WOR92595 50th Ann Brochure aw:Layout 1
Transcription
WOR92595 50th Ann Brochure aw:Layout 1
The Worshipful Company of Launderers 50th Anniversary City Banquet Great Hall Guildhall London EC2 By Kind permission of The Rt Hon. The Lord Mayor Tuesday 23rd February 2010 The Worshipful Company of Launderers Past Masters 1960-1962 1962-1963 1963-1964 1964-1965 1965-1966 1966-1967 1967-1968 1968-1969 1969-1970 1970-1971 1971-1972 1972-1973 1973-1974 1974-1975 1975-1976 1976-1977 1977-1978 1978-1979 1979-1980 1980-1981 1981-1982 1982-1983 1983-1984 1984-1985 1985-1986 1986-1987 1987-1988 1988-1989 1989-1990 1990-1991 1991-1992 1992-1993 1993-1994 1994-1995 1995-1996 1996-1997 1997-1998 1998-1999 1999-2000 2000-2001 2001-2002 2002-2003 2003-2004 2004-2005 2005-2006 2006-2007 2007-2008 2008-2009 Stanley W. Wells, Esq., MBE Mr Deputy Cuthbert Skilbeck Leslie E. Brown, Esq. Robert Allen, Esq., JP Charles Alva Rice-Hunt, Esq. Ancliffe R. Prince, Esq. C. Victor Best, Esq. Arthur E. Bailey, Esq. Vernon R. Jones, Esq. Donald A. Hutcheson, Esq. Arthur R. L. Oliver, Esq., TD, JP Michael Ross, Esq., DFC Neville M. Wells, Esq. Jack Leicester, Esq., OBE W. Desmond C. Robinson, Esq. Eric W. Swetman, Esq., OBE Arthur Kennedy, Esq., OBE Brian W. Goodliffe, Esq. Peter L. Macdonald, Esq., VRD William J. Marle, Esq. E. Stanley Hale, Esq. Richard L. Seaman, Esq. Stuart Laurie-Walker, Esq. Jack Pennell, Esq. Roy Le Poidevin, Esq. Derek L. Hirst, Esq. William H. Davidson, Esq., MBE John C. H. Baker, Esq. Oswald E. Longshaw, Esq. Frederick H. Scott, Esq. J. Anthony Dunn, Esq. Melvyn F. H. Rogers, Esq. James G. Crisp, Esq. Brian St. John Mowbray, Esq. James I. S. Fox, Esq. David R. Browne, Esq. Richard C. L. Orford, Esq. Michael Bennett, Esq. Thomas A. Elliott, Esq. Peter C. Crane, Esq. Dennis A. Hargreaves, Esq. David M. Hart, Esq. Margaret D. Sheppard Alick Kennedy, Esq. M. Paul Woolfenden, Esq. Terence J. Winter, Esq. Selwyn M. Burchhardt, Esq. M. Paul Woolfenden, Esq. Lord Mayor’s Welcome The Worshipful Company of Launderers Master Murray R. F. Simpson Deputy Master M. Paul Woolfenden Senior Warden Martyn E. M. Lewis Renter Warden Colin Hill Clerk of the Company Jacqueline A. Polek Master’s Welcome On behalf of the Court of the Worshipful Company of Launderers, may I welcome you to Guildhall and to our 50th Anniversary City Banquet. Exactly fifty years ago today, Tuesday 23rd February 1960, forty progressive leaders of their industry met in Tallow Chandlers’ Hall to celebrate the birth of The Company of Launderers. They were brought together by the Company’s first Master, Major Stanley Wells MBE, whose wisdom and foresight, and that of his fellow founders, is honoured here this evening. Laundry is an ancient craft; but we are a modern Company. Whilst modest in comparison to many Companies within the City, our fiftieth anniversary is a source of great pride to the Launderers and represents a landmark in our history well worthy of tonight’s splendid celebration at Guildhall. I should like to take this opportunity to thank my colleagues in the Company and particularly the members of the Organising Committee chaired by Senior Warden Martyn Lewis for their diligent preparation which has laid the foundation for tonight’s success. The generosity of the market-leading commercial companies who have sponsored this event is also gratefully acknowledged. Without this incredibly valuable support, it would have been impossible to stage tonight’s event on such a scale and with such professionalism. The Launderers play a full and growing part in the life of the City of London: sharing a splendid Livery Hall with the Glaziers and the Scientific Instrument Makers; strongly supporting the British Red Cross at Guildhall’s Christmas Market and other events; combining with other water-related Livery Companies to form the much vaunted “Wet 10”; processing with our fellow Modern Companies in the Lord Mayor’s Show; celebrating our valued link with the Laundry Squadron of the Royal Logistic Corps; competing on the River Thames in our Company’s Cutter, The Princess Nausicaa and supporting charity, education, training and benevolence both for the laundry industry and in the London Borough of Southwark. But above all, the Company celebrates the craft of laundering and its modern applications. The stunning table linen provided this evening is just one example of the contemporary innovative products and services provided by today’s laundry and dry cleaning industry. I hope that our Founders would approve of our stewardship of their legacy and look forward to the next chapter in the history of the Company: the next