who had been at OCTU with me. After putting the sergeant in charge, I accepted his invitation to look round the village. All the huts were decorated with blown up coloured contraceptives. My pal told me that Army Command, worried by the high incidence of VD among the coloured troops, had issued each of them with six, little knowing what they would be used for. Two weeks later, we docked at Bombay, but not without interest and incident on the way. The sea was so blue that it resembled the colour of a bad artist, and the phosphorescence was as breathtaking as the flying fish. The atmosphere was soft, warm and so soporific we spent all day on the deck. The only things that disturbed us were the constant burials at sea from other liners in the convoy. We learned later that some of the convoy had been diverted to Madagascar, which was taken with minimum casualties. However, many had caught malaria; hence nearly CASEY’S CONTINENTAL CAPERS (as Trevor Thewlis put it) by Adrian Casey (1951-59) Part 1 Lübeck - Katharineum I was a relatively experienced foreign traveller by then, as it was my third visit to the same place in Germany. My German penfriend was a pupil at the school and I had spent two days there with him in December 1955. I took the “Scarborough Flyer” (tagged onto the London train at York without having to leave the train) and spent the night in London. There I managed to lose my way on 52 the Underground! Next morning I caught the morning boat train at Liverpool Street that took me to Parkeston Quay, Harwich and the ‘day boat’. I little thought, as I showed my passport at the “British desk”, that within less than four years I would be an Immigration Officer and standing on the other side of that very same desk. According to a notice by the purser’s office, the Dutch ferry was fitted with Denny-Brown stabilisers; they did little good as far as I was concerned. I had taken seasickness tablets; although I was not actually vomiting sick, the side effects were so awful that I never took such tablets again - I preferred vomiting! (Oddly enough, I have never been seasick since.) As soon as the train moved off from Hoek van Holland, I went to the restaurant car, where I found the same Dutch steward as on my previous outward trip in December 1955. A couple of cups of coffee and a good meal soon overcame the side effects of the sea-sickness tablets. Among the other passengers on the train in Holland was a drunken Norwegian seaman clutching a bottle of gin. Also on the train were two khaki-uniformed Dutch Marechausee (immigration) officers who were checking passports. The seaman was standing outside our compartment, obviously giving them some lip; they were out of our field of vision until suddenly a uniformed arm shot out with a fist on the end and knocked the Norwegian down! When they asked to see our documents, everybody was tremendously polite. At the next station there was an unscheduled stop where we all watched as he was literally thrown off the train. Changing trains at Hamburg was a doddle, even though the station was busy. Arriving at Lübeck Hauptbahnhof a few hours before dawn, I was met off the train by a uniformed railway police officer who explained that my hosts, the Schröders, had been delayed on their way back from Frankfurt and there was nobody at their home yet. I would therefore have to wait at the station for several hours for somebody to collect me. He let me leave my luggage in the police office and settled me in the station cafeteria. I breakfasted on ersatz coffee, black bread (it’s dark brown), margarine and plum jam, read the newspaper and dozed until about midday when the Bavarian Haustochter (au pair) collected me. (Her name was Gudrun, but I used to call her ‘Liquorice’ because it gives you a Gudrun for your money!) I had already met the two Schröder sons and knew something of their family with whom I was to stay for the next five months. Herr Schröder was a Lutheran pastor at St Martin’s church who had two sons and two daughters. My rent was £7 a month, which was excellent value. There was a sink and cold tap outside my garret, which overlooked the side of the church. I had to wash and shave in cold water. The mattress on the bed was in three sections, which had to be rotated once a week. I had to leave my bed open first thing in the morning and make it neatly after breakfast. The bedding was a starched bottom sheet that was changed once a week, a feather duvet with a cover that Gudrun changed once a month, and a coarse army blanket. On the first laundry day I spotted Mrs Schröder examining my bedsheet carefully for signs of bedwetting or masturbation. She became suspicious