Comment - Sherborne School

issue nineteen
TRINITY TERM 2015
SherborneNews
SPORT
NEW TRADITIONS
MUSIC
LEADERSHIP
Comment
BY PETER WATTS
DEPUTY HEAD PASTORAL
Term time was always frantic, often noisy and
occasionally bedlam so I always looked forward
to those first few hours of silence once the boys had
left at the end of the School year; a chance to walk
around the house without the questions, the boys
chasing each other and the nagging feeling that
somewhere some boy was up to something!
There’s no such
thing as ghosts...
However, it was never quite silent. A pragmatic
scientist like me should be able to ascribe the moans
and sighs of an empty boarding house on the first day
of a long holiday to the building settling or to the central heating winding down but...how
could that explain the glimpse down a dark corridor of a rushing shadowy figure or the snatch
of a whispered conversation just around the corner?
Ghosts? Probably not…
Spirits? Umm, probably not...
Something less defined perhaps that describes how a building made from wood and stone
can seem to take on the life of those who have lived in it. For boarding houses are places
where life, with all of its challenges, successes and failures, is lived. And for all of the
deliciousness of those first few hours of calm, I actually much preferred the wet Wednesday
February evenings and the banter in the dormitory and the study bedrooms.
www.sherborne.org
Like any community there are the sad times to survive such as deaths (from pets, through to
grandparents, parents and even, most poignantly of all for unrelated boys, the death of a boy
still at School or just left), expulsions and the failures associated with public exams and
university application.
continued ...
Analogous to the conservation of energy,
emotion too, it seems, has its own sort of
balance and the sad times are offset over
time by the happy times associated with
births (from puppies, through to younger
siblings and the new offspring of the
Housemaster), social gatherings and
successes on the sports field or
elsewhere.
Sherborne ISI Inspection Report
The School received an outstanding ISI Inspection Report this term a full copy of the
report can be viewed on the School website http://www.sherborne.org/schoolpolicies/. Ralph Barlow, Headmaster, commented: “I am immensely proud of the boys,
my colleagues and the wider Sherborne community, not for any special effort put on
in inspection week, but for the dedication, love of learning, support for each other
and commitment to excellence which I see here week in, week out and which shine
through in this report. I commend you to read it all, as there is so much to celebrate.”
And then there are the bizarre and weird
times, which often turn out to be the
funniest, once the shock and confusion
subsides:
‘Sir, I know you’re not going to believe
me but you have to come quickly, John
has just disappeared into thin air ...’ Of
course John hadn’t, but what he had
done was to jump off a low wall into the
garden shrubbery and in doing so had
broken through a manhole cover, falling
over six feet into the drain below. It
didn’t take that long to find him,
given his shouts for help.
And then there was the dilemma
brought about by the tick... Was
it better for me, or matron, or both
of us (to account for each other) to
inspect a boy’s nether regions for the
painful lump he had detected on his
return from a weekend away from
Dartmoor? Removing the tick was
definitely a job for the sanatorium
though!
I could go on and on with tales of
snakes in the changing rooms, of fires in
the basement or indeed a flock of
sheep in the Courts (but this isn’t a
leaving speech) and perhaps one day, a
different book might tell these stories,
and more.
To conclude, life in any boarding house is
full ... yes, of ups and downs, of joy and
sorrow, of laughter and tears. It was the
laughter that kept me going through the
eleven years of exhaustion that I was
privileged to experience as a
Housemaster. Being surrounded by
teenage boys the whole time could lead
one to despair; mostly it brought me
hope for the future. ‘Dum vivo, spero’ as
the School’s oldest house motto
suggests.
BY PETER WATTS
DEPUTY HEAD PASTORAL
Poetry Recitation
Competition
BOW AWARD
This Award is given to a boy who has
made an outstanding contribution to the
pastoral welfare of others at Sherborne.
This year’s recipient, who received a
standing ovation from the whole school,
is Olly Douglas (U6d).
The Patterson Cup, named in honour of a
former Head of English, Mr Robert
Patterson, who retired in 2009, is
competed for annually by all members of
the Third and Fourth Forms, and is
awarded for the best recitation from
memory of a short poem. The winner of
this year’s final, held on 10th June in the
Old School Room and judged by
Mr Patterson, was Malhaar Shah (3a)
reciting Siegfried Sassoon’s ‘The Hero’.