fifty years. M R F Simpson Master 2009/10 Brief History of the Company Proposals to form the Company of Launderers originated in 1955 with foundations being laid by Mr Ancliffe Prince and Mr Dorrill K Rollitt OBE. The first meeting of the Launderers to consider the formation of the Company was held in Tallow Chandlers’ Hall on 3rd July 1957. A Constitution and Ordinances, prepared with the considerable aid of Mr Randall Monier-Williams, Clerk of the Tallow Chandlers’ Company, were approved and adopted at the inaugural meeting of the Company on the 23rd February 1960. Mr Stanley W Wells was elected Master, Mr Deputy Cuthbert Skilbeck, Senior Warden, Mr Leslie E Brown, Renter Warden along with eight Assistants and Mr Dorrell K Rollitt OBE as Clerk. Major Stanley W. Well, MBE A Benevolent Trust Fund, created in 1963, has proved to be of considerable value. Charitable grants are made from the Benevolent Trust Fund to worthy causes in the Laundry Industry; the City of London; the locality of Launderers’ Hall and, at the Masters’ discretion, to other deserving charities and appeals. The Launderers Company is a major contributor, amongst other Livery Companies, to the City of London Red Cross Christmas Market and Appeal. Also in 1963, the College of Heralds made a Grant of Arms to the Company with the Company motto - “Cleanliness is next to Godliness” - beneath the Coat of Arms. In 1970, the Company celebrated its tenth anniversary by holding an exhibition at Bakers’ Hall in the City of London to illustrate both the antiquity of the craft of laundering and the part which it plays in the life of the City and all its inhabitants. Senior Past Master Neville M. Wells By an Order of the Court of Mayor and Aldermen of the City of London dated 11th December 1973, the Company was recognised as a City Company without a Grant of Livery. By an Order of the Court of Mayor and Aldermen of the City of London dated 13th December 1977, the Company was constituted a Livery Company of the City of London. The Letters Patent confirming the Grant of Livery were presented to the Company by the Lord Mayor at a ceremony at The Mansion House on the 10th March 1978. At Guildhall on the 18th September 1980, the Lord Mayor unveiled a Shield bearing the Coat of Arms of the Company which was donated by Past Master Richard L Seaman. In 1982, the Launderers’ Hall Appeal fund was inaugurated with the intention of establishing a “home” for the Company in the City of London for the next 150 years. The appeal received a magnificent response from the Livery and Industry which enabled the Company to enter Launderers Hall on the 1st October 1982 and to hold its first Livery Dinner in the Hall on 18th October 1982. The Company’s first Ladies’ Banquet to be held at Launderers’ Hall took place on the 18th May 1983, when Her Royal Highness The Princess Anne GCVO proposed the Toast to the Worshipful Company of Launderers. During 1991/92, the first six female Freemen were admitted to the Company. On the 16th March 1998, Articles of Association between the Company and the Laundry Squadron of the Royal Logistic Corps (TA) were entered into, thus formalizing an association begun in 1992. In June 2003, Margaret Sheppard became the first Lady Master of the Company. The Coat of Arms The central feature on the shield of the Coat of Arms is a representation of a mechanical washing machine, invented in 1782 by Henry Sidgier of London. It operated on a rotary principle which set a trend for successive machines for the next 200 years. Sidgier's machine comprised two cages, one inside the other, the inner being perforated and fixed to a handle for rotation by hand. As it was turned, with the garments inside it, water was passed through the outer cage and the perforations of the inner cage to clean the clothes by agitation. Surrounding Sidgier's machine on the shield are three antique flat irons. On the crest sits a domestic cat, the cleanest of all animals. Surrounding it are lilies and sunflowers, symbols of purity, warmth and brightness. The right hand, or dexter, supporter of the shield (to the viewer's left) commemorates a royal laundress, Princess Nausicaa. The sixth book of Homer's Odyssey recounts how the Princess and her maidens are surprised by the shipwrecked Odysseus as they are washing the linen of the royal household on the beach. The sinister, or left-hand supporter (to the viewer's right), is an eighteenth century laundrywoman of contrastingly humbler origins. She carries a dolly which, with the tub, was long considered the only apparatus necessary for the washing of clothes. It was a natural progression from the beating of clothes in running water. The motto “Cleanliness is Next to Godliness” comes originally from the Talmud, the ancient book of Jewish law and literature. It came into widespread use in England after its adoption by John Wesley for use in his sermons. 