Education, Headlands, RattleBag and Rhubarb

The Changed Face of School Leadership

The schools we attend and work in help shape the people we become. Seven of my sixty plus years in school were spent here – at Headlands Grammar School, Swindon. It is long gone and the site redeveloped. 

It’s damp and chilly and “Bomber” Brown in his track suit is yelling at the top of his lungs. And off to the right Miss Jackson is telling some girl to whack the ball with a hockey stick. And then came the ‘avoid the showers’ routine to manage.

When people go into education as a career they sometimes seek to replicate the good experiences of their own schooling. Others dedicate themselves to making sure that students don’t have to endure what they went through. When it comes to Headlands, I belong mostly in that latter category.

This is what Peter Gow has called  “restitutional teaching”:

the idea that for some of us a portion of our motivation is to see to it that what was done unto us or our friends as children: the squashing of spirit and passion, the dehydration of subject matter until it was truly arid and meaningless, the petty and often unintentional unfairnesses and humiliations that can scar kids for a lifetime.

It wasn’t that the place was so bad or that the teachers were so fearsome or incompetent. Not that, although there were moments of great dread and distress. And Headlands had its fair share of the grotesque and hopeless along with the merely eccentric and hapless.

I’ve just looked through a couple of old Headlandians – annual school report/magazines from the 1960’s -the two available online. Many students clearly had a very different experience than I did. And of course – a personal viewpoint is narrow and idiosyncratic at best. Memory selects a mere fraction.

Gifted teachers are rare anywhere, and the school had a fair share of the sort that knew how to get you through the exam system and maintain at least some pleasure in the process of learning. And I don’t question the good intentions and dedication of any of them. As far as I know they were all dedicated, hard-working and well-meaning. Even the worst of them. My intent here is not to tear anyone down but rather to share what I remember and the conclusion I drew from my experience.

“Nutty” Almond, “Bomber” Brown, Mr Caws, Mrs Charlesby, “Grog” Evans, Norman Gilbert, Miss Harris, “Boomer” Hickman, “Holy Joe” Holroyd, Miss Jackson, Mr. Jenkins, Mr. Litherland, Mr. Parry-Jones, Mr Penelum, Andy Pollock, Mr, Rackham, “Pop” Shores, Miss Whereat, Miss Wildman … and all the rest – I think that they were doing their best to do what they thought was right. Some are memorable and some best forgotten. And many I have forgotten because perhaps they just did their job. And the ones that were popular? – another lesson learned – are best avoided. More anon.

And among them there were the benign eccentrics of which school legends are made. Outstanding among those was the English teacher/  careers master Merv Comrie – more anon on that too.

A couple of random events has led me to reflect on the teachers and the leadership I experienced, observed, benefitted and suffered from in my secondary education.

The first was unearthing something I had put together for a presentation years ago: “So you want to be a head: Take this readiness checklist.” It was a partially tongue-in-cheek inventory of what it takes to become a head of school. (How do you feel about being under constant surveillance? Are you ready to have no friends at work? Are you ready to have everyone mad you at the same time?). The second was reading and enjoying a memoir – Grammar School Boys – published by John Trueman.

John and I were in most of the same classes and had the same teachers. He was demoted into my class in his first year at grammar school before we were both demoted into a new class – a middle section – not top, not bottom – created to accommodate the growing numbers. It was the height of the baby boom in a mushrooming London overspill town. 

In his 1967 book An Awkward Size for a Town Kenneth Hudson concluded that Swindon, like many towns in the process of expansion, was too large to retain the strong social cohesion of smaller communities, but not yet large enough to support the extensive amenities associated with many cities.

He was right.

A little background 

Headlands was a fairly typical grammar school of that era, one of two such selective schools in the town. A third was built as the new estates stretched east and the numbers grew. Commonweal was the more established. It was the middle-class school up the hill in old Swindon, the part of town that pre-dated the coming of the Great Western Railway works and the first big industrial expansion in the C19th. 

Headlands was the amalgamation of two older schools in the town center but acquired its distinct identity as a grammar school with the opening of the new building on Cricklade Road, Stratton St. Margaret to the north of the town in 1952. 

In those days, 20% of students – selected at the age of eleven and on the basis of the infamous multi-year 11plus exam – were offered places at grammar schools. The actual percentage depended on where you lived but in Swindon it was 20%. About half of that number would leave for the world of work and apprenticeship after taking the GCE ‘O’ level at age 16. The rest would stay on for the two years of the sixth form and take the “A” level. About half of that number then would head for university and the rest to colleges of education, trainee programs or work. Slice, slice, slice. Education was expensive.

It was all a process of sorting that began at the age of seven and accelerated from there. It you survived the 11+ and entered the grammar school – dressed in your school uniform and carrying a big leather satchel – the next step was to be sorted into ability groupings based on your educational prospects as revealed by the exam.

At Headlands, the top class was 1U (university), the second was 1A (advanced level), the third was 1E  – who knew what that stood for – and the fourth was 1O (as in ordinary level GCE.) You could probably get a similar result sorting on the basis of family income or father’s occupation. Throw in whether they had a library card and you would have much the same result. 

So – carefully sorted – with some movement- promotion and demotion after mid-year and end-of-year exams – we knew our place.

Class 1A sorted and ready to be processed through the educational sausage machine with Latin teacher Miss Harris

In Greek mythology, Pygmalion carved the perfect woman in marble and she came to life and they lived happily ever after. The Pygmalion effect in education is the self-fulfilling prophesy of expectations. Call a class the top and treat them as headed for high achievement and they will have a better chance of success. Call them the bottom class and they will perform, and behave, accordingly. It’s why the so called bottom class was always full of such interesting characters – the defiant ones who resisted the system, the unruly rebels.

Microaggressions

It will always stay with me how that sorting process worked – the accumulated minor slights, indignities, disappointments and petty insults that were heaped on those who did not quite make it. Today we might call them microaggressions. Some were personal – the day to day harassment that comes when expression of individuality is tamped down and difference is regarded with hostility; where respect is regimented and demanded and kids are left to fend for themselves.

Some were institutional and borne of necessity and decisions about the use of resources: The assignment of teachers, the choice of subjects, the distribution of roles of responsibility, awards and prizes:  being taught by the most incompetent in the least attractive spaces. And some were just routine humiliations – being called out in assembly for some minor infraction, detentions, impositions, icy stares and acid tongue-lashes.  It all added up. Never-mind that all 120 students were among the so-called intellectually elite – the top 20% cream of the exam crop. The lowest class were at the bottom and they knew it and frequently lived up to that expectation.