when I did not submit my underpants for examination and laundering I washed them each night and dried them on the radiator so that I would always have fresh ones. I adopted a similar procedure with my pyjama trousers before handing them in. I overheard her muttering about my personal hygiene for not wearing underpants. I dread to think of her reaction if she had found semen stains on the bedclothes! (If I ever had the urge to masturbate, all I had to do was think of her face - she had a really ugly mug!) Every single day began at six, and each member of the household was allotted a time slot in the lavatory - if I was late, I had to negotiate a different slot or wait till last. There were strict rules about cleanliness in there and about ‘slopping out’ - we each had a chamber pot in our bedroom and were supposed to use that if necessary during the night to avoid 53 The Scarborough Cricket Club will be pleased to see members of the Old Scarborians Association at any of the County and Festival matches during the 2003 cricket season. The programme of major fixtures is detailed below. 2003 MAJOR FIXTURES 23rd - 25th JUNE : ENGLAND UNDER 17’s v YORKSHIRE ACADEMY 23rd - 26th JULY : FRIZZELL COUNTY CHAMPIONSHIP YORKSHIRE v HAMPSHIRE: 27th JULY : NATIONAL CRICKET LEAGUE YORKSHIRE v KENT 117th ANNUAL FESTIVAL 10th AUGUST : YORKSHIRE v LANCASHIRE Festival Sponsor - Scarborough Building Society 11th AUGUST : COMBINED SERVICES v MCC Festival Sponsor - Sir Peter Yarranton 12th AUGUST: YORKSHIRE LEAGUE v BRADFORD LEAGUE Festival Sponsor - Mr. Keith Moss th 13 - 16th AUGUST : FRIZZELL COUNTY CHAMPIONSHIP YORKSHIRE v WORCESTERSHIRE Festival Sponsor 13th - W. Boyes & Co. Limited Festival Sponsor 14th - Skanska Construction Limited 13th AUGUST : TETLEY’S BITTER FESTIVAL DINNER 17th AUGUST : CRICKET FESTIVAL SERVICE at ST. MARY’S PARISH CHURCH l7th AUGUST : NATIONAL CRICKET LEAGUE YORKSHIRE v WORCESTERSHIRE Festival Sponsor –McCain Foods (GB) Limited (Programme subject to alteration) Have you ever thought of becoming a Member, and if so, do you know just what privileges are attached to such membership? For £50.00 see 13 days of county and festival cricket with a turnstile value of about £145.00 with reduced rates for country, senior citizen and junior members. For further details contact The Secretary, Scarborough Cricket Club, Cricket Ground, North Marine Road, Scarborough, North Yorkshire, Y012 7TJ Telephone (01723) 365625 54 disturbing the others. (I used to tip my washing water into the chamber pot with any urine and empty it all into the sink outside my room, although I had been told that disposing of urine in this way was verboten.) Prompt at 0700 hours we reported to the dining room where we took it in turns to read a passage from the bible, sang a hymn to Frau Schröder’s piano accompaniment, said grace and sat to breakfast. This always consisted of haferflocken (oatflakes) with cold milk, coffee with cold milk, schwarzbrot (black bread) and leberwurst liver sausage) or home-made apple & plum jam, but no hot food. I would then make up sandwiches for my lunch - I could have as many as I would eat, which I put in a frischhaltertüte (plastic bag). There was a 20minutes walk to the school, which began at eight. On the first day I went straight to the enquiry window and gave my name. I was greeted in English, and a moment later a messenger arrived to book me in. I explained, as politely as possible, that I wished to speak German as much as possible, which cheered up everybody. For the time being, I was signed in as a member of staff, while it was decided which class I would join. (This permission was never rescinded, and I used to pop into the staff common-room now and again for coffee and biscuits. I even had a pigeonhole, in which I would sometimes find an exercise book with a note from one of the English teachers asking about some point of English usage, or asking whether I minded filling in for him/her on a certain date.) Eventually, I settled for Untersekunda (Lower 5th) with occasional attendances at the science arbeitsgemeinschaft, a sort of extra-curricular group at the end of the normal school day. At the school there was no assembly; that appeared to be a British institution. The register was taken by the class captain (klassensprecher). If you arrived late you simply apologised to the teacher and took your place in class. There was no such thing as detention for latecomers. Oh, yes, school finished for the day at 1 pm; the e-c groups went on for up to two more hours. To compensate for the short five-hour school day, there was more homework than we were given at SBHS. There was no such thing as school