50th Anniversary Menu A TRIO OF MINIATURE TERRINE, PARFAIT AND MOUSSELINE Wild Game Terrine, Foie Gras Parfait & Watercress Mousseline FILLET OF DOVER SOLE WITH BOK CHOY AND CORIANDER & CHILLI BEURRE BLANC CANNON OF CARMARTHENSHIRE LAMB BUTTERNUT TART TATIN AND MINTED WHITE WINE REDUCTION DAUPHINOIS POTATOES BUNDLE OF BEANS AND BABY CARROTS TIED WITH LEEK RIBBONS TUILE BASKET FILLED WITH PEARLS OF EXOTIC FRUIT SORBET AND PRESENTED ON A KISSEL OF RED FRUITS TWICE BAKED PARMESAN SOUFFLÉ WITH PLUM CHUTNEY A SELECTION OF BRITISH SWEETMEATS AND CHOCOLATES COFFEE WINES Montagny 1’er Cru, La Buxnoise 2006 Chateauneuf du Pape Domaine la Croze 2004 Champagne Lagache Rose LIQUEURS Warres 1980 Port Baron de Sigognac Armagnac SUNG GRACE For these and all thy mercies given We Bless and praise Thy Name, O Lord, May we receive them with thanksgiving, Ever trusting in Thy Word: To Thee alone be honour, glory Now, and henceforth, for evermore, -AmenFrom the “Laudi Spirituali”, A.D. 1545 Toasts THE QUEEN Proposed by The Master (It is our custom to sing the first verse of the National Anthem before the Toast) THE PRINCE PHILIP DUKE OF EDINBURGH THE PRINCE OF WALES, THE DUCHESS OF CORNWALL and the other members of the Royal Family Proposed by The Master (The first six bars of the National Anthem will be played, but not sung) THE LORD MAYOR, THE CITY OF LONDON CORPORATION AND THE SHERIFFS Proposed by The Master THE GUESTS Proposed by Senior Warden Martyn E M Lewis Response to the Civic Toast and the Guest coupled with the Toast to the Worshipful Company of Launderers The Right Worshipful the Lord Mayor Locum Tenens Alderman the Lord Levene of Portsoken KBE Response by The Master FINAL TOAST Proposed by Senior Past Master Neville M. Wells Music during dinner by THE BRASS QUINTET OF THE ROYAL ARTILLERY Led By Bombardier Martin Hinton Anthem from Chess The Magic Horn Concerto for Two Trumpets La Comprasita A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square The Roaring Twenties Carol of the Bells Gabriels Oboe Amazing Grace Entry of the Gladiators Sea Sketches Post Horn Gallop Arr. Bede Michael Kamen Vivaldi Rodriguez Arr. Gale Arr. Nagle Arr. Coombes Morricone Arr.Henderson Arr. Holcombe/Battles MacDonald Koenig March of the Master Launderers The March of the Master Launderers, which is is played as the Master, Wardens and chief guests take their places, brings in two traditional tunes associated with 19th Century members of our Industry - ‘The Irish Washerwoman’ and ‘Dashing Away with a Smoothing Iron’. The forerunners of the present laundry machinery manufacturers are also remembered by a few snatches of ‘The Harmonious Blacksmith’ (1720). Reproduction of original table plan Company of Launderers Inauguration Banquet Tallow Chandlers Hall, London Le slie K Tuesday 23rd February 1960 E. enn Art B rt row be uth n eth B C ayli hur E ss . Ba eck Stanley W. Wells O. iley ilb Sk and erl und on S rd Go ilip Ph ones E. J llen ert A Rob R.H. Monier -Williams C. Victor Best Rev. J. F. D. Trimingham Ancliffe R. Prince John K. Gambrell Vernon R. Jones Walter Hughes John Leicester Russell J. Brereton Leonard D. Sinclair C.A. Rice-Hunt Artbur R.L. Oliver Balfour Millar W.R. Powles-Hunt Michael Ross Robert K. Ross Charles J. Nichols Arthur Kennedy Frederick Rogers W.G. Martyn Wilkins Gordon A. Noble Herbert E. Davis Eric W.Swetman Lewis Hinkley Norman O. Wright Neville M. Wells John Barnett Stanley T. Burkett Edward J. Lowes The City Press Donald E. Hutcheson Dorrell K. Rollit Fascinating Facts of the Time THE TIMES 23rd February 1960 THE TIMES 27th February 1960 POWER LAUNDRY 4th Macrh 1960 A Brief History of Guildhall As the home of the Corporation of London, Guildhall has been the centre of City government since the Middle Ages. Today, Guildhall still plays an important role in the City. The word “guildhall” is said to derive from the Anglo-Saxon “gild” meaning payment, so it was probably a place where citizens would pay their taxes. The present Guildhall was begun in 1411 and, having survived both the Great Fire of London and the Blitz, it is the only secular stone structure dating from before 1666 still standing in the City. It is likely that at least one earlier guildhall existed on or near the current site. References to a London guildhall are made in a document dating back to 1128 and the current hall’s west