Favourite teacher
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- Button Grecian
- Posts: 1902
- Joined: Sat Jul 14, 2007 7:30 pm
- Real Name: AP
First time on this website, and the nostalgia is killing me! This particular string will run and run.
John Hall Matthews: junior house master Maine A and asst chaplain - I remember watching the first moon landing in his front room, and I will never forget his efforts to stamp out the more invidious bullying of squits by their "nursemaids."
Bob Hailey: a soccer man, but a gentleman. (Hell, nobody's perfect.)
BSGregory: who inevitably had the m-m-mickey taken something rotten, but was a good housemaster.
Peter Brotherton: as with most of the teachers I remember well, he never taught me (coincidence?) - great guy.
Christopher "S#d" Stace - I remember once raising my hand while holding a handkerchief and being asked if I was answering the question or offering my surrender. He liked sarcasm, but he got me through Latin O level, and I quite liked his style.
Gerald Davies: I played wing forward against him in a Colts v. Masters game. Ouch.
Noel Thingy-Wotsit: the first drama teacher at CH. Thank you, even if I can't remember your surname.
Richard Palmer: another all round good man.
Killer Fry: he always reminded me of Gregory Peck. (Apologies to very young Old Blues.)
And a guy who briefly taught me medieval history who had a very beautiful daughter.
John Hall Matthews: junior house master Maine A and asst chaplain - I remember watching the first moon landing in his front room, and I will never forget his efforts to stamp out the more invidious bullying of squits by their "nursemaids."
Bob Hailey: a soccer man, but a gentleman. (Hell, nobody's perfect.)
BSGregory: who inevitably had the m-m-mickey taken something rotten, but was a good housemaster.
Peter Brotherton: as with most of the teachers I remember well, he never taught me (coincidence?) - great guy.
Christopher "S#d" Stace - I remember once raising my hand while holding a handkerchief and being asked if I was answering the question or offering my surrender. He liked sarcasm, but he got me through Latin O level, and I quite liked his style.
Gerald Davies: I played wing forward against him in a Colts v. Masters game. Ouch.
Noel Thingy-Wotsit: the first drama teacher at CH. Thank you, even if I can't remember your surname.
Richard Palmer: another all round good man.
Killer Fry: he always reminded me of Gregory Peck. (Apologies to very young Old Blues.)
And a guy who briefly taught me medieval history who had a very beautiful daughter.
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- Button Grecian
- Posts: 1902
- Joined: Sat Jul 14, 2007 7:30 pm
- Real Name: AP
- J.R.
- Forum Moderator
- Posts: 15835
- Joined: Wed Mar 09, 2005 4:53 pm
- Real Name: John Rutley
- Location: Dorking, Surrey
I'd never noticed the similarity, but now that you mention it !!Ajarn Philip wrote:First time on this website, and the nostalgia is killing me! This particular string will run and run.
John Hall Matthews: junior house master Maine A and asst chaplain - I remember watching the first moon landing in his front room, and I will never forget his efforts to stamp out the more invidious bullying of squits by their "nursemaids."
Bob Hailey: a soccer man, but a gentleman. (Hell, nobody's perfect.)
BSGregory: who inevitably had the m-m-mickey taken something rotten, but was a good housemaster.
Peter Brotherton: as with most of the teachers I remember well, he never taught me (coincidence?) - great guy.
Christopher "S#d" Stace - I remember once raising my hand while holding a handkerchief and being asked if I was answering the question or offering my surrender. He liked sarcasm, but he got me through Latin O level, and I quite liked his style.
Gerald Davies: I played wing forward against him in a Colts v. Masters game. Ouch.
Noel Thingy-Wotsit: the first drama teacher at CH. Thank you, even if I can't remember your surname.
Richard Palmer: another all round good man.
Killer Fry: he always reminded me of Gregory Peck. (Apologies to very young Old Blues.)
And a guy who briefly taught me medieval history who had a very beautiful daughter.
John Rutley. Prep B & Coleridge B. 1958-1963.
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- Button Grecian
- Posts: 1902
- Joined: Sat Jul 14, 2007 7:30 pm
- Real Name: AP
- postwarblue
- Deputy Grecian
- Posts: 409
- Joined: Mon May 21, 2007 12:12 pm
- Real Name: Robert Griffiths
- Location: Havant
NT Fryer - scrum half for Harlequins - as a Grecian I was sent to take one of his classes on a Match day. The class tried to set light to me but fortunately did not succeed. A long forty minutes. He took over Col.B at short notice when AH Buck was sacked in 1955? 56?.
Fallic Matthews - wore an old sports jacket with his 'office' in one inside pocket (cheque book, letters, papers, all manner of useful things). The jacket was odd colours in front as he had eye problems I believe picked up in the war & often didn't pour straight. I avoided the front row of his class as one never knew what - nitric acid etc - would land in one's lap. No memory at all of him popping out for a smoke!
The lab behind him had belonged to Mr Jarvis who died in harness 1951? He always insisted 'A chemist is a clean animal.'
My favourites? Gad Malins, David Jesson-Dibley; big debts to Bill Armistead, Gordon Van Praagh and Pongo Littlefield.
Fallic Matthews - wore an old sports jacket with his 'office' in one inside pocket (cheque book, letters, papers, all manner of useful things). The jacket was odd colours in front as he had eye problems I believe picked up in the war & often didn't pour straight. I avoided the front row of his class as one never knew what - nitric acid etc - would land in one's lap. No memory at all of him popping out for a smoke!
The lab behind him had belonged to Mr Jarvis who died in harness 1951? He always insisted 'A chemist is a clean animal.'
My favourites? Gad Malins, David Jesson-Dibley; big debts to Bill Armistead, Gordon Van Praagh and Pongo Littlefield.
'Oh blest retirement, friend to life's decline'
- J.R.
- Forum Moderator
- Posts: 15835
- Joined: Wed Mar 09, 2005 4:53 pm
- Real Name: John Rutley
- Location: Dorking, Surrey
I seem to remember 'Killer' Fry had quite a glowing military record. Could that have had anything to do with it ? I seemed to remember he held quite a high decoration.
N.T. Fryer was my housemaster, (see other posts), and stories of Mr Buck still resounded around Coleridge in the early 60's. I wasn't aware he was dismissed. Would anyone care to elaborate on this matter ?
N.T. Fryer was my housemaster, (see other posts), and stories of Mr Buck still resounded around Coleridge in the early 60's. I wasn't aware he was dismissed. Would anyone care to elaborate on this matter ?
John Rutley. Prep B & Coleridge B. 1958-1963.
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- Deputy Grecian
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- Real Name: Craig Steger-Lewis
- Location: Tring UK