The Old Pocklingtonian 2018-19 | Page 26

DEATHS AND OBITUARIES DEATHS AND OBITUARIES OBITUARIES We regret to announce the passing of the following OPs and we extend our sympathy to their families and friends: Harold (Mick) Allison (35-45) of Pocklington, 26 February 2019, aged 91. Roger Orton Bickers (47-55) of Glasgow, 14 May 2019, aged 80. John Francis Booth (55-62) of Egremont, Cumbria, 7 August 2019, aged 75. Iain Hamish Butler (52-62) of Leeds, 4 March 2019, aged 74. John Witham Casson (61-70) of Little Lever, Bolton, Lancashire, 1 February 2019, aged 67. John Reginald Coates (31-36) of Exeter, 19 November 2017, aged 97. James Ashton Lamorock Cottrell (84-91) of Bedford, 8 March 2019, aged 45. Michael Robin Cuff (34-43) of Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, 2017, aged 89. John Stuart Dunning (35-38) of Bishop Burton, 21 June 2019, aged 97. Thomas (Tom) Arthur Eadon (73-84) of Melton Mowbray, 11 April 2019, aged 69. Ronald William Heselwood (33-36) of Orpington, Kent, 24 December 2017, aged 96. Timothy Richard Hylton (62-67) of Sutton Coldfield, 13 February 2019, aged 69. Gerald Kirby (54-62) of Durham, 8 November 2018, aged 75. Michael (Mike) John Lewis (60-68) of Cambridge, 21 July 2019, aged 69. Antony (Tony) John Maltby (Former Staff, 58-68) of Ashford, Kent, 18 May 2019, aged 91. Peter William Nettleton (49-58) of North Dalton, 25 July 2019, aged 79. John Dixon Brearey Nicholson (49-56) of Burnby, 3 May 2019, aged 78. John Revely (44-48) of York, 22 August 2018, aged 85. Adam Peter Robinson (88-95) of Walkington, Beverley, 2 September 2019, aged 40. Mark Antony Scholefield (72-79) of Barmby Moor, Pocklington, 6 February 2019, aged 57. Thomas Andrew Simpson (98-05) of Elvington, 1 July 2019, aged 30. Francis Geoffrey (Geoff) Coverley Smith (63-74) of Leeds, 15 June 2019, aged 64. John Tate-Smith (55-62) of Malton, 27 October 2018, aged 74. Robert (Bob) Thompson (42-48) of Settrington, near Malton, 11 December 2018, aged 88. Paul Woodhouse (71-75) of Ilkley, 21 January 2019, aged 61. Erratum: The Old Pocklingtonian, 2017-18 issue, page 24. G James (Jim) Coates (59-65) should read G James (Jim) Osborne (59-65). Roger Coates (61-65) informed us of Jim’s passing. Many apologies for the error. 26 Harold (Mick) Allison (35-45). For the first three years of the Second World War the church bells in Britain were famously silent. Winston Churchill was well known for reporting the history of the war with his own name writ large; but for once he was simply reporting the facts when he comments that he decided in November 1942 to mark “the end of the beginning” by having the bells rung throughout the country after the Battle of El Alamein. So the bells rang at All Saints, Pocklington – and one 15 year old bell-ringer was Pocklingtonian Mick Allison. Mick was born in July 1927 in Pocklington – one year after the General Strike and two years before the Wall Street Crash. He lived in the town and attended the school from 1935 to 1945, alongside other members of the Allison family. He eventually became Head of Day Boys and took School Certificate in 1944 (the old equivalent of A levels). He very much enjoyed the sport at school, playing for the 1st XV rugby team in the second row, and the 1st XI cricket as wicket-keeper. He also made life-long friends at school though few have survived him. One close friend, Harry Campbell (36-44), acted as best man at Mick’s wedding in 1954, and the two of them stayed close throughout their lives. Though it is not always recognised, the school community was quite diverse in the 1930s, and included international students from Romania (among other European countries).The start of the war at the age of 12 undoubtedly cast a shadow over his school days – though it brought with it more friendships when boarding pupils from Hymers were evacuated to school in Pocklington during the early years of the war to escape the bombing raids on Hull. After school, he undertook National Service in Gibraltar, and subsequently studied French and Geography at St John’s College, Cambridge. Returning to Pocklington – where he lived all his life – he qualified as a chartered accountant, working throughout his career in York, mostly in offices in Coppergate (now the site of the Jorvik centre). He became involved in many aspects of the local community: as a Rotarian, a mason, as a financial advisor to the Stewart Trust at Burnby Hall, and as a longstanding member of the congregation at All Saints Church where he had rung the bells years before. Similarly Mick stayed very much involved with the school: he took his turn as Chairman of the Old Pocklingtonian Association from 1975 to 1976 and was also Treasurer for a number of years. In both roles, he was a faithful attendee of the various OP functions, locally, in Manchester, and also at Oxford or Cambridge. He developed his interest in skiing after being invited on one of the school ski trips in the late 1960s run by Reggie Allen. He greatly valued the friendships he struck up with many of the school staff of the 1970s, often on the boundary of a cricket pitch where he used regularly to watch his two sons David (63-73) and Martin (65-76), and his nephew Mark Burton (67-74), playing for the school, or later for the Pocklington Pixies. He enjoyed meeting many other Pocklingtonians of younger generations through his sons. As someone who had played rugby with distinction both at school and for the Pocklington Town club, he acted as guest speaker at one of the OP rugby suppers run in the early 1980s in the old School House dining room, where he expressed a view in favour of open rugby played with a degree of flair rather than formulaically. He was always pleased to see the way the school continued to flourish from 1945 onwards, despite economic changes, changes of government and changes of status from a boys’ school to a co-educational school, from a direct- grant school to an independent one, from a mostly full-boarding school to one which takes pupils on a more flexible basis. He had a genuine affection for the school community. (Martin Allison, 65-76) John Francis Booth (54-62) died on 7 August 2019. Although John lived in Cumbria for over fifty years, he always regarded himself as a Yorkshireman and loved to return to his native county and Pocklington School, where he had so many happy memories (although Cross Country running was not his favourite!). After Pocklington, John went to Trinity College, Cambridge to study Classics. John and his wife Hilary were married for nearly 41 years and lived all their married life in Cumbria. John was a senior personnel manager at British Nuclear Fuels Ltd (BNFL) and after retiring, worked endlessly for the BNFL benevolent fund, where he was also a trustee.