Terms of use.Anonymous, offensive, or malicious postings will be deleted. School-related topics only please. If you need to add a "family notice" reply to any of the current messages in that thread, and remember to change the Subject to the name of the newsworthy person.
He was also a graduate of that excellent university Durham, also my alma mater due largely to Bill's encouragement. Bill went to Hatfield College, a place sporting of renown which produced Frank Tyson, Graham Fowler and Will Carling and, of course, Bill Day. Yes, he was a great guy - a gentleman and one of the few masters at KBGS of whom we were not afraid. Any more Durham graduates out there?
Years at KBGS e.g. 1958-1964 (optional) gwalker@diocant.org
Yes Days real name was Michael, but always known as 'Bill'
Anyway on the subject of masters we liked , well for those that taught me I would say Peart, Cullingford, Ben Tren, Stoker Stockdale (These last two because it was they who got me interested in Chemistry) , Sam Riley , Wilby (geography), 'Tex' Mitchell. I also got on quite well with B V Paynes (Music).
Ones I particularly disliked? Vincent Firman, Emery, Crouch, All PE staff, Bill Midgley.
Years at KBGS e.g. 1958-1964 (optional) brianmoate@hotmail.com
There was a woodwork "teacher" who was could hurl a piece of wood at you with reasonable accuracy. Thinking of the bahaviour of many ( most? ) of the staff then, some aspects, notably that of the violent kind, would see most of them suspended today, sacked even.
Ian Fearnside registered in the Forum's Guestbook quite some time ago. Perhaps he reads these comments and might like to confirm or deny B.M.'s recollection.
Fearnside was known as 'Rusty Guts' presumably because of his ginger hair. Him and Bill Midgeley did keep a fairly tight regime in the woodwork/metalwork dept. When he posted earlier he said he was from Gargrave, same as the posh Harron brothers. I think he is the only member of staff to have admitted reading and posting on this site. Could be wrong.
Cronshaw, for introducing me to Tolkien - see my comment on the worst teachers thread
As far as I remember (AFAIR) Slim had had polio. Despite struggling with one year of (to me) totally unnecessary latin I had/have great respect for the guy. He pitched it at the right level.
I remember Neil Coux (Sp?) with affection. Teaching us with coffee cup in hand and roll-up in his mouth.
Ben Tren - though I was deprived of being taught much by him by a Belgian? tram.
Years at KBGS e.g. 1958-1964 (optional) bill@bracewel.demon.co.uk
Admiration is a strong sentiment. Some of the qualities and even the antics of my teachers at KBGS made me stop and think - and recognise and respect. But I find it impossible to say that one individual commands my admiration. Aspects of their qualities and persona did.
For example, Wilbur's sense of public spirit - and his insistence that genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration. That got me through A Level Latin.
Frank Wellock's "Never give in - draw, don't lose" turned me into a studied and competitive cricketer.
There were other fragments of example that I picked up and made my own. I think much of the rest that I admired and picked up from KBGS came from the intellectual subject matter that we (and especially me as a working class kid) were exposed to - and that mostly on the humanities side. I also learnt a lot from the other kids in my teaching groups and sports teams - and from the opportunities for sporting competition against my known peers that came through the house system in particular. I suppose many members of staff contributed to this in their own way - especially those who encouraged participation and competition - for the sake of the sport. Or have I grown deceptively olympian as time goes by? I think - at this distance - that it was the mixture of so many influences that made me admire the experience I had at KBGS.
All the 'masters' at KBGS, and every teacher I have had the dubious pleasure of dealing with throughout my childs education, were WITHOUT EXCEPTION ....
'Men in a childs world and children in a mans world!'
Cheers,
Steve.
Years at KBGS e.g. 1958-1964 (optional) itsonlysteve@hotmail.com
Current location (optional) You do not want to know?
The teachers at KBGS was sometimes good, sometimes moderately competent and sometimes sheer dross. Unfortunately the relatively small number who were either poor or should never have been allowed near children tends to colour our memories.
Much of the teaching would not have been accepable nowadays though.
Having worked in schools and LEA support services for thirty-odd years, I have seen far far more very good teachers than poor ones and the general quality of teaching is much better than it was 25 years ago [despite the incompetent buffoons at the DfES trying to dictate practice they know nothing about].
Some of us will, no doubt, have had bad experiences with our children's education but this if far from typical now.
Sadly, for many of our contemporaries, our experiences at KBGS were streets ahead of what some of my friends encountered at secondary moderns in the 50s and 60s.