That’s where I learned the advantage of staying in the middle of the pack and working at going unnoticed. From there you have options and can take advantage of possibilities as long as you keep your head below the parapet. People don’t expect much of you and therefore won’t be disappointed when you fail.  And – unless you do something to draw attention to yourself – all may be well. You can always choose to surprise them. You have that power.

From the safety of the middle grouping – two above me and two below – you could see it all. For me this meant being excluded from Latin after one year – a move that later severely limited my university options, having the PE teacher drafted in to teach history which for her meant dictating from the textbook. She is actually the only teacher I remember saying a kind word to me. And – to top it all I just this week – lo! these many decades later – discovered that my name was omitted from the Headlandian university entrance list in the program for a speech day that happened almost a year after I was already at university. I didn’t know at the time because I did not – and would not attend – such a ceremony.  Bless the intertubes for one final – unintentional for sure – petty insult. It fits perfectly with the rather low expectations the school had for my exam chances. You have to laugh after all the ongoing song and dance about striving and achieving and all the rest of the palaver. When the unexpected academic success actually happened they didn’t get the record straight. (See Escape from the Spirit People) In truth – they actually had better things to do. Or rather, more things to do than bother about me.This was a school with no support staff – no nurse, no psychologist, no learning specialist, no community liaison. The tiny admin team – with the support of their teachers – did it all. And that’s why it didn’t, couldn’t, get done. No blame.

So Headlands was a product of its time and place. It was also the product of stable school leadership and a  trio that steered the school for more than two decades.

Miss A Jacob, senior mistress, Mr. T.S. Magson, headmaster, Mr. D.H.MacLean deputy headmaster.

These are the people who ruled my secondary school existence. They were not monsters by any stretch of the imagination although they were capable of actions that were experienced as cruel and frightening. All three were born into the Edwardian era, were children during WW1, and lived and worked through the depression and WW2. 

They were dedicated, committed, hard-working, and on a mission. Even in my time they were throwbacks to another time and place, true believers in the importance of standards – on the eternal warpath against the encroachments of the modern era as represented by slang, popular music, nail varnish, eye shadow,  long-haired boys, wearing of jewelry of any kind and slipshod anything. Failure to wear the school hat while traveling to and from school on the public bus was a major crime and – like eating iced confectionary in the street – was “letting down the good name of the school”. Such egregious conduct was met with a battery of responses ranging from icy stares and acid tongue to impositions and detention.

There’s another school in the UK with the name ‘Headlands’ and while googling I came across its website. It seems that schools are still obsessing over eye shadow and skirt length. And now they have smart watches and cell phones to add to the forbidden list. Policing children in the name of standards marches on. 

Magson – always known as “the Boss” – was an inveterate user of the fustian and florid when it came to language. As well as iced confectionary there was his fried chipped potatoes for crisps and pantechnicon for lorry.  I am sure there were others that I have forgotten and surely he said omnibus. We would hear these expressions at morning assembly when he would sweep into the hall, glasses flashing and gown flowing and we would rise to our feet as the expected mark of respect while he and the teachers sat up on the platform and we were arrayed by age and class below. Two hymns, a prayer, the Lords Prayer, a reading from the Bible (King James, of course) and then the announcements. Twenty minutes to start the day.

Sometimes the reading would be installments of Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress. I am sure that Mr. Magson took the allegory of Christian as an analog of his own work. He wanted all of us to leave the City of Destruction and seek the straight and narrow of the King’s Highway. With hard work we could move beyond the moral degeneracy of the Slough of Despond, climb the Hill of Difficulty, uphold the good name of the school and reach the Celestial City by means of good exam results.  

In retrospect I am grateful for those daily readings. Not for any moral uplift but because they are extraordinary works of English literature and part of the fabric of our language. And it didn’t escape the notice of those ever vigilant about the hypocrisy of our elders and betters that both Bunyan and Christian are usually portrayed with long hair. 

Educational leadership today is a growth industry, Everyone has a program or a theory or at the very least a few favorite quotations or examples. Global management consulting firms gather data on what makes leaders effective and business schools and educational institutes opine on the key characteristics and essential capacities to promote their programs.

It’s all very different from the assumptions that these three brought to their understanding of their work. I don’t think they were assailed by doubt or worried about their emotional intelligence or distributive leadership style. They operated with a kind of moral certitude and they had no qualms about exercising authority. The world may have been changing but they were there to stem the tide, uphold eternal verities and standards. Together they built a school that was firmly based on authority and a sense of righteous cause. It was, mostly, predictable, stable, certain and unambiguous. 

All this was to come crashing down in a very short period of years. The town council was re-organizing secondary education in the borough. The year I left was the start of the big school restructuring. And the world was changing too, presenting new challenges to the established order. You can read the signs of the future in the words of the headmaster’s remarks of 1967 where he comments on the changes, mentions truancy and vandalism and opines at length about difficulties of hiring and retaining teachers. One by one the old guard retired and in a short period of years they were all gone. Even the caretaker “Tarz” Barnett – who had been with the school since the Euclid Street days – retired.

In second year English with Mr. Jenkins we read Tennyson’s Morte D’Arthur and it comes to me now. One of the few things I remember from that class. The dying King Arthur informs and then reassures Sir Bedivere: 

The sequel of to-day unsolders all
The goodliest fellowship of famous knights
Whereof this world holds record.
The old order changeth, yielding place to new,
And God fulfills Himself in many ways,
Lest one good custom should corrupt the world.

In the case of Headlands, that order changed, but not without a struggle. Not without pain and loss.  From what I have gathered, Magson took on the challenge and smoothly managed a complex transition to accommodate a different school population.

But the culture! –  the carefully constructed, built-over-decades community ethos –  the web of routines and expectations, attitudes and assumptions – so many of the things I resented and resisted – how could that survive such an upheaval?  The barbarians – in the shape of popular culture, slackness, moral degeneracy, change – that had always been gnawing at Magson’s gate were now inside the house and tearing at the foundation. 

In my next Headlands post I’ll say a little more about who each of these people were and about the teachers with whom they worked – particularly the old guard many of whom dated back to when the school was in cramped quarters on Euclid Street. 

If you attended Headlands I would love to hear your responses to this post. And if you didn’t – well I would love to hear from you too, 

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71 thoughts on “The Changed Face of School Leadership

  1. I well remember both Pat Clarke & Mike Squires ( from Moredon Juniors). Felicitations to you both.

    Josie, I’ve Headlandian mags. from 1960 -1966 somewhere but have no idea how to “put them on line”.

