
Recollections
If former pupils, staff and friends of Huyton Hill, have any recollections to share, please complete the attached form, which will come to me, John West, and I will add them to this page.Up to two images or PDFs etc. can be added to the form.
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Derrick Gillingham (1957-1962)
Gordon and I have been exploring a fishing theme of late, and you can consider the latest instalment wrapped (see below).
Do you remember this, Gordon? It is an extract from a ‘letter’ I sent to you in 2013.
‘It is interesting to note (in a 1969 cutting from the Westmorland Gazette) Hubert Butler’s statement that the increase in motor cars and boats was impinging on Huyton Hill’s outdoor ethos and that this was contributory to the School’s closure. I remember my grandfather (who lived in Ambleside) complaining about speed boats on the lake. He said that these had destroyed the peace and tranquillity of Windermere and ruined the fishing. He was a master of hyperbolic storytelling, and, on one occasion, claimed that not a solitary fish had been seen or caught in the lake for the previous six months. Apparently, the last to be seen had popped its head out of the water and promptly been run down by a speed boat! It was the way that he told it too – the fine line between gravity and levity, sinker and float.’
John West (1955-1961)
My wife Julie and I recently went to Garstang. Hardly a metropolis, but it has a profusion of charity shops. Julie collects jigsaw puzzles and prefers to pay £3.00 rather than £18.00!
I mentioned to her that Hubert is buried at Broughton (thank you Gordon for that information – can’t remember if I’ve added the photos to the website), which is just north of Preston, so we carried on down the old A6 to Broughton churchyard, while not being sure if we’d find his and Nita’s grave. Julie went ahead of me while I parked the car and she shouted ‘The first grave is Hercules Scott Butler, is he a relation?’ I replied that he was Hubert’s father. We wandered up and down the graves and among the more recent ones was Hubert and Nita’s. I was pleased to find both of them.
I attach photos of Hubert’s grave and also the church, which has an ancient set of stocks outside!
I see that both GVB and HDB were born when HSB was in his late forties. He was vicar at Preston from 1900 to 1920, so I guess that’s why he rated first place in the graveyard! Both of those headstones have what appears to be the Butler family crest proverb on it, which if I remember rightly is also on GVB’s headstone. Timor Domini fons vitae – The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life
https://www.myfamilysilver.com/pages/crestfinder-crest.aspx?id=138682&name=Butler
My Memories – John Nevin (1961-1962)
I was delighted to hear from Derrick Gillingham and read his recollections. He writes very well and is more literate than I am. It seems very late to be reconnecting with the people I went to HH with but I just never had the space to do it until now. One of the things I remember about Derrick is that he had the complete Sherlock Holmes that he was reading, something I was unfamiliar with and which I later admired him for reading at that age. He was the most cheerful person I knew there. My unhappiness there was caused by the situation I was in due to the sudden uprooting of my life. The whole place was extremely beautiful and I liked all the masters (except Mr. Ellis). I don’t remember the black fish-skin at all but the mutton was my favourite meal. I can still see Mr. Newby carving that enormous joint.
My family had just come from Brazil and I remember my parents taking me to Kendal Milne. During the process of buying the uniform, the subject of swimming came up because I loved swimming in Brazil. I wondered where the bathing suits were. The salesman said that I would be using my birthday suit. I wondered about that cryptic remark and it gradually dawned on me what that meant. I was soon to have a different swimming experience to what I had imagined.
It is sad that Ian (Kraunsoe) passed away (in April 2013). His parents were actually living in Brazil at the time and I found him someone with whom I had something special in common and there was something serious about his nature that I found attractive. There was a day during the Christmas term (61) when I wanted to run away from the school. We were walking along the driveway together while I was expressing my feelings about it to him and he persuaded me not to do it. He took me back to Mr. Butler and told him the situation and Hubert was understanding and compassionate about it.
I visited the Pull Wood Bay property twice, once with my wife. We were driven there by my cousin who lives in Darwen. I missed seeing the beautiful gardens as they were when we helped to maintain them. I remember doing estate work and throwing earth onto a screen to make soil for the new cricket pitch. Then there were the Sunday BBC church services with Hubert struggling to play the hymns with 1 1/2 fingers missing on one hand.
I was on Alfred house and I well remember being in the changing of the houses ceremony. Pomp and Circumstance is forever burned in my memory. That recording must have been very old because I still remember the scratchy sound but it also left me with a love for Elgar’s music.