dinners, but there was a mid-morning break at 10 when hot drinks in glass bottles and hot Danish pastries could be purchased from a room in the basement. You made your selection and carried them to the end of the room where you paid for them. If you were first in line, the drink was almost too hot to hold and I learned to go in a couple of minutes later. By then the queue to pay was quite long and it was possible to swallow the drink and eat the pastry before paying for them. However, the idea of not paying for something you had already consumed never crossed anyone’s mind. The science arbeitsgemeinschaft was always interesting. (The science master had once shared lodgings in France with a Scotsman, and he used to mimic his mispronunciation of German during anecdotes. I remember him describing one occasion when the Scotsman remarked, “Yes, we say ‘Beat Hoh-ven’ too.”) There was an experiment to produce varying effects by passing a very narrow beam of light from a point source through two very fine grids of different ratings to produce various colours of the spectrum. Another time we experimented with polarising filters and Agfa colour negative film - we went on an outside trip for this one, using a Leica camera, then came back and reversal processed the film; the colour negative film base was clear at that time. The developing tank and film reel were stainless steel, and the film had to be removed after the first development, exposed to light, then fed back into the reel in a sink full of water to avoid scratching, before completing the processing. I wrote to both ‘Bon’ Clarke (from Germany) and Les Brown (from Germany and France) to let them know how I was doing. Also, all the time I was away, I was kept up to date 55 with a fortnightly exchange of letters with Peter “Pew” Mole in Modern 6B to which everybody in both 6Bs contributed. Besides news of doings and goings, these were enlivened in both directions with liberal measures of sixth form “humour”. This included the annual inter High School “Ebberston And Back Race” for putty, and a reference to my “act with dry sticks” (my address in Lübeck was at No 38, or acht und dreissig Schwartauer Allee ). There were regular requests for information on German (and later French) slang or about how to swear in those languages. My foreign schoolmates used to borrow these letters in the vague hope that they might learn more than was available in English lessons. Despite my enthusiasm for physics and chemistry, I was never much good at them at SBHS, but I enjoyed these lessons in Germany. Many a science lesson was enlivened as I struggled to explain eruditely, in German, something which had previously defied me in English, eventually tailing off with a Neddy Seagoon “Huuurrhh”. No one there was familiar with the Goon Show, but my classmates looked forward to its catchphrases dropping from my lips. (“You can’t get the wood” was their favourite.) (In German, lurgi, of all things, turned out to be a process for making ersatz coal gas, and the class spent a day being shown round the local lurgi works!) It was while I was in Lübeck that the uprising took place in Hungary and the Suez crisis arose. Soviet and East German troops massed on the border with West Germany, which in the case of Adrian Casey was only a mile or so away, and I used to take the tram to the border for a look at the massed Soviet armour, all set to unleash World War III. Facing them was a single Bundesgrenzschutz (Federal border guard) officer in a field green Volkswagen who advised me against taking photographs of the Russian tanks. (I had visions of a Soviet invasion just to confiscate my film!) Everybody at the Katharineum expected me to have nothing but Suez on my mind and assumed I wanted to discuss the subject, which I did not. When I arrived one morning in a filthy mood, they assumed I had received bad news of the ‘war’; in fact, I was furious because I had been unable to receive The Goon Show on BFN the previous evening! The first English lesson following the latest Goon Show would feature me relating the story of last night’s broadcast to a totally bewildered class. Some of my classmates had tried listening to it but failed to see what was funny about, for example, a long silence and the luxury version, an even longer silence. Of course, a long silence taken out of context had to be well-written to be funny, I explained! In one of Pew’s early letters, he reminded me that I was supposed to be learning Latin from scratch in a foreign language! I decided to go to an evening class, which was so well run that I could hold a simple conversation in Latin by the time I returned to SBHS. The chap