    ‘O’ level physics not helping 60 years on, tho’ I was in the “A’ stream, whatever that actually meant…

    Drop me a line, if I have been able to work out what a URL is too get this posted.

    Best,

    Ray.

    1. Hi, Ray, David Kavanagh here. I don’t know if Josie replied, but if your offer is still open, if you send me the mags (14, Alnwick, Swindon SN5 8JJ) I will upload them and return them, soonest and intact.
      Still see about 10 of our year (including Teresa) with a monthly lunch at Blunsdon.

      Best wishes (and to your sister)

      dk

      1. Hello David,

        A pleasure to hear from you.

        Yes can do, or gatecrash your next Blunsdon lunch & deliver them personally?

        I am in regular contact with a “rump” contingent from our year ( which was of course a very special year, as indeed was yours!), several of whom still live in the Highworth/Wroughton area.

        I shall of course pass on your best wishes to Pat.

        Kindest regards,

        Ray

  2. Hi Josie [ and , of course , all other posters on here ] . Ive just stumbled on these " threads " and have thoroughly enjoyed reviving memories of Headlands Grammar School. I attended the school from 1951 to 1956 and frankly was pleased to escape in July of the latter year ! There are many gaps in this study which I can fill [ and would like to be filled ] and its a pity that we cant chat over a drink at The Moonrakers ! I often think of my experience of Headlands and not having been a star pupil cant ever convince myself that I was happy there ! Most of the contributions I ve just read have been made by folk who passed through The School after my " sentence " so they wouldnt remember ” Basher ” Hall , ” [ an extremely mildmannered man ! ] Gunner ” Moore [ WW1 military veteran ] and ” Ticker ” Loaring ” [ frequently looking at his watch ! ] Alas all three died soon after retiring. There was also Jill Richardson [ a French teacher] and one nearly fell off your chair when she hollered at you ! We all have vivid memories of ” Aggie” Jacob and ” Nutty ” Almond who continued at Headlands until their retirement. ” Aggie ” never missed an opportunity to belittle someone who had erred in some almost imperceptible way but ” Nutty ” although feared by many was respected at the same time. Now for a gem ! Tony H [ one of the villains in my year ] arrived a few minutes late and a bit scruffy for her lesson upon which she pounced on him to tell him ” I dislike you turning up late looking like a Wild Man from Borneo ” Tony replied ” Well youre not exactly Marilyn Monroe [ a glamorous filmstar at the time ] yourself are you ? She often went red in the face when angry but her colour must have turned near to purple on that occasion ! Ill mull over a few more memories and make contact a bit later on. Keep up the good work ! Best Regards, Nigel

    1. Nigel – how wonderful to hear from you. So glad you’re enjoying the posts about Headlands. I tried to be fair but the truth is that my years there were mostly rather miserable. I remember the name – “Basher” Hall but not the person. The same with “Gunner’ and “Ticker”. Used to be everyone had a nickname – or almost everyone. But like whistling it seems to have gone out of fashion. I would love to hear more of your stories and memories of the school.

      Did you also see the other posts on “Aggie”, “Nutty, and Merv?

      If you happen to be on Facebook check out this Headlands group with some photos going back to Euclid Street and before the war. https://www.facebook.com/groups/413266433320550

      So glad you wrote. I would love to hear more.

      1. Thanks for your response to my recent posting. Yes, nicknaming teachers was a common practice at Headlands and , of course , some were inevitable [ e.g. Snoz Adams ! ] During my time there Mr Hickman joined the teaching squad having had previously , I understand , a senior position in the army. For some time he was very loud in the classroom and was soon referred to as Boomer ! About 1953 Barbara Elliott [ an attractive lady in her mid twenties ] joined the staff and was soon nicknamed Flossie . A teacher called Keith Mayell [ who was nicknamed Gandy or Ghandi for some unknown reason ] wasted no time in dating her and they got married about two years later. It was said that on honeymoon they had gandyfloss ! Whether they did or not I dont know but I expect they did ! ! Taffy Davies was another that comes to mind but dont think he was Welsh. Of course some children had memorable nicknames too and prime examples were David ” Slim” People and ” Tank ” Nash whose sizes were colossal for schoolboys ! Well that`s all for now, Best Regards, Nigel

        1. I well remember Slim People for 2 reasons. As an initiating ceremony as a new boy I was sat on my Slim. A few years later his father gave me a job delivering newspapers.

  3. “So you want to be a head: Take this readiness checklist.” It was a partially tongue-in-cheek inventory of what it takes to become a head of school.”

    So – sounds like an entertaining read. Want to share it?
    I didn’t go Headlands but I did go to a school I loathed with a passion. But nevertheless went into teaching. Go figure.

    1. Hi Barry – I’ll have to dig it out. But will do. It will probably seem quite outdated given our current circumstances and the extraordinary demands on school leaders that come with this crisis.

  4. Josie – I found your article by chance and am astounded by your memories. I was in your year, started in ‘59. My name then was Patricia (Pat) Clark. I was in 1U but should never have been in that intake as I was only 10 and very immature. I landed up in the “e” stream but somehow managed to get 6 O levels and expected to go into the sixth and on to university. Not so. I hold Magson entirely responsible for my not going to University as he said I was too young to go into the sixth form and must retake the 5th form. I stuck it for a term and then left. I have never forgiven him. Despite this I worked very hard and had a good career as an accountant but not going to university is my greatest regret. I hated my time at Headlands. The petty rules, narrow mindedness and total lack of nurturing or counselling, only discipline and punishment made every day an ordeal. I will never, ever forget turning up on the first day of term in my 6th form pleated skirt and then being sent back to 5th form (and, no, they did not tell me in advance). I do remember you Josie – very blonde hair, I doubt if you remember me, specs and mousy hair.

    1. I empathise with your experience. Indeed I find it a little alarming the creeping rehabilitation of Magson and his ilk (you know who you are).
      ‘good intentions and dedication?’ ‘dedicated, hard-working and well-meaning?’. ‘Even the worst of them?’. I’m afraid I don’t agree – I think some of them were cruel and viscious, and it was they who enforced the school ethos. Thet had no empathy for the pupils; no love of their subject (at least they didn’t imbue it in me) and no idea of the learning process. Discipline? Yes, but how much needed to be forced on 1U? Apart from me, and of course . . . . . . well, it wasn’t many, anyway.
      Talking of rehabilitation, nice to see that of Johnny Trueman: my recollection was that he was the school bully (behind Dave Simpson and Roddy Johns) but maybe I’m just bitter and twisted, because of (see below)
      Lettie, it’s not all bad news: I would’ve been much better off not going to University (there, I’ve admitted it), or at the very least having a year out (55 years is a bit OTT, I grant you but . . . . . . )
      Blimey! The sooner this virus stuff is over, the sooner you’ll have a rest from me!

