The Trusty Servant Nov 2018 No. 126 | Page 27

N o .126 do something and he set up a trust with the princely sum of £1 in 1967 and by 1974 sufficient funds had been collected for the trust to start in earnest. He first established two Macmillan nurses in Cornwall, which grew to 16. He also established St Julia’s Hospice in Hayle, named after his mother. His cottage at St Ives offered free holidays for terminally ill cancer patients. He wanted to share his knowledge of palliative care overseas and his charitable arms extended across the length and breadth of India from the Palliative Care Society in Assam in the North East to the Institute of Palliative Care Medicine at Calicut, Kerala in the South West. The Wilfred Bruce Davis Gold Medal was inaugurated to recognise young doctors in India who made a significant contribution to the delivery of palliative care. He enjoyed flying, gliding and sailing. On one occasion, whilst lost in a fog off Portland Bill, he tied up to a buoy, only to find it marked ‘Keep Off, Firing Range’. When he sold his sailing boat the proceeds were used to establish Pallium India’s Bruce Davis Training Centre. He was appointed MBE in 1992, having been nominated by a team of Macmillan nurses. He is survived by Dodo, his wife of 65 years, and their three daughters. Frederick George Blackwood (K, 39-44): died 17.11.2017 aged 91. At school, although he enjoyed cricket, he opted to support local farmers digging ditches. National Service with the RAF in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur building airstrips on which they played cricket. Magdalen College, Oxford, 2 Agriculture 1950. He was offered a job on a farm in the Great Rift Valley. He flew to Nairobi in a Dakota, flight time three days with overnight and lunch stops. He arrived at Gogar Farm to live in a house with mud walls. On his retirement the farm had a collection of T he T rusty S ervant antique equipment – ox-carts, Fordson Major tractor, a 2-cylinder kerosene John Deere, 1-cylinder Lister diesel and a threshing machine. During the Mau Mau uprising he served with the Kenya Police Reserve. He took over the full management of Gogar Farm in 1967 and maintained it to perfection with 74 miles of tensioned fencing and all the roads maintained with drainage ditches built to endure whatever the African rains threw at them. He retired in 1992 and left Kenya and returned to Somerset where he continued to maintain the land and kept machinery going when others would have despaired of them. Married 1968 Fiona Grant who survives him with their son and two daughters. Peter Gregson Cronk (H, 40-44): died 29.7.2018 aged 91. Jesus College, Cambridge, 2 Natural Sciences 1948. St Bartholomew’s Hospital, MB, BChir 1951. He then did three years in the Royal Army Medical Corps, with whom he served in Tripoli, Libya. Retired as a Captain 1954. He then took up a sole General Practitioner post in Gloucester in 1957. In 1973 he attended an Occupational Therapy course and soon had a portfolio of corporate clients including Wall’s Ice Cream, Permali and RAF Innsworth and soon he became Senior Medical Officer, Ministry of Defence. He later served with the Royal Fleet Auxiliary 1985-87, serving as a ship’s doctor, visiting the Falklands and Norfolk, Virginia. He was a member, Tewkesbury Borough Council 1989-9; member, Gloucester Diocesan Board of Finance 1998-2007; and member, Bishop’s Council 2003- 2007. Stamp-collecting played a large part in his life and he was a long-serving member of the Royal Philatelic Society. He won awards for his ‘Seahorses’ collection. He loved sailing and cruised extensively with the Island Cruising Club. He bought keelboats and 27 based them at Salcombe, and later in Dartmouth. He enjoyed pottering and tinkering with the boats. Married (1) 1953 Elizabeth Ogden (died 1993) and (2) 1996 Diana Richards, who survives him with three sons. William (Bill) Frank Philip Currie (B, 41-46): died 6.2.2018. His halcyon days were at West Hill preparatory school when it was evacuated to Polzeath to escape Hitler’s bombers. RMAS 1947. Commissioned into 4th Hussars, later to become the Queen’s Royal Irish Hussars, with whom he served in Malaya, BAOR, Borneo and the United Kingdom. He was Adjutant, the Shropshire Yeomanry and later attended the Australian Staff College. During this time he witnessed the muster not of sheep but of hundreds of kangaroos. His last appointment was Commanding Officer, the Armoured Automotive School. He retired as Lieutenant Colonel in 1978. As a Retired Officer he was Staff Officer to the Military Secretary at HQ UKLF 1980-93. He ran a syndicate on the Army shoot at Tidworth and he shared with his wife an interest in working Labradors. He is survived by Ann, his wife of 64 years, and their son and daughter. Sherban Georges Cantacuzino (H, 42-46): died 19.2.2018. He was the elder child of Prince George Cantacuzino. Cannons were fired on the Cantacuzino estate on his birth and he claimed descent from the 14th-Century Byzantine Emperor John VI. He came to England in 1939 to attend prep school. His father returned to Bucharest in 1940, where he was imprisoned and Sherban was never to see him again. His housemaster, Budge Firth, became a surrogate father, paying for his last term. Co Prae, Bisley and Editor, The Wykehamist. Exhibitioner, Magdalene College, Cambridge 1947. MA 1956.