who sat next to me lived on a farm and invited me to visit him and his family. I cycled out of the city and along some very minor roads, then along a cart track and eventually had to dismount and follow a footpath to the farmstead. I was made very welcome. My friend’s father confessed that he had been a Nazi and showed me his party card and lapel badge. In that tiny community it was practically compulsory to join the NSDAP, he told me. He opened an old tin and showed me something he had kept as a reminder of how things were in the Nazi-time: a cake of soap stamped “RJF” for Reines Juden Fett - Pure Jewish Fat. In the early days of concentration camps, he said, the people were told they were segregation camps for Jews. By 1943 though, you could be sent to a KZ (konzentrationslager) just for criticising the government - or if your face didn’t fit at work! A lot of the intelligentsia disappeared that way, he told me. Of course, I was reminded, the British created the first concentration camps, in South Africa for the Boers. There were also some evening classes in German for Germans, so I joined these. One of 56 the teachers worked at the local technical high school, which was next door to my digs. He inveigled me into teaching English Conversation for a double period on Friday mornings. I was introduced to my class of over 40 students, who were my age, and left to get on with it. It was a bit disconcerting to go into a classroom as a teacher, because all the pupils stood up as I entered and chorused, “Guten Morgen, Herr Professor!” For some reason, this class enjoyed Goon humour more than those at the Katharineum. I started going out socially with them and was invited to attend when one of the girls got married. The party lasted into the early hours and I was locked out of my digs. Ringing the doorbell at 2 a.m. must have woken the whole household, but not a word was said to me afterwards. Bon Clarke had really taken me to task after my first holiday in Germany in 1954, because I had not practised speaking German as much as he thought I should. My excuse was that everybody there had wanted to speak English. He took me off to the library where he railed at me for “wasting your father’s money!” Before leaving for Lübeck in 1956, he told me to tell people, “Ich kann nur Deutsch und Chinesisch! (I only speak German and Chinese.)” One day a Chinese Lutheran pastor came to visit the church, and the Schroder invited him to meet me so I could practice my Chinese. Of course, I had to admit to him that I did not speak Chinese. He sympathised with my explanation - that I was there to study German - and taught me some Mandarin. I recited a scene from a Goon Show about China, which he found amusing (I think it was the one about knocking six thousand times on a door and asking for Ah Pong - “Curses! It’s always next door in China!”). Another visitor to the house was Pastor Martin Niemöller. We had ‘done’ him in a German lesson with Bon, and Chicko (Mr Hampton) had mentioned him to me. Somebody took a picture of me shaking his hand, but I have lost it. Most people outside school recognised me as a foreigner by my accent - but in view of my apparent inability to understand English (an opinion of me expressed by most members of the staff at SBHS at one time or another), and my pathetic attempts at Latin, they usually let me use German in the end. (“What do you think of my English? Is it good?” “Ach so! Es klingt sehr gut - aber was heißt es, hein? It sounds very good - but what does it mean?”) The Katharineum had a good athletics team, which I joined and trained regularly with them. During my term there were two sports meets against the other principal schools, the Oberschule zum Dom (Cathedral School) and the Johanneum. I was not allowed to play for the Katharineum on either occasion, but I ran round the inside of the track shouting encouragement to my comrades. Instead of a starting pistol, there was a device made of two hinged pieces of wood. When these were slammed together, it caused a loud bang. As I was preparing to leave at the end of term, the headmaster invited me to join him in his panelled study for coffee and sandwiches, handed me a certificate of attendance and told me that I would be welcome back as a student teacher if ever I wished. He wished me well in my intended career in the Foreign Service and told me that a number of his former pupils were in the West German Auslandsdienst. (I spent a day back there in 1961, when he confessed that I spoke better German than he did - I was very careful with grammar and the use of such things as the future subjunctive. He was very pleased to learn that I was now