    2. Hi Pat, Lettie – What a terrible memory and even worse experience. A what a story – six ‘O’Levels and then held back. Which is ironic when you consider that boys seen as Oxbridge bound were often skipped a year in 2nd or 3rd form in order to give them an extra year in the 6th form. Magson even comments on that in one of his Headlandian pomposities.

      So many of us seem to carry scars like that. Among them for me was being dropped from Latin which then – years later – severely curtailed my university choices Then being actually not considered as being university ‘material’ and then – the final indignity – being wrongly listed in the final school mag. (A slight that I only discovered this year!)

      Headlands was not a happy place for me either. And for all the reasons you mentioned. Plus the fact that it was an atmosphere that allowed for and turned a blind eye to harassment and certainly never did anything about it.

      I do remember you and actually thought you were in one of my classes – was it 3M? Do you have any school pics or did you shred them at the first opportunity?

      Schools and teachers have a lasting impact of children. And not always for the good.

      I’m so glad you wrote your comment. Thank you.

      1. Dear Josie
        Writing to you stirred up all the bad memories of Headlands and the regrets about not going to university. So my lovely new husband with his degrees in law and history said “well just do it now”. So I am. 73 years old and into my second year of a BA (hons) in History and English Literature. I am loving it and getting very good marks! So sucks boo yah to Magson !!
        Lettie

        1. Brilliant!
          Good for him and good for you.
          And Ya boo sucks! to all the naysayers.

          This is just great to know! Thank you for taking the time to add this message.

          And look! Here you are in 1U.

          https://scontent.fphl1-1.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t1.6435-9/143834345_10158494465717787_1707851509689311143_n.jpg?_nc_cat=102&ccb=1-5&_nc_sid=825194&_nc_ohc=IC4LCLsjcLMAX9dt-Gh&_nc_ht=scontent.fphl1-1.fna&oh=b59d99037904707bba4644eb95946dbf&oe=61AD9C0C

  5. Maureen it looks like we were at Headlands around the same time – I remember most of the teachers you mention…and their foibles…and Aggie Jacobs’ perpetual dislike of the girls…she was in charge of the necessary accountrements of being female – some of the girls used “I’ve got to go and see Miss Jacob” as a nice excuse to get out of the classroom for ten minutes…I didn’t get to have to do that – I left in the 4th year as we moved…Oh and the fabled General Book – still got mine somewhere…and you daren’t leave a line empty…Great stuff!

  6. Oh the memories flooding back – thanks so much for writing this…Teachers I’d forgotten…And the revelation that it wasn’t just me who felt in the wrong place but had no means of explaining how I felt or of doing anything about it- starting off in !.A but ending up in the “bottom” stream (4.0 for me – even lower than the E stream – I always thought the middle stream was M…) This was indeed how you were treated:
    “Call a class the top and treat them as headed for high achievement and they will have a better chance of success. Call them the bottom class and they will perform, and behave, accordingly. It’s why the so called bottom class was always full of such interesting characters – the defiant ones who resisted the system, the unruly rebels.”
    Spot-on, as were the “Microaggressions”…Aggie Jacob regarded me with hate and confusion (as well as innate superciliousness) – because I was always late, but I was top of the class in English (and only English – couldn’t get my head round anything else), which was her subject, so she didn’t know what to do with me.
    I was unruly aka scruffy, but I wasn’t an overt rebel. As Andy Pollock once wrote in my report “It isn’t that she misbehaves, rather that she does nothing at all.” That icy denouncement stayed with me for decades…I was considered “intelligent” and nobody could understand why I didn’t do better. I think it was because, as you rightly say, some of us didn’t conform and tick the right boxes so we were left on the scrapheap of the unconventional and the unfathomable. I’ve felt this my whole life and been labelled weird, eccentric, not-like-everyone-else…and just a few people have recognised that I’m really not like everyone else and respected me for it – I’m not some genius or anything more or less than a human being I just don’t think the same way as most. That’s probably why I went for art-related occupations and never fitted in anywhere. Had I been given credence for not fitting in and not made to feel guilty about it, perhaps I would indeed have done better.
    I was born in Essex and passed my 11plus there – it was expected – nobody said Well Done or promised me a new bike – it was taken for granted…We moved to Swindon then with my Dad’s job and I was at Headlands (chosen because it was “modern” unlike Commonweal which was apparently a better school but a bit old fashioned -?????) from 1958 to 1962 – so I left in the 4th year to move to Oxfordshire, again for my Dad’s job. I desperately wanted to go to art school but not being university (hate that word uni) nurse material, I was told to get a secretarial qualification “to fall back on” because Art was considered wacky and unlucrative (a bit like me…)
    It gave me quite a turn seeing those Three in the photo again…ke devils come back to haunt you…One example of Magson’s verbosity was his use one year of the word “combustibles” for fireworks…And his description of those with long hair also spot-on for the attitude of the time – I was once turned down for a job because my hair was long…
    One incident from those days came back with painful clarity. In the first week of term one year we made rock cakes…I think we took the ingredients in… Miss Woodruff wasn’t prepared and didn’t have anything for us to wrap them in to take home except newspaper. I knew beyond doubt that my mother would hit the roof if I turned up with anything edible wrapped in newspaper (the chip shop just wasn’t in her realm of existence), so I quietly nicked two leaves of that precious classroom commodity known as “Block” – good lined paper, kept for Best….with which to cover the rock cakes before sullying them with the newspaper. Using Block for anything other than your Best Handwriting was a heinous crime and invoked detention for sure. So when I got home, never mind how I’d painstakingly made the rock cakes (mother was a superb cook so she didn’t give them much attention anyway), she accordingly went apoplectic and promptly telephoned Magson, berating him for allowing this to happen. Magson calmly suggested the cakes be brought back to school so he could see them – he said he might even like to eat one, whereupon my mother said “Oh well if you don’t mind eating something out of newspaper!” To which he told her she was being rude…I agreed…
    So there I was standing outside his office next day, quaking in my shoes, partly from embarrassment at being made to give him this tatty package, but mainly fearing the wrath of the almighty over daring to pinch unauthorised pages of Block…I can’t honestly remember what happened, I don’t remember him berating me for using Block – probably he didn’t even know the lower teaching orders were so draconian about it…!
    Other things coming to mind – Miss Quartermain’s outspokenness – she actually used the word Period – the girls coyly called it Being On….
    I’m grateful for some things I learned – elementary French, which helped when I moved to France last year…Ma Charlesby had a dreadful accent and held my attention for about five seconds most of the time but some of it sank in…I couldn’t do Algebra to save my life in tears every Tuesday, my clever Dad tying to help me and saying “It’s easy…” no it darned well wasn’t.
    Does anyone remember the “BritishTrades Alphabet” – an annual magazine celebrating British industry and trade…It held a competition every year where you chose a trade and produced a “project” on it. I did that three times – nobody else seemed interested, yet that was something that caught my attention and I put a lot of work into it – which proves I could do things if they were presented in the right way….I got Highly Commended for my entries on Milk, Wheat and Photography…We had to go to the front in Assembly to get our certificates – only one other girl in the whole school did this too, her name was Gloria…So yes I was different and a bit nerdy – but I did’t excel academically…
    Something I gained from Assemblies was a love of singing – I’m not at all religious, in fact being Jewish the other Jewish kids told me I shouldn’t be going into Assembly, but my parents were very liberal and left it to me…So I learned all the great tunes such as Jerusalem, Eternal Father, Hills of the North, Summer Suns are Glowing…I thought Assembly was a good way of bringing the whole school together and not least a way of catching your breath after the mad rush to get there in the morning (like I said, I was always late…)
    Who remembers World Refugee Year – the school held a Talent Scheme where we were given half a crown to buy materials make things and sell them in aid of the Hungarian refugees – 1958 I think, so the second year. Mot people made sweets or toffee apples etc… me, being Different, chose an artistic path, and I bought rubber moulds of animals etc., and made plaster-of-Paris moulds painted and sold them round the neighbouring houses. I made the grand sum of about £3 10s (had to think how to write that!) My mother said “You’ve worked so hard on those you should keep 15 shillings of that money.” “Oh no” I said “I can’t, it’s meant for the refugees”. But she went on at me so I did, feeling very guilty. At school there was a prize for the person who made the most money. Had I not kept that 15 shillings I’d have won it….So that taught me that crime doesn’t pay..!
    I landed on the Headlands page when an old friend I’m still in touch with, told me about a photo – gave me quite a turn to see the old place again. A boy from my class I’d never spoken to (I was much too shy to talk to Boys at that time…), Liked a comment of mine and we’ve since had a nice chat on Facebook Messaging. I couldn’t believe he is now 72…well so am I….
    OK I’ve woffled long enough…great to read all this, and talk to kindred spirits…

