The Trusty Servant May 2017 No.123 | Page 13

N o .123 achievements, but feedback from parents indicates that the Club is making a real difference to its members’ school results, whether it be in English, Maths or even Spanish. Both the sports activities and the academic classes receive very real support from Win Coll. For many years, the Club has sent football teams down to Winchester for annual matches. More recently, the ad hoc help of current Wykehamists at the Club has been enhanced by the weekly attendance of young dons helping with the academic classes. The end of Cloister Time usually sees a small ‘summer school’ visit to Winchester by a Club party and successive generations of Wykehamists have given the Club generous help, from hands-on management to financial support. To set against that catalogue of continuity, much else has changed, and is continuing to change. The most obvious change is the Club’s home: the increasingly dilapidated single-storey 1920s building with its outdoor yard has been replaced by new state-of-the- art premises on the ground floor and basement of the imposing block of flats which now stands on the old Wiltshire T he T rusty S ervant Row site, with a huge indoor sports hall. The realization of that redevelopment has resulted in the Club gaining a second assured income source: the Club itself, as distinct from the Trust, holds an investment portfolio of roughly £1.3m. Other changes are less rosy, or at least more uncertain. There are big changes happening in the local neighbourhood, leading to a changing population and different needs of the local community. Hoxton is no longer an area of extreme deprivation with substandard housing and a newly settled immigrant population. As relative prosperity has come to the neighbourhood, social issues affecting young people abound. In particular, the local area has seen a dramatic rise in crime against property and against young people and an increasing appearance of gangs. The new premises are proving more of a handful than was anticipated. The building is new but also very complex, and when things go wrong, they are difficult and expensive to correct. The flood in the sports hall last year caused immense damage: a new floor had to be laid at great cost (fortunately, to the insurers) and at great disruption to the 13 Club’s activities, as the sports hall was out of action for some five months. The boys’ changing room is still out of use due to another water ingress which has yet to dry out. Then there is the long-term financial health of the Club. Although the Club is supported by those two investment portfolios, income is not matching expenditure to Mr Micawber’s satisfaction, and costs are slowly eating into the Club’s reserves. As most of the costs are incurred either on the staff bill or the maintenance of the building, there are no easy savings without radical overhaul of what the Club does. On the income side, for some years now the Club has not received any assured public- sector grant, and private-sector grants and individual donations have become the mainstay of its fundraising. So, the Win Coll connection remains vital to the long-term well-being of the Club. Besides the generous help of successive Headmasters, any help from individual OWs will continue to be very welcome and appreciated. Under 10s training