a member of the Immigration Service, that had only 250 officers and was considered the elite of the UK civil service. I won’t repeat what IOs thought of the Diplomatic Service!) At half-term, Johannes Schröder and I went on a cycling holiday through SchleswigHolstein. We set off for Neustadt in heavy rain and despite our cycling capes we were soon soaked to the skin. I was wearing khaki shorts and my bicycle had a black rubber saddle. That night I discovered that the seat 57 of my shorts was stained black. We stayed at a Jugendherberge (youth hostel). Supper that night was a thick green concoction with suspicious-looking brown lumps floating in it. It smelled as bad as it looked. However, cold lager (in unlabelled Grolsch-type half-litre bottles) was very cheap and helped disguise the taste. It was supposed to be low in alcohol so it could be sold in the youth hostel, but some of the other patrons managed to get a bit squiffy on it. (Johannes claimed to be teetotal, so he bought peppermint tea; then he tried some of my lager and found he preferred its effect.) In our dormitory that night there were mysterious scamperings in the darkness. Then somebody shouted that tomorrow’s supper had escaped and a torchlight hunt began for rats. In Schleswig we stayed with the Bishop of Schleswig, Herr Westermann. There was none of the religious fervour that I had expected. We said grace before supper and that was it. The bishop had a dining table, chairs and a desk that had been made from the 800year-old timbers from the steeple of the cathedral, which had to be rebuilt after the war. He had invited an American tourist to stay the night, a Mr Pifer from Ohio. He introduced me to adding strawberry jam to boiled eggs at breakfast. I also remember breakfast there for the vast amount of sliced cheeses and sausages to fill the brötchen (rolls) and butter from a local farm. After the meal the bishop took us to the common by his house and demonstrated how to throw a boomerang, which he had acquired while working in Australia. It spun away into the distance then as it began its return flight about two metres above the ground a party of ramblers emerged from a dip, right in its path. Fortunately it did not hit them although they heard the whizzing sound it made as it passed close above them. They were ever so nice about it when they recognised the bishop as the person who had thrown it. At Flensburg I popped over the border into Denmark for an hour or so and bought some bottles of Tuborg strong dark beer. The youth hostel was a wooden building with no fire escape, and the lights were turned off at ten o’clock. During the night the Tuborg took effect and twice I felt my way along to where I thought the toilet was. When I relieved myself, there was no answering sound of water. In the morning I discovered I had peed down the stairs! The next night we stayed at a newly-built hostel where we were the only guests. The warden said it wasn’t worth cooking for just two, so we bought pumpernickel and honey and made sandwiches. With the place to ourselves, we washed our clothes and hung them to dry on the radiators. In the morning we spent about half an hour in the showers - there was a coin-operated meter for the hot water. At Husum there wasn’t a youth hostel so we stayed at the local pfadfinderhaus (scout hostel). They weren’t very welcoming and the boy scouts had scoffed all the supper; there was only peppermint tea left. In the morning we were only offered ersatz coffee. Then it was back to Neustadt. After two days without a proper meal, even the peas and sausage stew was welcome, and we actually had second helpings. As I trumpeted in the bog that night, I explained to a fellow hosteller what I had eaten. “Ach, Erbsensuppe ist gefährlich!” he exclaimed (Pea soup is dangerous). Like many German cities, Lübeck has trams as well as buses. One day I was cycling to the town centre when the front tyre got stuck in a tramline just as a tram was bearing down on me with the driver sounding his bell at me. I only managed to prise the tyre free in the nick of time! I was also shown round the local slaughterhouse and followed the progress of both cattle and pigs through the processes. I may have misunderstood, but I had the impression that pigs were only stunned by the electrocution process. Some of the terms used were new to me and in such cases I was shown the item in question. In particular I recall Eingeweide and was shown a wheelbarrow full of them - still moving pigs’ entrails! I 58 left the place with a souvenir parcel of freshly- 4) In which month do Russians celebrate the made pork sausages and beef steak. October Revolution? November On two nights a week I had a Latin evening class followed by a German one elsewhere in the city. There was insufficient time for me to return to my digs for the evening meal but at that time of year there were wurstbuden (sausage stalls) in the Rathausplatz. For the equivalent of half a crown I got a large griddled sausage, sauerkraut, two brötchen, real butter, a pot of mustard, and a large mug of real coffee. I always went to the same stall, where the proprietor got to know me, and I soon noticed that I was given the biggest sausage for the standard price. On my last visit before I returned to Scarborough they gave me a free meal and a box of Lübeck marzipan in sausage shapes! 