    1. Great memories. Thanks so much. “Combustibles” indeed. Great rock cakes story. It must have been Miss Woodruff who sent me for miss Jacob for refusing to cut up meat. And I remember Block for Best! And British Trades Alphabet – weren’t we given it in the time after exams to help keep us busy and quiet?

      Interesting that you were Jewish and while assemblies were innocuous enough I hope you were allowed to skip Religious Education with “Holy Joe” Holroyd. Both my brother and I remember his very open anti-Semitism. (His bigotry extended to Roman Catholics too. Quite appalling.)

      I remember the talent scheme too although I don’t think I came up with anything very creative or workable. Also the blankets for Oxfam phase when it was quite the thing for both girls and boys to stand around knitting away.

      And those labels and comments made oh !so casually that stay with you for decades.

      1. I attended RI with everyone else…I don’t recall Holy Joe Holroyd saying anything anti-semitic, though at that time, my parents didn’t tell anyone they were Jewish in case of repercussions – it wasn’t THAT long after the war…so maybe I was just used to that vibe…
        I do remember one of his supposedly amusing expressions, getting us ready for our Eggshamandbacon…! PS I don’t think the ham and bacon resonated with me either…we had both at home!.

        1. Eggshamandbacon sounds like just a harmless and – when repeated endlessly – very tiresome – play on words.

          The remark I most remember was his wondering why there was no synagogue in Swindon and making it quite clear that he considered this a good thing. My brother remembers something much worse.

          And then there was his anti-Catholicism which was blatant and common.

      2. As a follow up to the talent scheme and Oxfam I think I can pre date them. In 1956 a large number of Hungarian refugees were housed at Wroughton airbase. I asked Magson if we could arrange a ‘party’ for them. He firmly told me that was not on but if someone wanted to hire the hall for such an event they should contact the Civic Offices. So I did and obtained written consent. I then asked the USAF commander if he could provide transport to and from the school which he agreed to do. To add to my mis-demeanour I went to every form asking if all pupils could bring some money on the Friday. I think I might have suggested that I had someone’s consent to do this. The total raised I recall was over £50. Several teachers attended the party. On Monday I was called to Magson’s study to explain my outrageous actions and why he I should not be expelled. I am not sure what I said but I was dismissed without punishment and told to chose 2 colleagues to walk with me to the nearest post office to bank the money.
        Some months later Magson was the local preacher at the church I attended and after the service in as many words congratulated me on my initiative. He certainly was not all bad, I liked him

  7. By a pool in Tenerife sounds good? He’s probably still there! Tried (hard) to find something I disagreed with but couldn’t. Oh, okay then: you seem to regret the absence of ‘support staff’ – believe (as I do) that if you put a pair of crutches in a room, everyone starts limping, then the lack of psychobabble support is a positive good! Oh, and why does only Mr Pollock get a Christian name appended, oh, and (2) the only thing I remember about ‘Chet’ Wherry was that Lewis Hunt called him a wet cherry whereupon I laughed so much I got an impo!

    1. I wasn’t so much regretting the lack of support staff as noting that as a sign of the times as well as thinking about their work load. And I wouldn’t call support staff crutches when it comes to giving all children what they need to succeed. Our ignorance about learning differences was staggering back in the day when we still caught up in the fraudulence of Cyril Burt’s ideas about intelligence.

      But on a more positive note – it was a time that valued its children enough to provide morning milk and a subsidized hot lunch which – while we all complained about it – was actually pretty good considering.

      And it was Andy Pollock because that was how he was known. I have no idea if he was Christian.

      1. I kicked up a big fuss about having to stay in for lunch but you’re right, they weren’t too bad…except if you didn’t keep in withthe prefect a the head of the table you got the Skin on the Custard…yuk

        1. Hmmm, my recollection (as a prefect) was that if you didn’t keep in with your ‘table’ they would form a little gully of the plastic tablecloth and run water into your lap!

  8. I really enjoyed reading this! I was at Headlands from 1961 to 1968, one of 6 sisters who eventually all passed through its hallowed halls. So lovely to hear those familiar names of teachers long gone – though one or two remain, I believe. I look forward to reading more about them. And I think this is a very fair assessment of what our experience was like.