crypt is thought to be part of a late 13th century building. Remains of a long-lost Roman amphitheatre discovered in 1987 underneath what is now Guildhall Yard indicate that the site of Guildhall was significant as far back as Roman times. The Great Hall is the third largest civic hall in England, where royalty and state visitors have been entertained down the centuries. It has been the setting for famous state trials, including that of Lady Jane Grey in 1553. The imposing medieval hall has stained glass windows and several monuments to national heroes including Sir Winston Churchill. The monuments surrounding Great Hall date back to the eighteenth century. The oldest, erected in 1772, was dedicated to Lord Mayor William Beckford who is represented addressing a remonstrance to King George III, after the King had apparently rebuffed an address from the City. Legend has it that the two statutes of Gog and Magog represent the conflict between the ancient inhabitants of Britain and the Trojan invaders. This resulted in the founding, 1000 years before the beginning of the Christian era, of Albion’s capital city New Troy upon which site London is said to stand. The ancestors of the giants, eventually set up in Guildhall in 1708, were paraded in the mid-summer pageants of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Britain’s two most foremost naval and military heroes also take their place among the statesmen represented. The monument to Admiral Viscount Nelson depicts the Battle of Trafalgar with Neptune and Britannia grieving at his death, while the City of London records his great victories. That of the Duke of Wellington depicts the last charge at Waterloo, the Duke standing between Peace and War, holding his Field Marshal’s baton in one hand and the Peace of 1815 in the other. Both the Old Library and the Print Room are now used as reception rooms and beneath Guildhall lie the largest medieval crypts in London, which are also now used for reception purposes. The Origins of Beating Retreat The ceremony of Beating Retreat has its origins in the practicalities of early warfare when the drum was used for all signals on the battlefield. Beating the Retreat was a signal for troops to disengage from combat as light faded. This custom was also used to warn outlying troops to withdraw to the confines of the encampment before the picquets were set for the night. One of the first references to the custom of Retreat is in the 'Rules and Ordynaunces for the Warre' dated 1554, where it is called 'Watch Setting'. In 1727 Humphrey Bland's 'Treatise of Military Discipline' stated: 'Half an hour before the gates are to be shut, generally at the setting of the sun, the Drummers of the Port Guard are to go upon the ramparts and beat a Retreat to give notice to those without that the gates are to be shut.' There appeared to be some confusion between Retreat and another custom of 'Tattoo' which was a beating of drums within the billeting areas to order the troops to their quarters. Twenty years later, whilst in Flanders during the war of the Austrian succession, The Duke of Cumberland made the first clear distinction between Retreat and Tattoo, when he ordered 'The Retreat is to be daily at Sunset and the Tattoo is to be beat at a later hour as ordered by the Commandants of individual encampments'. The original call of Retreat was beaten by drums alone, and it was some years before fifers were added to play tunes. The bugle came later still and the present ceremony of having a band parade is a modern innovation to add spectacle. The ceremony of Beating Retreat in the Royal Navy and Royal Marines rose to importance in the 1930s when the then Commander-in-Chief Mediterranean Fleet, Admiral Sir William Fisher KCB, CVO, chose it as an impressive spectacle to perform when his Fleet visited foreign ports. The Massed Bands of the Fleet were added to the Corps of Drums and the ceremony was concluded with the bugle call •Sunset• as the White Ensign was lowered. The Company of Launderers first Annual Banquet held at Tallow Chandlers Hall Her Royal Highness the Princess Anne and Past Master Richard L. Seaman 1983 The RLC setting up their mobile laundry unit The Company’s Cutter taking part in the Nelson Flotilla 2005 The Company’s Court 2010 Event Sponsors Fishers Services Limited Armstrong Commercial Laundry Equipment Clay & Abbott Clean Linen Services Hilden Huebsch Originators Jensen Group Lapauw Tibard and Tonrose Cuttings from Power Laundry have been reproduced by kind permission of Laundry and Cleaning News Photographs of this Banquet can be purchased from www.sharpphoto.co.uk