Maximilian Scheuner (4f) was second, and
Sam MacDonald (4c) third.
BY PATRICK HAGUE
ENGLISH TEACHER
“Throughout his time in the School he
has demonstrated a consistency of
kindness and awareness of others and
their individual situations which I have
seen in no-one else. Of all the people I
know in the School, I cannot think of a
more worthy candidate for this award.”
Current Pupil
“Ever since I joined the School he has
done everything he can to help me settle
in. I have witnessed him repeatedly
treating Third Formers as he would
friends in his own year group, with a
smile on his face, helping them to feel
comfortable at School and be part of it.”
The first ever flag-raising ceremony took
place at the start of this term. This new
tradition will mean that the School flag
flies whenever the boys are in School.
Current Pupil
Sherborne School
is one of most beautiful places to study in Britain
as voted by the Oxford Royale Academy
Lionheart Challenge
Making young business people
Third Form
Chemistry Trip to
Bristol University
Third Form boys visited Bristol University
Chemistry Department for a day of
laboratory work and a display lecture.
The boys followed a circuit of
experiments creating different polymers;
Caesine polymer (synthetic ivory), Nylon,
polyvinyl alcohol gel (slime),
thermosoftening polymer and benzoic
acid from sodium benzoate. They were
assisted by Chemistry postgraduates.
They also took part in a lecture on
aspects of the Chemistry of air with
liquid nitrogen, solid carbon dioxide and
hydrogen explosions mixed in with other
colourful demonstrations.
The Fourth Form spent a day undertaking
the Lionheart Challenge. Boys were given
the challenge of deciding upon a product
that they could market to encourage
young adults to take a healthy lifestyle
seriously. They worked alongside
business coaches considering areas as
diverse as marketing and finance. The
ideas ranged from ‘Sole Obsession’, an
insole that monitored exercise levels and
calorie intake, to ‘Mix Master’, a
personalised healthy smoothie and soup
maker. Prizes were awarded for the best
presentation, the best financial package,
the best team skills and the best
marketing plan, as well as for the overall
winning team. Three judges from local
businesses, Abigail Bromell, Andrew
Cranfield and Richard Herbert, were
fantastic in providing feedback to each
of the teams, and afterwards boys
commented on how the day had made
them think differently about business and
innovation.
BY SUE SALMON
ASSISTANT HEAD PASTORAL
BY CHRIS HAMON
CHEMISTRY
Young Entrepreneurs
Winning Team
Representing GB
Rory McMillan (U6b) has been chosen to
represent Great Britain as part of a fourstrong team at the International
Chemistry Olympiad in Azerbaijan this
summer.
Fifth Form boys and Sherborne Girls took part in the Young British Entrepreneurs
Course. The course teaches that business, like life, is all about attitude … 80% attitude,
20% skill. If you acquire the right attitude in identifying and then solving a problem you
have a potential business model. The course showed the participants how business
works and its logistics. One of the tasks they undertook in teams was to come up with
an idea for a new product, and how this would work from conception through to market
place. This was then ‘pitched’ to a panel of ‘Dragons’. The team that won designed
a ‘Safety Straw’ which could detect
SHERBORNE FOUNDATION
if a drink had been contaminated
SUPPORTING THE SCHOOL FOR 15 YEARS
with a drug.
Third Form
Battlefields trip
Staying at the Peace Village Hostel at Messines for three nights
enabled the whole Third Form to explore several sites in the
immediate vicinity, including the Island of Ireland Peace Park,
with its emphasis on present-day reconciliation, as well as betterknown places associated with the First World War in both the
Ypres Salient and on the Somme.
Wreaths in memory of the 225 Old Shirburnians who fell in the
Great War were laid at four memorials, including the Menin Gate
at Ypres during a Last Post ceremony and at the Thiepval
Memorial to the Missing of the Somme. Battlefield sites visited
included Hill 60, where Robert Kestell-Cornish (b,1895) earned
his first Military Cross in 1915, and Newfoundland Park, where
the preserved trenches brought home, in dramatic fashion, the
carnage caused by German machine guns when the
Newfoundlanders tried to advance there on the first day of
the battle of the Somme in July 1916.