    Carole King (nee Gough)

    1. We overlapped for some of those years. The Gough name sounds very familiar.

      I don’t remember Headlands fondly but it’s so easy to just blame and attack. It was a different time. And they did things differently. I want to be truthful to my memory and experience but also to try and understand and place things in context.

      Thanks for the comment. I would be interested to hear any other thoughts you have on the other Headlands posts.

  9. Reading this brilliant article stirred up more memories of my school time at Headlands. Before life in Swindon I originally lived in East Greenwich in London where I worked my backside off to pass my 11 plus. Not from an academic point of view but so I didn’t have to go to either of the secondary modern schools in Greenwich or Charlton . They had reputations similar to the film ‘Blackboard Jungle’. I therefore started at the Roan Grammar School on Blackheath but after a few months my parents sold the house in Greenwich and bought a shop in Swindon. So I had to move schools. For some unknown reason it was suggested that I went to Headlands rather than Commonweal which would have been nearer as we lived in Groundwell Rd. Anyway rather than put me in the middle streams and see if I went up or down I was placed in the bottom class. I never ever got out of that stream and as you rightly say we tended to live up to our reputation of being in the bottom set. For some one who was absolutely hopeless with my hands I was forced to do Woodwork and Technical Drawing rather than Economics and British Constitution. They were more akin to my interest in History and Geography. That plus my insatiable interest in all sporting activities led me to a school life of missed academic opportunities in exchange for representing the school at all levels of sport. In my first year however I was very interested in singing and theatricals. My first Christmas at Headlands culminated in me going carol singing with the choir around old town and ending up at Magson’s house to serenade him and his family. I also participated in that year’s school play which for some odd reason was set in the middle ages. Can’t remember the plot but I was one of the crowd of peasants dressed in baggy tights. It was then decided that due to the period it was set in there would be Morris Dancing involved and I was press ganged into being a member much against my will. Not only did we have to perform this obscene and painful dance using wooden staffs but after the school play was over the idea was launched that the school set up a Morris Dancing club with us as the leading lights. This experience has left me with a lifetime hatred of anything to do with Morris Dancing or similar. It has also stretched to my hate of country dancing resulting from the enforced sessions in preparation for the annual school Christmas Soiree . Progressive Barn Dance and the Gay Gordon’s always has stuck in my mind often danced with two boys due to a shortage of girls in my year. That together with the sight of ‘Boss’ Magson wafting through the school hall at morning assembly with his flowing gown hanging off one shoulder are etched forever in my memory . And they said that school days were the happiest years of your life.

    1. Oh the joys of the Christmas Soiree…The girls would vie with each other to have the best “Swarry dress” and some precocious souls actually wore high heels…I’ve still got my dress – emerald green taffeta with white daisies round the edge. My mother made it…The girls lined up o one side of the hall, the boys on the other, and – well I used to quite enjoy the Dashing White Sergeant et al…held me in good stead for when you end up at a Barn Dance in your later years…

      1. The ‘swarries’ were too socially excruciating for me to attend beyond the first year. But like you I remember the party dress – blue flocked -my mother bought for me along with some silvery slippery shoes. The first and last party dress I ever owned.

        We were eleven years old playing grown ups and I hated it.

        I remember there was some kind of hidden treasure game set up in the foyer where you stuck a pin in and the one nearest the treasure won some kind of prize. At least that was better than the dancing and compulsory social humiliation and rejection.

  10. Josie. Amazing reading. You won’t remember me. No-one ever does, because I was not the gregarious type and absolutely hated school. But reading this and a contribution from Johnny Trueman (where he gets an interview at Plesseys accounts office like I did) brings back so many, many memories. My name is Michael Squires. My dad too worked ‘inside’ and only now do I realise that I share so many experiences with others. In the ‘team’ photo where you are sat next to Gillian Mulraney, I am 4th from the right in the back row, in between (the late) Richard Clewlow and Alan Widdows. I just wanted to be a railway carriage cleaner in my early years, going ‘inside’ like three generations before me. I ended up (through the Plessey route starting as a filing clerk) and ended up as a Chartered Accountant. My hatred of Headlands has been somewhat tempered by reading your words and those of Johnny Trueman. I really must buy his book. this will be a struggle because, without a hint of shame, I’ve never read a book in my life. Words just don’t sink in, as my ‘O’ levels confirm. I’m a numbers bloke and at Burmah Castrol, where I worked for 24 years, I was Finance Manager with 30 staff. I worked hard and expected everyone to work similarly hard and with pride, commitment and discipline. Suddenly at work (doing what I wanted to do) I wasn’t unsociable and I actually taught 4 of my best lads and lasses ‘A’ level accounts from scratch and they’ve all gone on to become Finance Directors. I loved my career and the people I worked with. I played squash for 37 years, something I would never ever have done all those years ago. And only now have I realised that my work ethic comes from my schooldays and the Magson regime. Josie you cannot believe how important reading this stuff of yours is to me. In April 2019 I tracked down Roger Hood, the only lad at Headlands I had any contact with because we cylced together from Moredon along Whitworth Road every day. I just wanted to see him. Out of the blue this was. One month later I was diagnosed with prostate cancer. I must have known something was up. I just had this desire to meet up and discuss school days, so finding this today has made my day. Josie, I have loads to write on my 5 years at Headlands. Do you want to share it, and if so can I have your email address? Sincere best wishes from Mike Squires.

    1. I remember you so much as I pretty much remember anyone from back then Mike. Fantastic to hear from you. I’ve written an email but just to say here that I would love to read and share your stuff. So please – ship it out! To be continued and thanks so much for the contribution. Your comment is making my day too!

  11. Thanks for the memories, Josie. I just wish that I had read this before I published my book. Plagiarism would undoubtedly have been added to my list of crimes, but the book would have been better written for it.
    I am very much looking forward to the next episode.

  12. I really enjoyed reading this article, which brought back many memories for me – most of them sadly, unhappy ones. I never knew about the “grading” system so that was interesting to read. I was at Headlands Grammar School from 1957-1962 and sadly because my Mother didn’t support me, although I was in the choir – and enjoyed it – I was never allowed to go to the school concerts, most of which were held in the evenings, as she wasn’t bothered about getting me there or picking me up afterwards. Therefore, although I had practised and could sing well, I missed them all – and therefore incurred the wrath of Norman Gilbert.

