The Old Pocklingtonian 2018-19 | Page 27

OBITUARIES John was a keen sportsman. He loved playing golf and was a member of Eskdale Cricket Club for many years. He served as Honorary Treasurer for over 30 years for Egremont Rugby Union Club and also managed the Cumbria Rugby Union Patrons’ Scheme. John enjoyed supporting Durham County Cricket too. Iain was an active member of the Leeds Junior Chamber of Commerce and the Rotary Club of Leeds which he joined in 1995, becoming President in 2003/4. He became a Magistrate in 2007 yet still found time to help as Treasurer to the Scouts and a similar role in Adel Church and also to continue to follow his varied sporting interests. He was a wonderful father to the couple’s two sons, Adam and Alistair, and their wives, Gilla and Elizabeth. He was a proud and loving grandfather of Osla, Sandy and most recently, twins Theodore and India. Iain had a daughter Helen, and a son Duncan from his first marriage to Katy. Then in June 1999 he married Carol and they spent many enjoyable moments with their family and friends until May 2017, when he was suddenly diagnosed with cancer. He was admired for his intelligence, politeness and dry wit and was regarded by many as a true gentleman. Also in attendance at the funeral were OPs Gordon Garside (59-62), Chris Rump (54-60) and Malcolm Milne (55-62). Hilary and the family have been overwhelmed by the impact John’s death has had on so many people. (John Miller and Malcolm Milne, 55-62 and former staff 71-03) of course MS. James often did collections for the Bedford MS centre. In 2013, James married Alison. He described the past 5 years as being the best years of his life. It was amazing to see that he kept a positive attitude during his illness. MS is a hateful disease but James was determined to live a full life. He has been a remarkable example of ‘positive attitude’. Even when he was wheelchair-bound, he managed to go to concerts in London with the help of Alison, who has been a simply superb carer for James. James’s funeral was on 28 March in Kempston, Bedford and was attended by many of his old friends from Pocklington. (David Cottrell, 55-65) (Hilary Booth) Iain Hamish Butler (52-62) died on 4 March 2019 aged 74, brother of Richard (45-54), brother-in -law of Martin Davison (54-61) and uncle of Ian (72-82). A “Weighton” man, he had a distinguished academic career at school and was no mean sportsman representing both rugby and cricket teams throughout the years. He was inspired by Mr James Eggleshaw (39-76) to read classics at the London School of African and Oriental Languages with a view, I seem to remember, to a career in the Foreign Office. This didn’t live up to expectations and he embarked on a career in accountancy instead. In spite of the time spent on studying and also doing an Open University degree in Mathematics, he still had time to represent Londesbrough Park Cricket Club and Pocklington RUFC. When he moved to Leeds, he became a partner of Hope Agar Chartered Accountants in Meanwood before joining Weatherall, Green & Smith and was later involved with the merger with Sandersons to form Sanderson Weatherall, where he worked until retirement in 2007. James Cottrell (84-91) died in Bedford on 8 March 2019, aged 45, after a long battle with multiple sclerosis. From Pocklington, James went to St Andrews University, where he read Divinity and then to Hughes Hall, Cambridge for his PGCE. James was a secondary school teacher (public and private sectors) in the Cambridge and Bedford areas. James always loved music, an interest he shared with many of his friends. James played bass guitar. While at school and university, he was in a few bands, including the Alehouse Shufflebutts. He liked to keep up with current affairs, especially politics and watched the news avidly. He loved reading books (particularly sci- fi), watching films and going to concerts. He was well known for being an enthusiastic and accomplished conversationalist! James was a committed Christian. Throughout his adult life, he made a point of reading his Bible each day, until reading became too difficult for him. In the past couple of years, his wife Alison read the Bible to him. He was very interested in and supported charities like Oxfam, Red Cross, WaterAid and Dr John Witham Casson (61-70) died of a brain tumour on 1 February 2019. He came to Pocklington at the age of nine from Yokohama where his father was chaplain to the Mission to Seamen. At school, John directed and acted in several arresting performances, accompanied by music and special effects of his own devising. Those were the days of the Vietnam War and the Prague Spring and John’s productions expressed his concern about current events. John continued to direct and act at Warwick University where he read English and later in the United States and in India. Richard Casson, a nineteenth-century ancestor of John’s, had opened a private hospital in Hull for the humane treatment of mental patients. John himself worked in the Manchester area as a psychotherapist and specialised in treating clients through psychodrama. He also worked as an independent Shakespearean scholar and valiantly and ingeniously argued in several books and articles that Sir Henry Neville, and not Sir Francis Bacon, the Earl of Oxford, or William Shakespeare of Stratford, was the author of the Shakespearean corpus. John made his own way in life. He leaves a daughter, Anna, a sister, Lesley, a brother, Eric and Allen, John’s husband who saw John through his final illness with devotion. (Stephen Deas, 63-70) 27