The always powerful and poignant experience of visiting such
sites was reflected on most effectively by Reverend Nicholas
Mercer when he conducted an open-air service for the
Sherborne School party at Messines Ridge Cemetery on the
final evening of our visit to the Western Front. In a fitting
conclusion to the whole experience, he reminded us all of
the sheer waste of war and the supreme sacrifice made a
hundred years ago by so many former pupils of the School,
quite a few of them not much older than most of those
present at this service of remembrance.
BY PATRICK FRANCIS
HISTORY AND POLITICS TEACHER
RADIO SHERBORNE
The inaugural live broadcast of Radio Sherborne took place
at the end of this term. The two hour show was presented by
Robert Ham (U6e) and Ed Polsue (U6b), and featured some
special surprise attractions and an interesting mix of music.
Parent Lecture
Programme
Turing Cycle Ride
Seventy Sherborne cyclists set off from the Courts, to cycle 62
miles in honour of Alan Turing’s famous 1926 ride from
Southampton to Sherborne. A mix of boys, parents, staff and
other friends of the school took part, they climbed two of
Dorset’s most challenging hills and raced past the Crown Hotel
in Blandford Forum, where Turing had spent the night.
As part of our ongoing programme of parent lectures, PSCO
Shelly Connolly from Dorset Police Force Safer Schools and
Communities team spoke to parents about drugs awareness.
The talk focused on illegal drugs (primarily cannabis) and
legal highs, two of the biggest areas of concern and those
most often featured in the media. After discussing the legal
classifications, she talked us through the effects of individual
drugs and the signs to look out for if you are concerned that
your child might be taking them. There were also
opportunities to ask questions and discuss any concerns with
a professional who has had many years working in this area
with young people. It was an interesting and informative talk
and one that will be back on our lecture programme again
next year.
BY SEANA CUMMINGS
HEAD OF PSHE
BY MICHAEL MCGINTY
HOUSEMASTER - ABBEY HOUSE
FOURTH FORM GERMAN EXCHANGE VISIT
Fourth Form pupils studying German hosted 16 exchange pupils
from Gymnasium Steglitz Berlin. This is the return visit following
on from the week our pupils spent at the homes of their
exchange partners in Berlin. There were interesting discussions
on the difference between city and country life, boarding and
day schools and single sex versus mixed. The pupils from Berlin
were treated to the full Sherborne experience, including living in
boarding houses, taking part in lessons, Abbey services, sports
and extra-curricular activities. Both sides gained a better
understanding of each other’s cultures and as always good
friends were made.
BY JUDY THURMAN
HEAD OF MODERN LANGUAGES
Commemoration
Celebrations
DUKE OF EDINBURGH EXPEDITIONS
This has been a very busy term for DofE, with 125 boys involved in 10 separate expeditions. The
silver teams visited the Brecon Beacons and Quantock Hills, to refine their navigation skills and
work as a team. Gold teams had an expedition in the Lake District and experienced challenging
weather conditions with 60mph winds, hail, snow and limited visibility, which made
circumnavigating Derwentwater and climbing Blencathra all the more demanding. Over 40 Third Formers, working in six teams, learnt
new skills in camping, outdoor cooking and navigation on their expeditions to the Mendips. We are looking forward to a busy
summer holiday with trips to the Peaks, Exmoor, Ross on Wye and Snowdonia all planned.
BY LAURIE PHIPPARD - MASTER IN CHARGE OF DofE
Ten Tors Challenge
Eighteen Fourth Form boys successfully completed the Ten Tors 35-mile challenge on Dartmoor. With 2,400 participants, this event
should not be underestimated: 35 miles on the uneven and often boggy terrain of Dartmoor will make for sore feet, and navigation is
tough as there are vast stretches of undulating grassland with few distinguishing features. There is little shelter from the elements
(think wind and rain more than sunshine).
Participants may no longer have to carry a 40-metre rope to pull people out of bogs, but the required kit list is almost as lengthy, and
some packs seemed to be almost as large as some of the smaller people. A big well done to the 0boys who successfully completed
the challenge – and also to Giles Cook (4g) and Vincent Hagg-Davies (4f) who completed the training but missed out on the event.
You made us very proud this year, not by being the quickest or the strongest, or by being black-belt ninja navigators, but by being
excellent teams who demonstrated growing competence in many skills, great care for one another and the environment and a
genuine passion for the outdoors. We hope that this is just the start of many more adventures and challenges to come.
