The Trusty Servant Nov 2018 No. 126 | Page 28

N o .126 FRIBA 1969. He began his career as an architect with first Steane Shipman & Cantacuzino and then with Sherban Cantacuzino & Associates from 1964. He was lecturer, School of Art, College of Art, Canterbury 1966-69. He was Executive Editor, Architectural Review 1973-79, when he was at the heart of debates on planning and design. He was Secretary, Royal Fine Art Commission 1979-95. Appointed CBE 1988. Lecturer, Tehran University 1976 and Lecturer, Aberdeen University 1977. Hon Doctorate, University of York 1996. And his most lasting contribution was to found and act as President of the Pro Patrimonio Foundation (the National Trust of Romania) to save the architectural legacy of a country whose historic buildings had been so severely neglected by four decades of Communist rule. He later chaired the European steering committee of Icomos, the international NGO dedicated to conservation of historic sites. Publications include, Great Modern Architecture 1966, New Uses for Old Buildings 1975 and What makes a Good Building, an inquiry by the Royal Fine Art Commission, 1994. After the fall of the Ceausescus he began his practice of taking groups of 20 people round historic sites in Romania. He also initiated a campaign to restore 60 wooden churches with the help of local people. He also designed Trant’s original study block in the late 60s. He had an aptitude for the piano and gave recitals as a schoolboy. He was, as a Romanian friend wrote, ‘a prince by birth, an architect by education, and an Englishman by mistake.’ He is survived by Anne, his wife of 64 years, and their two daughters. A son predeceased him. Obituary The Daily Telegraph. John Michael Gidley Wright (F, 42-45): died 9.4.2018. Brother of TAGW (F, 38-42). He spent the whole of his working life in the shoe industry T he T rusty S ervant with the family shoe-manufacturing business in Leicester from 1946, first with his brother and then with a son. He spent three year promoting the shoe industry in the USA. He was a keen golfer and represented his county. He is survived by Jill, his wife of 64 years, and their five sons and a daughter. Orlando Michael Philip Kenyon- Slaney (D, 42-47): died 21.6.2018. National Service with RAEC 1947. Christ Church, Oxford 1949, 2 Modern Languages 1953. He first worked for the Bank of London and South America 1953-73. He then worked for London and Continental Bankers Ltd, for whom he was Executive Director and Secretary to the Board of Directors 1973-88. On retirement he was churchwarden for St Mary’s Church, High Halden and was secretary to local organisations and societies. For 20 years he organised the village quiz, devising the questions and introducing a unique method of scoring which was too complicated to be copied by other organisations! He enjoyed his golf, which he played most reliably. He is survived by Philippa, his wife of 58 years, and their two sons. François Wyndham Edwards (D, 43-48): died 3.4.2018. In 1939 a small French boy arrived at prep school from Paris and never looked back. French Speech. National Service, Ox and Bucks L I 1948-50, with whom he served in Greece and Cyprus. King’s College, Cambridge, 2 French and German Pt 1 and 2 Law Pt 2 1953. LLB 1954. FCA. He first worked with Price Waterhouse &Co and Kleinwort Benson. He then worked for William de Broe (stockbrokers), subsidiary of Banque Bruxelles Lambert SA, where he ran the French and Swiss desk. He was a member of the finance committee, St Dunstan’s Charity 1985- 2008, Vice President since 2008. His 28 favourite exploit was to water-ski across Lake Geneva in black tie to arrive at the party with only his trouser bottoms wet. Most of his adventures involved mountains. He climbed the Matterhorn three times by three routes. When Eric Shipton fell on a climb of Annapurna in the Himalayas, he took the lead to the summit. Married 1969 Elizabeth Haldane, who survives him with their son and daughter. His ashes were scattered beneath the Matterhorn. John Harrison Thresher (Coll, 43-48): died 21.3.2018. Grandson of JHT (Comm, 1855-59). Sen Cap Prae 1948 and VI 1948. National Service with Royal Artillery 1950. Exhibitioner, New College 1950, 2 PPE 1953. He moved to Canada and first worked for McLean Budden Ltd, Montreal 1955-67. He then moved to New York in 1967 and worked with several financial institutions on Wall Street until his retirement in 1996. He was responsible for representing his firms in Europe, Asia, Australia and the Middle East. 50-year resident in Rye, New York. He was an Elder of Christ Church in Rye where he supported the musical programme. Married 1955 Alison Gillespie (died 2003). He is survived by two sons and a daughter. John Bamforth (Coll, 43-48): died 6.3.2018. Fives colours 1947- 48. Trinity College, Cambridge 1948. 2 Nat Sci, BA 1951. He trained at St Thomas’s Hospital 1951-54. MB 1954. He was Secretary, St Thomas’s Golf Team 1953-54. National Service with the RAMC 1956, with whom he served in Munster and Berlin and where his prowess on the golf course was put to good effect, playing with visiting generals. Registrar St Thomas’s 1958. Fellow, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota 1962. Senior Registrar St Thomas’s 1964. Consultant physician and gastroenterologist, Southampton