    Miss Jacob disliked me – and as far as I can remember disliked most of the girls – so I never could understand why she was a teacher! Sadly I had very painful periods and often fainted and when I ended up in the sick room, which was most months, she would prance in, look me up and down and say, “Not you again, girl!” For someone who was not affirmed at home, to be treated like this at school was so cruel and unkind, but of course, I never said anything because at that time, we were not encouraged to tell anyone how we felt.

    When we were taken to Liddington Hill for an outing on, I believe, 6th May 1960, Princess Margaret’s wedding day, I slipped and fell and did a lot of damage to my left knee, which resulted in being taken to Princess Margaret Hospital, following which I had several operations. I missed a lot of school and was in a lot of pain, but this was never taken into account and I was treated quite badly by several teachers, because I couldn’t do games and having had a lot of time off, didn’t get particularly good marks in my exams. I remember receiving a letter from Mr. Penelhum, my form teacher at the time, and he wrote some particularly scathing remarks, which today would be classed as abusive!

    My favourite teacher, who was a true “gentle” man, was Mr. Whitely and I’m glad to say, he believed in me, encouraged me and was extremely kind to me although I never did get my Maths “O” level! I also remember Mr. Wherry, who was from New Zealand and again, he was very kind to me.

    Others teachers I remember are Mr. Saunders, who I believe taught Geography, Miss Vingoe (who seemed to “hang around” with “Bomber” Brown, particularly near the trampoline), Miss Quartermain, who taught French and whose initials were QT otherwise known as “Cutie”, Mr. Millin, who also taught (or tried to teach) Maths, “Snoz” Adams, although I haven’t a clue why he was called that, Mr. Davies, who taught Physics and who I used to see in Old Town after I left, and was always very chatty. Mr. Greed was another teacher who was very unkind to those who found difficulty in understand the subject he taught – and his was Physics – so my memories of him are not good. Mind you, I’m not surprised I failed my Physics “O” level – I remember my formula obviously wasn’t quite right, as in one of the questions, my train travelled at 20,000 miles an hour!

    Miss Wildman taught me much of what I know about English – language and literature and Mrs. S.G. Alexander taught me in my first cookery lesson how to cook a potato, an onion and a carrot! Miss Woodruff took over from Mrs. Alexander and I remember always wrote with a Sheaffer fountain pen.

    Of course, along with many others, I remember “Nutty” Almond – and who will ever forget her stare? I thorough enjoyed reading Josie’s story of her life. Following my accident, my involvement with games was very limited, and Miss Jackson could be quite ascerbic – and I often wonder what they gained from being like this. Was it for our benefit or to make them look good?

    Mr. Porter and Mrs. Charlesby taught us French, along with Miss Busby. Miss Harris, who later married the Vicar of St. Barnabas Church in Swindon, taught me Latin but I only did this for one year.

    However, my favourite teacher was Merv Comrie, with his dry humour and wit. In fact, I still remember him today when I go into M & S and the cashier says “Can I help you?” Many of you will remember Merv’s response when we asked “Please sir, can I fill my pen?” “I don’t know, can you? Don’t you mean, “Please sir, may I fill my pen?”

    One memory I have of Mr. Magson is going to him with my General Book, when he would flick through it to make sure that every page was full – before tearing off the back bottom corner (to make sure you didn’t try and get another one later) and then handing you a new book. On one occasion he found about four lines on one of the pages without writing, so made me go back to my class to fill those four before returning for a new book. It sounds petty now, but in those days, it was important that nothing was wasted.

    Although my school days were not particularly happy ones, I am nevertheless grateful for the education I received at Headlands. I didn’t actually go on to university or college, although I wanted to be a teacher, because my parents wouldn’t let me. I had to leave school, go to college to do a secretarial course, and then worked in Lloyds Bank for a few years, so that I could pay my parents back! However, at the end of my working life, in a Solicitors’ office, I did get to teach younger colleagues how to use the computers – which although very rewarding, made me realise how much I had missed out on. However, I am now happily retired – and my schooldays are but a memory.

  13. I recall my history and geography teachers were both terrifying and as a result I studied hard and “did well” in those subjects. Both have led me into my careers and still excite my leisure interests. But does good teaching have to mean being terrified? I wonder if it is crowd control. All teachers views welcome!

    1. I think crowd control was part of it. There were 48 children in my primary class and at least two of the four teachers I had managed those numbers by creating a kind of reign by terror.

      The teacher’s job was seen as transmitting information and so silence was prized. The teacher talked and wrote on the board and the students listened and took notes. A quiet classroom was the mark of a successful teacher. It’s not actually natural for children to sit still and quiet for so many hours a day so control – discipline- needed to be exerted.

  14. I left the 6th form in 1961 and went on to a career in banking. I was with a small group who had a reunion just before the school was demolished – I think this was done through Friends Reunited. Most of the memories quoted are mine as well. Also remember Mr Holroyd who taught RE. Overall it was a good time.

    1. You may have been in my brother’s class – Chris Holford. He and i dropped by the school on a rare visit to swindon some years ago – possibly mid 1990s. The school was in session but the admin kindly let us take a wander. Unfortunately I did not take any photos. I know there was a robust headlands presence on Friends Reunited and lots of photographs and memories – all of which now seem to be lost from the intertubes. Too bad. We all must have had “Holy Joe” Holroyd. Found him and his opinions rather an antidote to Christianity. Thanks for the comment Barry. Sounds like you not only survived Headlands but also managed to thrive! Cheers.

  15. Great reading Josie, brought a lot of memories flooding back. I was there from 1957-64 and must admit that I enjoyed the experience on the whole. I was a very keen sportsman and the facilities and opportunities were great, I also managed to come out with 3 A levels, much to the astonishment of a few teachers. I remember the strict rules, etiquette and traditions, many of which I thought unnecessary at the time, but I am sure they helped forge my character, ambitions and respect. I taught for over 30 years and enjoyed the experience of seeing life on the other side. Thank you again. Did any of the reports ec cover those years 1957-64 as I would love to read them if you could supply a link.

    1. Thanks Terry. I started in 1959 so we overlap a few years. the sports facilities were good and there were many opportunities to play via the house system as well as for the school. You must have had “Bomber” Brown. I read somewhere that in retirement he regretted all the damage done by contact sports/ rugby. I also went into teaching and did my best to see that kids were not as fearful as I had been.Where and what did you teach?

      I found the online Headlandians via the Stratton OPC (online Parish Clerk) site.
      https://www.wiltshire-opc.org.uk/genealogy/index.php/parish-directory/item/91-stratton-st-margaret

      They are from 1967 and 1968. For years I kept some editions from the early 1960’s. But now long gone. Someone must have them in the attic or basement. I wish they would dig them up and put them on line.