BY KIM KIMBER - CLASSICS
CCF FIELD TRIPS
The highlight of the trip to Sennybridge this term for the CCF
Army and Royal Marine Cadets was being able to use the latest
night vision equipment as part of the exercise attempt to sneak
past a ‘hunter force’ at night without being caught. The boys
also got to put into practice their field craft skills and weapon
handling, with a combination of live firing, blank firing and laser-
tag. The Royal Navy Cadets visited RNAS Yeovilton where they
had a chance to take the controls of an aircraft and try a range of
aerobatics, including flying upside-down and putting the aircraft
through a loop-the-loop! They also spent two days at HMS
Raleigh powerboat training and yacht sailing, in very lively
conditions, which tested the Cadets to the full.
BY ROB LE POIDEVIN AND HARRY STRAUGHAN
CCF COMMANDER AND CCF OFFICER
Leadership and Teambuilding
The Leadership and Teambuilding Course meant that the Fifth Form boys jumped from
exams to Brownsea Island. The course started with an inspirational address from double
Paralympic medallist Ian Rose. Ian spoke passionately about learning to bounce back
from setbacks and how perseverance can lead to success. The boys then went to
Brownsea Island to complete a series of leadership and teambuilding tasks. Some of
these tasks are designed to create friction to see how the group adapts and responds
to these challenges. The boys were responsible for cooking their own meals and, much
to the pleasure of the National Trust, continued the fine annual tradition of giving
something back to the island through a conservation task. This year the boys cut down
a number of trees (they were asked to!) in an overcrowded area to enable others to
grow. Once the boys returned from Brownsea, they completed questionnaires about
communication and leadership styles to discover more about themselves. They then
gave valuable peer-to-peer feedback to identify strengths and areas for development. It
is hoped that when the boys reflect upon their performance and attitude on the course,
it will help develop their leadership and teamwork attributes for the future.
BY ROB LE POIDEVIN
Running a Marathon
around The Courts
Head of Politics and CCF Commander Rob Le Poidevin, together with former
Sherborne Business Studies teacher Matt Woods, ran 26.2 miles around the
Courts at Sherborne School, as part of their 31-week training programme for
the 8-stage mountain ultra-marathon they will be undertaking in August. They
are aiming to raise £8,000 for Macmillan Cancer Charity, by running on 8
consecutive days across Germany, Austria (stepping briefly into Switzerland)
and Italy in the Alps, running 268km across some of the most unforgiving
running routes in the world. This will involve 16.3km of vertical ascent and
14.5km of descent. Their progress can be followed on twitter - @transalpine_
and https://www.facebook.com/transalpinechallenge. Rob commented that
running around the Sherborne School Courts was a challenge in itself.
However, we had a lot of support from the boys and staff, which certainly
helped to keep us motivated during our 270 laps! We have only raised 16% of
our target so far and we really hope that as many people as possible will
support this worthy cause. https://www.justgiving.com/transalpine
MUSIC
The 2015 Sherborne Abbey Festival
provided an opportunity for the
School’s music-making to shine within
the local community as an extension
to that which is offered week on week
in the Cheap Street Church lunchtime
recitals. A Chamber Music concert in
the Abbey of soloists showed
Alexander Stagg (L6f, trumpet) to be
on particularly fine form with Spiritual,
by Jean Hubeau, and James Richards
(U6a, piano) with Billy Mayerl’s
Marigold on superb pianistic virtuosity,
while the Chamber Orchestra
accompanied Charlie Smith (4g, flute)
in a strong performance of Menuet
and Badinerie by J S Bach. The Swing
Band’s concert in the Powell Theatre, a
change in venue after 2014 when the
Tindall Recital Hall’s capacity left
disappointed members of the public
listening from outside, saw the theatre
full to capacity and one wonders where
next year’s performance will need to
take place! Finally, the Chamber Choir,
Close Harmony and Barbershop gave
a largely a cappella concert in the
Abbey on the Saturday morning, albeit
with some fine piano accompaniments
by Benjamin Davey in a specially
commissioned Kings Singers’ style
arrangements by Paul Drayton.
