The Trusty Servant May 2020 Issue 129 | Page 39

No.129 The Trusty Servant Winchester College Society Office Donovan’s 73 Kingsgate Street Winchester SO23 9PE Telephone 01962 621217 E-mail: [email protected] Web site: wincollsoc.org Directors: Lorna Stoddart Alex Roe (G, 72-75) Deputy Director: Tamara Templer Don Associate: Michael Wallis (also Director of The Friends) The Council Nat Hone (F, 68-72) Alex Roe (G, 72-75) – Director of Win Coll Soc Winston Ginsberg (I, 81-85) Henry Knapman (B, 86-91 – Chairman Caspar Uniacke (H, 86-91) Guy Pascoe (I, 86-91) David Hogan-Hern (Coll, 94-99) Freddie Bjorn (H, 95-00) Conrad Griffin (I, 04-09) Dr Tim Hands – Headmaster Lorna Stoddart – Director of Development Tamara Templer – Deputy Director of Development Michael Wallis – Don Associate and Director of The Friends Decemviri The Hon NHC Bruce (D, 34-39) Professor HB Barlow FRS (I, 35-39) Dr DH Malan (Coll, 35-40) Major General HSR Watson CBE (F, 36-41) A Hanbury (K, 36-40) JR Prince (Coll, 37-42) DP Garnons Williams (F, 37-41) Professor Sir Bryan Thwaites (C, 41-42) Dr CH Aberg (E, 39-40) JCP Boyes-Watson (D, 37-42) From the Director Crown & Manor Club The leading article of this edition of The Trusty Servant sets out the manner in which the academic side of school life will carry on during these strange times. Meanwhile, the Support Departments continue to function, in most cases remotely. I would like to take this opportunity to thank the Win Coll Soc team for the seamless way in which they have embraced working from home which has allowed us to function at pretty well full capacity. Fortunately, our IT systems have held up very satisfactorily and those of us of an older generation, to whom such things perhaps do not come naturally, are having plenty of opportunity to hone our typing skills. We continue to send out regular ‘keeping connected’ emails, which contain links to subjects we think will be of interest. Please also monitor our website wincollsoc.org for news. As ever, we welcome constructive feedback on all matters, as well as news and information to be published in The Trusty Servant. This is my first session as Obituarist, having taken over from Christopher Van der Noot. There seem to be rather a lot of entries in this edition: I don’t think there is anything sinister in this, although it is public knowledge that Tim Brooke-Taylor succumbed to COVID-19. Rather, there was some expansion of the school in the 20 years after the War from 465 to 530 and this is beginning to be reflected in the numbers of OWs and former staff going to a Better Place. Finally, from time to time we receive generous donations anonymously. These are most welcome and on behalf of Win Coll Soc I would like to thank you, whoever you are. Clare Bryce-Smith reports: Few will emerge from the current Covid-19 crisis unscathed, but Crown & Manor caters largely for families who will be disproportionately affected. More will struggle; those struggling before will be even harder hit as job losses and pay freezes mount, the cost of living increases and uncertainty abounds. It is an especially precarious future for the families of C&M boys. 39 Yet what the club offers has never been more relevant. Parents appreciate the club’s ethos: ‘enthusiastic staff” who organise ‘extra trips and activities’; ‘the opportunity to learn’ and ‘to become good, polite young men’ in a ‘safe environment’; the ‘friendly atmosphere and the discipline’. Boys value the club experience. Little is as enriching as a WinColl/C&M summer camp which, according to one boy, was ‘an action-packed fun journey’. From initial impressions (‘just like Hogwarts!’) to inspirational lessons (‘the best ever’), new sports, facilities and activities; no surprise that ‘I was really sad to leave’. C&M’s emphasis on mentoring - a slow-burn process, where relationships grow organically - provides boys with positive role models and stability. 75% of the boys come from single-parent households and many schools are too stretched to provide more than the most basic pastoral care. Hackney presents considerable challenges - drugs, gangs and knife crime to name but a few - so the Club and its mentoring is needed as never before. Achievement verifies our value. Two more boys joined Win Coll on full bursaries; a four-year educational