R.A.Smith (1941-49) known as
“Raser” or more politely as Tony Smith.
The headmaster Fraser died of a stroke whilst on a
walking holiday in Scotland at Michaelmas half-term 1941 he was eventually
succeeded by Moody in 1942. Moody was an Oxford graduate (Chemistry) as
per regulations, and probably secured his appointment by having recently
had a book published on Analytical Chemistry. I am afraid I endeared
myself to him by finding three errors in it. In my time Moody never took a
chemistry lesson, even when Nick Nicholson was ill. He concentrated on
religious instruction, usually using the period to harangue pupils on
their poor performance. One of his early acts was to change the house
system from one where boys were allocated by area of the town or to the
same house as their fathers had been in, to a random distribution. At a
time of severe clothes rationing this made him very popular.
Of the masters etc. not mentioned were Hilda Press,
a thug who taught French. I am sure many B form members will remember
being whacked on the back of the head by this virago. There was also
Norman Cleave who returned after the war (Tank group commander) to resume
his post as senior English master but left after a term, to become
headmaster of Poole Royal Grammar School. In his absence the English posts
had been filled by Jake Hammond and Cyril (the weed) Edlin. Cleave taught
the Lower Sixth Science Logic for one term. I believe woodwork was
abandoned in 1942 due to lack of materials, After the departure of Davis,
the subject was taken over by Jenkins who also taught Latin. This master
left in 1942 and Jake Hammond took over Latin.
Chemistry was not taught until one reached form 2,
George Cooper took us for our first year, his degree was in Chemistry
despite being Senior Maths Master. George always played the piano for
assembly and the organ at Speech Day, etc. He was organist at Horninglow
Methodist Church. Bill Read, Jake Hammond and Ronny Illingworth
favoured the Wyggeston Hotel as their watering hole. Unfortunately Bill,
who lived at the top of Foston Avenue, was found asleep in the front
garden of a member of 4b halfway home, this took some living down.
Tom Parkin achieved notoriety by standing up in the
middle of a church sermon and accusing the vicar of using the pulpit as a
coward's castle. He retired at the end of the war to be succeeded by
Shorthose (the Drip-after an end of nose feature), another author. His
book, 'The Properties of Matter' occupied 75% of the teaching time, but
only 10% of the examination questions. He was the only master who came to
school in a car, a Ford Popular, and had the distinction of being caught
in the car in the middle of a level crossing with the gates closed.
Schoolboys have eyes and ears everywhere.
Charlie Brown taught History and a bit of Geography
and was press ganged into teaching American history to 2A in 1942. He did
this by reading a chapter in the text book during the preceding week then
regurgitating it as a lesson. One week Charlie, always rather scatter
brained, 'lost' his text book. Charlie also kept bees and several times
interrupted assembly with 'Excuse me headsmaster, has any boy in the Field
Lane area seen my bees?'
'Old nick' Nicholson, an Irish communist, was the
senior Chemistry master. He had previously been employed in industry which
he left under a bit of a cloud. He was held responsible for a gas
explosion in a large calciner which disintegrated. Chemistry lessons
lasted two periods, for the first part, a lecture/demonstration, the class
sat in a circle in an alphabetical order clockwise with Nick at 12 o'clock
and Timber Woodcock at 11.30. Consequently Timber got the pleasure of
sniffing any obnoxious gasses produced in the demonstration. There was one
fire extinguisher, which after use, remained empty for a term.
In Moody's time the procedure was for the extant
prefects to send a list of preferred candidates for the next year to him,
he then amended it. Up to the end of the 1940s prefects had a fair amount
of power, they could set lines, put a persistent offender in detention and
administer a smart clip on the ear. Discipline was pretty tight.
The War Years
Turning to the war years I started as one of twenty
scholarship pupils in September 1941, eight from Grange St. eight from
Horninglow Rd. four from the rest of Burton. The total of new entrants
was made up to about forty, from the outside districts and the Prep form.
The intake was lager than usual due to families moving out of Derby and
Birmingham to the Burton area and commuting to their wartime jobs by bus
or train. Their sons passed the entrance exam for paying pupils. We were
divided into 1A form master Bill Read and 1B. We were taught identical
lessons until the February exams and from the results reallocated to 1A&B.
These results virtually governed whether you were in the A or B stream
throughout your school career. This had the knock-on result that many of
the brighter boys trapped by the scheme were removed and sent to the
technical school in Guild St.… This school had a very good reputation
thanks in part to the efforts of A.H.Blake, Burton's very competent
Director of Education.