The new affiliate partnership with
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra
(BSO) was cemented with a pre-
concert foyer performance of Mozart’s
Wind Octet at Poole Lighthouse in
April. As with the partnership, the
ensemble was joint with Sherborne
Girls: the two horns and the
bassoons were Shirburnians (Theo
Beeny (L6c), Ben MacLean (4b) –
horns; William Glasse (U6a), Sebastian
Fender (L6e) – bassoons); two oboists
and two flautists joined them in the
performance. It was remarked upon
as having been excellent, with an
article on the ensemble’s
performance featured in a BSO
quarterly review. Following hot on the
heels of the BSO success was a House
Concert of exceptional quality:
Wallace House highlights included
Jackie Zheng (3e) with Elgar’s Salut
d’amour on the violin; James Pyman
(4e) with Klengel’s Sonatina on the
‘cello; Robert Ham (U6e) with
Gregson’s Tuba Concerto (3rd
movement); Harry Reynolds (L6e) with
Schumann’s Fantasiestücke on the
clarinet; and Wallace House
Barbershop (Harry Reynolds, Tomos
Evans, James Pyman, Robert Ham,
Joss Nelson) with Mr Sandman; a
string group and a saxophone group
(Marcus Soo, Alec Drew-Prior, Jack
Slade, Jack Wells, James Foulger, Will
Thorne).
...
CONCERT IN THE COURTS,
returning after a year off in 2014,
proved to be an enormous success.
To an audience of 700, bands
competed with one another for places
on the much-exalted stage with its
high-powered amplification.
Neighbours within a one mile radius
had been warned. The concert
certainly filled the courts with rock
music and particular mention should
be made of Charlie Smith (4g) and his
band which, for the first time in many
years, involved a full saxophone
section, trombones and
Five Concerts
trumpets. An Unplugged concert
followed within a week of the rock
concert and this, too, benefited from
excellent weather: the amphitheatre
outside the Music School proved to
be the perfect venue for high quality
solo and ensemble performances
as a kind of prelude for the
Commemoration concert, ‘Music for
a Summer’s Afternoon’.
of the academic year, which made up Commem,
were the Leavers’ Concert in the Tindall Recital Hall, a nostalgic farewell to the
extraordinary musical talent of the Upper Sixth; ‘Music for a Summer’s Afternoon’ on
the last Friday of term, which was followed by the Gala Concert for all the School’s
major ensembles in the BSR (Concert Orchestra, which is shortly to tour Prague,
Chamber Orchestra, Chamber Choir, Wind Band, Swing Band and one of the RocSoc
bands); music in The Courts by the Swing Band and its talented vocalists James Allan
(L6m), Jacob Hughes-Hallett (L6a) and Jack Miller (L6a); and finally the annual Jazz Tea
in Abbey Grange garden on the Saturday afternoon, following the House Lunches.
LUNCHTIME RECITALS continued until
just after Half Term, when the inevitable
public exam pressure put a temporary halt
to concerts until the mini music-festival
during Commem. The final Chamber
Music recital gave an indication of the
extraordinary high quality of the
performances which were about to be
performed in the annual Patrick Shelley
Music Competition: this event,
adjudicated by Roy Stratford – a pianist
and conductor – showed just how
exceptional the music-making at
Sherborne currently is: of the thirty-nine
performances, almost all were of Grade
Eight and above standard with Robert
Ham ATCL – awarded in April - performing
to a proven diploma level. The
competition was won by Finnbar Blakey
(5a), as the adjudicator felt that his
performances on the ‘cello, piano and as a
singer were outstanding: the Strings
section was also won by Finnbar; the
Woodwind by Peter Folkes (4a,
saxophone); the Brass by Robert Ham
(U6e); the Piano by Douglas Mak (5c) and
the Singing by Jacob Hughes-Hallett (L6a).
Sport
IT HAS BEEN AN INCREDIBLY BUSY TERM FOR
ALL THE BOYS AT SHERBORNE, BUT AS WE
APPROACH THE FINAL FEW DAYS, IT IS TIME
TO REFLECT ON THE EFFORTS AND
ACHIEVEMENTS OF A HUGE NUMBER OF BOYS
throughout the age groups and across a wide range
of sporting activities. From Athletics to Tennis and
Golf to Cricket it has been a very good term on the
sporting front. In the best season ever for cricket at
Sherborne there were seven centuries scored, three
from Will Caldwell (L6m), two from Tadgh Patten (3m),
one from Dom Prest (4d) and one from Harry Taylor
(4c), an amazing achievement. There are also other
obvious examples of success amongst our elite
performers such as Ben Childerley (4f) and Ben Poe
(L6d) in Sailing, our Junior Colts A cricketers and the
Colts A Tennis group who enjoyed an unbeaten
season. Will Westmacott (3c), following a serious
injury last September, has returned to full fitness and
rightfully claimed a place at the English School
National Athletics Championships in the junior boys
80m hurdles. The list of achievements goes on and
on. However, I am equally pleased and proud of the
significant majority who ply their trade below the top
teams but who nevertheless achieve great things. In
the last couple of weeks, Sean Williams (L6f) returned
figures of 5 wickets for 5 runs against Clifton College
in a 3rd XI fixture, and Harry Taylor (4c) smashed a
century for the Junior Colts C team against Canford.