  16. Fabulous reading, Josie. A great blog. I was there from 1952 (the new school) and left in 1958 to do Nursing in Oxford. Eldest of the Gough girls. I enjoyed the school and some of my teachers. Loved Norm and the choirs. We had some great reunions there in the earlier 2000’s and just before it came down – with free run of the school bringing back memories. Good days for me. Btw – loved John Truman’s book! Very nostalgic and funny.

    1. Norman Gilbert was a really accomplished organist. I’ve found some of his compositions online and they are lovely. I will add them when I write my post that includes him. I thought John’s anecdote about singing was a classic.

      My own experience was a brief moment as a third violin in the orchestra. I was terrible.

      I do remember singing some good old songs plus of course practice runs for singing hymns in assembly.
      “By the light of burning martyrs,
      Christ thy beleeding feet we track …”
      and etc. being one that fed my atheist tendencies.

    2. Glenys – I think I remember you and sister – we lived in Church Walk South. I cannot recall if we were in the same class.

    3. Hi Glenys, I am sure we were in the same form as I joined Headlands in 1952 as well. I thought and still do that my years at Headlands were some of the best.

  17. I very much enjoyed your article. Brought back a mixed bag of memories.
    First, the biographical essentials: I had just started my first year at Euclid St in 1943 when it was merged with the College to form Headlands. G. V. Smith was headmaster. As you may know, he came to an ignominious end a year or so after I left in 1948. Mr Mclean took over as acting HM. It is not generally known that sixth-formers at both secondary schools were reassigned: BA candidates to Commonweal, BSc candidates to Headlands for their last two years.
    Dress codes were relaxed during WW2. I wore discarded army battle dress to school and carried my books in an army gas mask bag. John Boorman’s brilliant film “Hope and Glory” captures the mood and many of the details of school life in those days.
    Lunch, such as it was, a couple of bits of fluorescent meat and some over-boiled veggies, was free.
    At that time, teachers were mainly female, with a few males past military age, and some European imports, in particular a French teacher, Mlle Boubet, who remains fixed in my memory to this day!!
    Enough for now! I’d be glad to take questions.

    1. Great history there Geoffrey. Thank you. It’s great to have those details. And I will have some questions. You must have known Mr. H.T.Lovett and Mr S.F.Adams both of whom were appointed in 1936. Did you go on any of the fruit-picking trips? I don’t know much about George V. Smith other than the fact he had a B.Sc, lived on Westlecot Road and left under a cloud.

      Do you know anything about a Mr W. C. Loaring? I came across his name when digging about. Said he was a deputy head sometime in the early 1950s. He may have been a chemistry teacher.

    2. Mlle Boubet – that seems familiar. I think she was my French teacher in 1 alpha in 52-53. Wiped the chair and her table with a duster each time she entered the room.

    3. Miss Boubet was my first French teacher followed I think by Miss Emery. I remember her as being quite short with white hair and by my standards then, very old. I well recall the outburst of laughter by most of the form when she announced that she would sing to us. I believe the song was all about loosing one’s do on your clarinet.

  18. Fantastic article. Brought back many memories. Mr Magson was the head when I was there as well as Mr Comrie who taught me English and History. A lot of the Grammar School ‘traditions’ did remain whilst I was there 1972-1975… Look forward to your next article.

  19. Loved your memories Josie-I have a few of my own. Just a couple of months before I left, my beret blew off when cycling to school. Mr Magson caught me without it on and threatened to make the rest of my school life a misery if I didn’t find it. It was the one and only time my father took my side and went to the school to remonstrate with him. I have got to say that although I found the petty rules annoying I will be forever grateful for the education I got.

    1. That’s a classic Magson anecdote.Thanks Janice. Schools in those days did not expect patents to remonstrate with them. In junior school my mother went to the head to object to me being hit with a ruler. (Second form, Clarence Street, and taught by a terrifying tyrant or so it seemed to me.) He told my mother that if more parents disciplined their children at home the the school would not have to. My mother – who was a teacher herself – made her own more progressive views soundly known. That teacher never hit me again.(Although she was still terrifying.)

  20. Brilliant read. Look forward to your next one. I was a pupil from 53-58. Feared Miss Jacob and Mr Magson.
    Didn’t really enjoy my time there. All that homework!!

    1. All that being told not to talk and walk in single file and wear a hat and all the rest. A lot of fear. And yet I doubt that’s what they thought they were doing. They were merely upholding standards for our own good. Or something! Thanks for commenting. Did you ever get “sent to Miss Jacob” for some school-crime or other?

    2. Hi Judy, Your name rings a bell with me . Did you go on the trip to France with Hickman. If so I think some where I still have a photo of you standing next to a Renault Dauphine.

  21. A very interesting read. I was a pupil at Headlands but I only recognise a little of this. Maybe it is because I only spent one year at the new school with Mr Magson as head.

    1. Thanks Pat. You must have so many memories of the Euclid Street days and of the move and the transition to the new building. I would love to hear more about anything that you remember. And also of your recollections of the teaching and teachers of that time. In addition to Miss Almond, Miss Jackson, Miss Whereat, Mr.Lovett, Mr. Whitely and Mr. Gilbert do you remember a science/ technical teacher Mr. C.C Werry? Also – I’ve come across a reference to a Mr W. C. Loaring. Does that name ring any memory bells?

  22. How well you describe my experience of post war education and, in my case fighting against it without even knowing. Yes superficially the empire was crumbling and new schools came about with their distinct architectural style. Political events since could be read to illustrate the decline in Edwardian Empire and the freeing up of our class ridden society, changes in fashion, Royalty etc etc. But underneather the same old feudal order survived even the post war labour dash for modernity and change. Eton still rules the waves.

      1. Josie… I’ve just discovered this incredible research sat by the pool in Tenerife… l was a year above you by the sound of it but the analysis and appraisal is spookily familiar .. to see images of these individuals who managed my life for 6 years is a real dose of rather pleasant nostalgia. I have just bought John’s book of poetry and now must get a copy of the book you refer to … l have many broadly similar memories l would like to share which will wait until l have the opportunity to put together cogent and interesting thoughts in a way that does no dilute the quality, depth and incisiveness of your work …

        1. By a pool in Tenerife sounds good! Looking forward to reading your accounts. I’m glad for you it was “pleasant nostalgia”. Someone else with whom I recently corresponded hoped it wouldn’t give her nightmares!

          I’m working on something about Miss Jacob plus more on “the Boss”.

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