School hours were 9 am till 4.05 pm with lunch from
12.20 until 2.00, The problem of going home in the dark did not occur as
single and double summertime were adopted throughout the war years.
However detention was moved to Saturday mornings in the mid winter months.
As a general rule school could start at 10.00 if the air raid warning had
lasted for more than three hours in the preceding night. This was
frequently the case in the winter of 1940 but not subsequently.
After school activities were severely limited in the
winter months due to the blackout which despite the adoption of summer
time, could be as early as 4.45. It was impossible to blackout the school
though I think an attempt was made with A room and the adjoining
corridors.
Their was also the deterrent of boys having to cycle
home in the blackout and masters having to do fire-watching about once a
week. An air raid shelter was constructed in the garden where U & V rooms
were later constructed and several more in Peel Croft between the grand
stand and Lichfield St.… They were relatively shallow shelters due to the
possibility of flooding. I can only recall their use on one genuine
occasion and several practises. Ironically the ATC's uncamoulflaged
Bulldog bi-plane was parked about 20 yards from the shelters.
Woodwork classes were abandoned in 1942 and with the
advent of hit and run raids it was decided that the Art Room with its
glass roof, was unsafe. This meant the loss of two class rooms and to
compensate rooms were occupied in Bond St infants school which had been
closed in 1939 and the Mission Hall in Bond End. As neither locations had
an allocation of fuel, classes were conducted in gloves and overcoats.
Infant size desks also caused problems. The Mission Hall was however
successfully blacked-out, and was used by the Scouts, the ATC and the
Aircraft Spotters Club. The Chess Club also functioned during the war
years.
Most boys and masters came to school by cycle in all
weathers. If it rained or snowed it was impossible to get on the buses
unless you lived within two stops of the terminus. Waterproof capes and
leggings were in short supply and required clothing coupons for purchase,
so assembly and the first lesson were frequently accompanied by a steamy
atmosphere. The school yard was surrounded by cycle racks, mostly
undercover. All were numbered and you were allocated a number for the
year. Cycles had to be pushed along Bond St. and mounted in Lichfield St.
Lichfield St. had to be crossed by the pedestrian crossing. Scooting on
one pedal across the Ferry Bridge was not permitted, a detention was the
punishment.
In common with other schools the toilets were outside
and froze in winter, smoking in the toilets was a caneable offence. Gas
masks had to be carried from lesson to lesson until 1944 when regulations
became less stringent. The school bell, traditionally rung by the weeks
duty prefect, was not rung between 1940 & 1944
Sport took its usual pattern during the war except
that rowing had been abandoned. Rugby was played in the Autumn term and
the first few weeks of the Spring term. House matches were played on Peel
Croft as Burton rugby club was not functioning. Inter-school matches on
Wednesdays and Saturdays were played at Senior and Junior level, travel
usually being by Stevenson's yellow peril. Cricket was also played at the
same levels. Amongst the school opponents were:-Lichfield GS, Coton
College,Denstone College,Uttoxeter GS, Burton Tech., Ashby GS, Newport GS,
Trent College, King Edwards GS Aston & Five Ways, Radcliffe College,
Nottingham High Pavement GS, Nottingham GS, Tamworth GS. Some fixtures
were cricket only. Photo's of the Cricket 1st XI are confusing, in general
they were taken of the XI chosen for the Old Boys match which began at 11
am and frequently coincided with A level exams. This explains why a number
of stalwarts are missing.
The school had a very strong swimming team and
thrashed most opponents, the climax came in 1948 with a match against
Motherwell GS which we narrowly lost. The opponents had three team
members who subsequently swam in the London Olympic Games.
Cross country was the main athletic event in the
second half of the spring term. The senior course started on the Ox Hay,
then across the Ferry Bridge, through the back streets of Stapenhill, up
to Brizlincote Hall Farm, across to Winshill Clump, down Tower Rd., and
Ashby Rd., to Elms Rd., across Stapenhill Rd., through the Riverside
Gardens and back to the Ox Hay via the Ferry Bridge. Track athletics were
not taken very seriously until the arrival of Norman Jones and Norman
Paine after the war.
The easing of blackout restrictions in 1944, lead to
the renewal of evening activities. The Scouts held Gang shows in the
school hall and the drama group got back into full swing.
In the Pre-42 photos the second one down is of 'An
Enemy of the People' 1943, third, fourth and sixth row 'An Inspector
Calls' 1949, fifth row 'The Petrified Forest' 1947. I could probably
identify some of the characters if you wish.
The Fauld explosion has already been written about.
There has been no mention of the fairground fire in 1943, which
conveniently started at about 3.50 pm so had most ot he school as
audience.