There are numerous other examples and I applaud
all those who have worked hard and enjoyed their
sport in the summer term. Good luck to our home
Rugby Squad who are heading to Australia in a few
weeks and thanks to all Sponsors, Parents and Staff
for their support.
BY DAVID GUY – DIRECTOR OF SPORT
Cricket
round up
Congratulations to the Junior Colts
A Cricket team who are South West
Champions and for the first time in
30 years are through to the
National Finals.
Old Shirburnians Will Homer (m,2014) and Richard Galloway (m,2014), have
both been picked to play in the IRB U20 World Championships Rugby, Will
for England and Richard for Scotland.
Inter-House Athletics
Congratulations to The Digby on winning all three Inter-House Athletics
Tournaments.
Sailing Success
Congratulations
to Ben Poe (L6d)
and Ben
Childerley (4f)
who won the
National Sailing
Championships in
the 420 class.
South West
Hurdles Champion
Swimming Records Broken
Congratulations to Will Westmacott (3c),
who won the South West Championships
U15 hurdles in 11.6 seconds, beating the
previous School record. This qualifies Will
to compete in the English Schools
Championships in a few weeks’ time.
Congratulations to Jasper
Slawson (U6e) on breaking
two further School Swim
records, the 50m Butterfly
in 27.94s & the 50m
Freestyle in 25.24s.
National Point to
Point Champion
Congratulations to Michael Treneer (4m)
on winning the 148cms Conditions
Championships to become National Point
to Point Champion, on his pony, Tarka.
LOOKING FORWARD...
• Pre-season Rugby:
1st & 2nd XV – Wednesday 2nd to Sat 5th September (Match on Sat 5th)
Colts A & B – Thursday 3rd to Sat 5th September (Match on Sat 5th)
JCA & JCB – Thursday 3rd to Sat 5th September (Match on Sat 5th)
• Parent/Teacher Meetings (Provisional Dates):
Friday 25th September – Third Form Parent/Teacher Meeting
Saturday 10th October – Lower Sixth Parent/Teacher Meeting
Friday 20th November – Upper Sixth Parent/Teacher Meeting
• Term Dates:
Travelling day for new boys: Sunday 6th September
Travelling day for remainder: Monday 7th September
First Exeat: Friday 25th to Sunday 27th September
Second Exeat: Saturday 10th to Sunday 11th October
Half Term: Friday 23rd October to Wednesday 4th November
Third Exeat: Friday 20th to Sunday 22nd November
End of Term: Saturday 12th December
PARENT AND SON CLAY
PIGEON SHOOTING
COMPETITION
Boys and parents met for the annual Parents’ and
Sons’ Clay Shooting Competition. Boys were keen to
show off their practised skills and the parents, as in
previous years, were in high competitive spirit. In the
boys’ competition the trophy was won jointly by Max
Baldwin (5b) and Henry Jackson (L6c). The parents’
trophy was won by Derek Purchase and for the second
year in a row the parent and son team trophy was won
by the Baldwin team.
SHERBORNE SCHOOL ABBEY ROAD SHERBORNE DORSET DT9 3AP
T: 01935 812249 E: [email protected] www.sherborne.org
Photographs: Alexander Davidson (5f), Alex Dunham, Saffron Gallagher, Chris Hamon, Sophie Harris, James Henderson, Nick Henderson, Jim Kimber, Rob Le Poidevin, Louise Litchfield,
Michael McGinty, Nico Morgan Photography, Laurie Phippard, Fiona Reay, Nick Scorer, Judy Thurman, Harry Trump and others.
Registered Charity No. 1081228