The History Date Machines – David Porter (1963-1968)
Thanks for passing it all on Gordon.
Derrick!! You are wonderful to read. Thank you.
And……as a trumpeter I cannot but help but blow my own a bit.
Derrick left HH in 1962 and lo and behold the Major had a new history date machine arrive in 1963.
One of my fondest memories is of Major inviting me to sit with him in the Playroom one evening, just him and me…..we just had a wonderful time calling up battles, events, whatever..putting dates to them, and just generally indulging ourselves in our love of history. I felt SO special. I can still recall the feeling!
He was like my father, mentor, friend and inspiration all wrapped up in one.
Didn’t stop him punishing me when he smelt onion weed (one of my other passions) on my breath one lunchtime. Isn’t it amazing…I actually remember the conversation. We were discussing the spelling of the name of the Russian composer of the 1812 Overture. You know…Peter whatsiname.
Good wishes to you all from Australia.
Who shall escape blame in the presence of the Great Dame? – from Derrick Gillingham (1957-1962):
What can we say then of Miss Isa Blake of Greenock? Isa, presumably, as in the diminutive of Isabella, the Spanish form of Elizabeth, meaning: God is satisfaction. We may say, I believe, that her name was not far off the mark and her divine right far from merely nominal. She was the occasional teacher of mathematics who is described by Peter in his memoir as: ‘the Queen Bee’. The figure head then, and a formidable old dame who did not tolerate boyish dalliance, as I found out to my cost on more than one occasion.
The answer to my question, just in case anyone has been wondering for the last fifty years, is: 2,546 feet. At the time, given righteous indignation and rage on the one hand, and a general state of mute terror or suppressed amusement on the other, the answer was not forthcoming. A bit of a scree herself, Miss Blake, I seem to recall, as in: granite-faced, and a danger to those, like me, who were beneath her stony eminence.
She also did for my musical career. I was in the music room, seated at the piano and awaiting her dread tread in the corridor. I was also sucking on half an orange and it was perhaps this happy preoccupation that distracted me, as I never heard Miss Blake’s approach until the last moment, and panicked! So much so that I plonked the potentially offending fruit, juicy side down, onto the keyboard, then closed the lid. Can you believe it? I then sat in horror as she deposited herself at my side and instructed me to raise the lid. I remember hesitating and having to be further urged by her (not a patient soul) to comply. I’m afraid that I cannot possibly report the sequel as I have blocked it entirely out of my mind, save to say that my music lessons did not extend beyond the end of that term.
What’s in a Name – from Derrick Gillingham (1957-1962):
Peter Royds mentions in his memoir that the Butler brothers would have applauded any effort to promote peace in the world, no doubt under the banner of ‘good will’ to all men. I remember that on one occasion Hubert Butler addressed the school in the dining hall to narrate the story of an encounter he had had on the streets of London, possibly on the way to or from Switzerland, on UNICEF business. I believe the meeting was initiated when he asked a man for directions and this led to an engagement of minds and an exchange of ideas and information. The story lodged in my mind, and, as I have come to understand it, was a lesson about trading ideas, and to do with the quality of exchange, not so much at a common rate, but as a precious rarity, and at mental rather than metal or material level. Or is this too esoteric? Anyway, I have been left with the sense that unless man to man communications of that sort become more the norm, the wars will go on, and all manner of petty disputes to boot. Small change there, I’m afraid.
As for the Major (he of less civil title), it could truly be said that he had (though not in the ordinary way) three hundred boys, all or most of whom are devoted to his memory to this day. The Major it was who initiated, or hugely enhanced, my interest in history, just as he did for so many others. On one occasion he referred to me as his ‘history date machine’, a badge of honour I wear to this day. The circumstances surrounding the bestowal of that epithet were as follows…
Thus Gerald and Hubert, spear-wielding and mind-bright, were just about right. The Butler brothers were well named.
Sink or Float – from Derrick Gillingham (1957-1962):
In 2003 Peter Royds (1957-1962) wrote:
What finally converted those intentions into action was the news that the house is to be sold. It is, therefore, now likely that my holiday visits to the flats in Huyton Hill (created after the school closed) will be coming to an end; and the memories revived by that continuing association could then disappear completely.
So the motivation is not so much that we all had a wonderful life at the school in harmony with the scenery, but rather to leave some trace of the life and times of the school to posterity.
Then as now, the most captivating feature of the place was the beauty of the location. The magic of the setting has remained with me all my life.”
A full account of his recollections is available. Click the button below to view: