The Trusty Servant Nov 2019 No.128 | Page 31

No.128 Anthropology 1970. He trained as a glassblower at the Venini factory on Murano (Venice) and subsequently set up his own glassblowing studio at Greenwich. As his art evolved he became a landscape photographer and transformed his studio with a space for local art with his wife. He loved trees and was given a natural burial at Edenbridge, Kent. Married 1974 Irene Morway, who survives him with their son and daughter. Andrew Nigel Murray Longmore (A, 67-71): died unexpectedly from an arrhythmia 11.4.2019. Grandson of Field Marshal Lord Wavell (Coll, 1896- 1900) and brother of RMWL (A, 61-66). History Prize. Lords 1969-71 (Captain 1971 and Soccer XI 1971. Travelled to India with the England under-19 side. 1971. Exhibition, Worcester College, Oxford, 2 History (Modern), BA and he played cricket for OUCC 1974-75. Loughborough University 1979-80, MSc Recreation Management and captained the winning OW XI in the 1982 Cricketer Cup. He began his long career as a journalist in 1981, during which it was calculated that he wrote 25 million words. He started with Bracknell News and the Cricketer Magazine 1981-86; then as a freelance sportswriter mainly for The Times from 1989; Chief Sportswriter for The Independent on Sunday 1996-2002; and Senior Sportswriter for The Sunday Times from 2002, during which time he covered four Olympic Games, until he retired in 2018. He was named the Sports Feature Writer of the Year by the Sports Journalists’ Association in 2003. After watching Great Britain defeat Romania 3-1 in the Davis Cup in Romania he was so moved by the 100,000 Romanian orphans that he embarked on a project to raise funds for the Romanian Orphanage Trust. He also supported Portsmouth FC financially when the club was in dire straits. Publications included Fallon – The Biography 2009. Dame Jess Ennis-Hill tweeted after his death, ‘He was always such a lovely man, it was a joy to be interviewed by him’. He was a superb journalist with integrity, a sense of justice and a limitless capacity for kindness and was regarded The Trusty Servant as one of the leading sportswriters of his generation. Married 1976 Jane Morgan, who survives him with their two daughters and a son. Obituaries in The Times and The Sunday Times. Benjamin (Ben) Robert Hamilton-Baillie (C, 68-73): died 3.3.2019. Brother of TRH-B (C, 62-67). Born in Iserlohn, Germany. Sydney Sussex College, Cambridge 1974-77, Architecture MA (Hons) 1977. He spent time in Hamburg and London before settling into a career in social housing in Bristol. In 1995 he joined pedestrian and cyclist charity Sustrans to help it deliver a national cycle network with National Lottery funding. His work became truly international as he travelled to Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark and Germany on a Winston Churchill Travelling Fellowship and he then in 2000 became the first Briton to win a Loeb Fellowship at Harvard University. Studies led him to the conclusion that removing traffic-control measures would encourage drivers to take responsibility for avoiding more vulnerable road users. In 2003 he set up Hamilton- Baillie Associates which went on to redesign several busy junctions using his principles of equal priority for road users. The practice’s regeneration of Park Lane, Poynton, Cheshire won the 2013 Highways Magazine award for congestion reduction. He became the United Kingdom’s most influential and innovative voice promoting the idea of ‘shared space’. He is fondly remembered for his infectious passion, humour and expertise. Married 1988 Jennifer Hill, who survives him with their son and daughter. Obituaries in The Architect’s Journal and The Guardian. Alasdair Michael Gore Burroughs (G, 69-73): died 26.7.2019. Headmaster’s Medals for Gymnā 1970 and 1971. Initially he qualified as a Chartered Accountant with Dearden, Lord, Annan and Morrish, followed by financial positions in a succession of companies, finally Financial Director of Majestic Wines Warehouses Ltd 1989-90. But he was more interested in the practical side of business and helped to set up and 31 then run the theatrical shoe company K & D where he learned the business of specialist shoemaking for the film and entertainment industries. His client list included the Game of Thrones and Harry Potter films, from which he had a prized souvenir of a pair of huge wooden lasts made for Hagrid. He was concerned about the impact of air transport – he enjoyed touring the UK and Europe in a bright yellow VW camper van accompanied by his dog, Inca. He was unmarried and is survived by his sister Daphne. Rupert George Syndercombe Bower (H, 81-85): died 13.5.2019, tragically drowned in the Falmouth Estuary. Son of JTSB (G, 48-53). Girton College, Cambridge, Theology and Philosophy. He did not have a career as such but considered himself an inventor and a poet. He is remembered for his times in New York, the British Virgin Islands, Ireland, Paris and his beloved Cornwall and also for his laugh, his twinkle in his eyes, and an enviable sense of the absurd. He was unique – an original. He is survived by Sarah Nicholson, the mother of his son. We are aware of the following deaths which will be covered in the next issue of the Trusty Servant: Charles Evan Bruce-Gardyne (H, 40-45) died 22.10.2019 Giles Hepburn John Myrtle (D, 41-45) died 25.9.2019 Richard Alan Pinsent (D, 45-50) died 2.8.2019 Robert Hugh Hardy (Coll, 46-51) died 12.10.2019 Hon Stephen Anthony Hurd (I, 46-51) died 6.9.2019 Edward Oliver John Beck (H, 51-56) died 3.10.2019 William Marsden (F, 54-58) died 12.10.2019 Richard David Chandler (A, 55-60) died 19.09.2019 Humfrey Charles Butters (K, 60-65) died 6.9.2019