5) What is a camelʹs hair brush made of? Squirrel fur 6) The Canary Islands in the Pacific are named after what animal? Dogs 7) What was King George VIʹs first name? Albert 8) What colour is a purple finch? Crimson 9) Where are Chinese gooseberries from? New Zealand (Editor: What do you mean, you failed?) CROSSWORD SOLUTION November 2002 The first correct solution was received from Adrian Casey (1951-59) who was proudly sportI had to obtain a residence permit ing his prize of an OSA tie at the London Lunch. (Aufenthaltserlaubnis) from the town hall Congratulations Adrian, and thank you to the (Rathhaus) soon after I arrived in Lübeck. I also members who took the time to complete and had to report my impending departure, on 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 which occasion the official was very pleasant to B I F F I S H E R W O O D 8 9 me and sent me along to meet the Bürgermeister L O G T L H L C 11 (mayor). This stout gentleman asked for my 10A J P E R R Y B R E A D T H impressions of his city then entertained me to K P O L O R S B 13 coffee and schlagsahnekuchen (cream cakes) and 12E P I C U R E W R E A T H presented me with a signed copy of the official M S S L A E 15 16 17 souvenir booklet and the coat of arms in Lübeck 14 O C H R E E X P O S U R E S marzipan. R S A 21 Both Lübeck and the Katharineum have web 18E X 19T R 20I N S I C S sites at www.tzl.de and www.tzl.de/ H L K C 23 24 25 katharineum respectively. The former includes T A Y L O R E X A a slide-show of the old area of the city, where 26A L E A D L 28 there is a laser show, while the school one has 27 D R A U G H T O X B photos of the building both interiors and exteO M A I U Y rior. There used to be a section for former pupils 29 B I L L P O T T S to get in touch but that has now been removed and the old lady is behaving herself with the send in their solutions. greatest decorum. PRIZE CROSSWORD ANSWERS TO THE WORLD’S EASIEST QUIZ (See page 36) C M 22 I T M M P N L E O D I R L L O I D 30 H E H E -3 Compiled by Alan Bridgewater (1933-40) 2) Which country makes Panama hats? Ecuador Answers please, to reach the Editor before 30th June 2003. Photocopies accepted. For contact details see page 1. Across 3) From which animal do we get cat gut? Sheep and Horses 7 This company has its name on the gates of what the older members would call The Athletic 1) How long did the Hundred Years War last? 116 years 59 1 Ground. (6) 8 (and 12 across) Battles of yesteryear are refought here during the summer. (8) 9 Short for Reserve Officers Training Corps. (4) 10 (and 19 across) The local OSA dinners have been held here recently. (9) 2 3 4 7 6 8 9 10 12 11 13 14 15 16 17 12 See 8 across (4) 18 13 His Chemistry lessons were often punctuated by Welsh exclamations! (9) 22 19 20 23 21 24 18 Dues were paid when we 25 visited the tuck-shop (4) 19 See 10 across (5) 20 Our Maths teachers taught us about these parts of the circle. (4) 5 26 31 27 28 29 30 32 22 The old Odeon might now be called this. (9) 24 Two members of the staff had this name. One 14 In medicine this is defined as a stroke or seizure. was headmaster and the other taught Maths to (5) School Certificate level. (4) 15 Harwood and Stainton come to mind when this 26 Oneʹs first experience of Room 10 was certainly is mentioned. (4) this! (9) 16 Tich Richardson was always telling us to watch 30 It was best to do this when told to do something this while he went through it! (10) by some members of staff! (4) 17 A state in Bill Pottsʹ homeland. (4) 31 A wing threequarter had to be this if he wished 21 Some of the members started their scholastic to survive. (8) careers at these schools, one of which was in Queen 32 We all used these to show that we had missed Street. (8) out a letter or word. (6) 23 The sheltered side of a ship. (3) Down 25 A Biology teacher after Taffy. (5) 1 When we had passed the entrance exam we could 27 Tarzanʹs real forename! (4) all be considered to be this. (8) 28 The name we all used for Maurice Cornish. (4) 2 This is the time when skipping on the Foreshore is 29 In the morn we all hoped that P.T. would be the foremost activity. (10) taken by Stodd. (4) 3 When it came to using paint, many of us could said to be this. (5) LATE NEWS 4 The chemists among us would say that this is a Peter Newham(1954-61) writes quartz-like form of hydrated silica. (4) Congratulations to all concerned with the London Lunch, which was most enjoyable. The 6 We have this when Mary has left Yarmouth. (4) strong Scarborough contingent who had made 11 A mild expression which might have been used the effort to travel down from Civilization quite by teachers when marking the homework offering put to shame those of us who have not exerted themselves to attend the Scarborough Dinners – of some pupils! (3) 5 A powder most often used for babies. (4) 60 even if, as I understand from Mike Bowman, FORTHCOMING EVENTS several Yorkshire wives had been so suspicious as to accompany their husbands on this occasion Joint Reception & Buffet: Saturday September 27th 2003 with SGHS Old Girls (for members & to keep a watchful eye on them! guests). Booking form enclosed. On the subject of Summer Times, as a relative new boy I feel somewhat presumptuous in expressing AGM: Tuesday 25th November 2003 7.30pm a view, but “The Scarborian” or “The Old Scar- Boden Room Stephen Joseph Theatre. borian” (if we admit to not being as young as our fantasies) would surely be preferable as a title. Even if one ignored the incorrect “summer” connotations of a twice yearly magazine, I like to think our academic age range was more appropriately the Spring rather than the Summer of our lives, otherwise some of us are in danger of slipping, if not into second childhood, into a late winter! Having said that, obviously the contents of the Magazine matter more than the name, and although I sometimes with age struggle to remember recent events, I surprise myself at my belated recollection of events some 45 years ago, triggered partly by Summer Times and partly by a fund of stories from seasoned reprobates at the Luncheon, Gridley P being a particular culprit, who (perhaps not wholly deservedly) still looks not totally dissimilar from his appearance all those years ago, which is perhaps more than can be said of some of the rest of us! It all seems a long time ago (and indeed it was) but we are what we are today as a result, although I am not sure to whether such a statement is a matter for self-congratulation or otherwise! (Editor: Peter’s response is as a result of my query at the London Lunch as to whether the title Summer Times - which we understand was originally intended to represent the “Summer” of our lives - rather than the season of publication, remains appropriate. I expressed the view that the present title is possible a little twee and from a quick straw poll at the lunch it seemed there was probably a majority for a change to say, The Scarborian or The Old Scarborian. In true democratic fashion members left a final decision to your committee. However, members’ views would be appreciated before any decision is taken) Christmas Dinner: Friday 28th November 2003 Palm Court Hotel. London Lunch, (provisional) Saturday March 13th 2004. POSTCRIPT • An index to Volume 42 is available free of charge in exchange for a stamped addressed envelope, from Adrian Casey, 22 Gordon Road, Surbiton, Greater London. KT5 9AR E-mail: YCLEFTSTICK@aol.com •A CD containing all issues of Summer Times since 1999, viewable on a computer, costs only £2 (£3 overseas). Order from David Fowler. •A few copies of Frank Binders tour de force remain available from Mike Rines. He offers these at £5 a copy plus £1 UK p& p. (Proceeds to FB’s family). Please contact Mike direct at 32 Saxon Way, Melton, WOODBRIDGE, Suffolk, IP12 1LG Telephone 01394 610034. E-mail rines@rinesm.freeserve.co.uk • The final copy date for our next issue is 15th August 2003. • John Forster (1955-60) appeared on “Who wants to be a Millionaire” on Saturday 5th April. Not bad timing for an Accountant! He excelled – and won £128,000 – without coughing! He agreed we could mention his success and added, “To answer the question everyoneʹs asking: I may well escape some of the next English winter by going to see friends in Australia. I shall almost certainly go to Trinidad (maybe Barbados, too) for the cricket etc this time next year. Itʹs all very exciting. I MAY be able to come up with something for the Autumn Summer Times - but no promises! 3 4 Published by The Old Scarborians Association, Telephone 01723 365448 Printed by Prontaprint, 5 Station Shops, Westborough, Scarborough Telephone 01723 367715