BARRY
COUNTY SCHOOLS
THE FIRST FOUR DECADES
Mr. EDGAR
JONES,
M.A.
Headmaster,
1899—1933.
The Barry County
School opened its doors on October 1st, 1896. One hundred and eleven pupils
entered the first term. Fifty years, years later the numbers attending the
two Secondary Schools of Barry exceed a thousand.
Although the Welsh
Intermediate Education Act was passed in 1889, it was not till 1894 that the
majority of the Welsh Intermediate Schools were established and those of
Glamorgan for special reasons were not opened until 1896.
But Barry narrowly
missed having a Secondary School. When the Glamorgan County Scheme for the
provision of Intermediate Schools was first published it was discovered that
Barry was left out. A strong protest was made, but at first without result.
It was claimed by the framers of the Scheme that the School at Penarth would
amply suffice for Barry’s needs, and that the Scheme could not be altered.
There were, however, in Barry a band of education enthusiasts of vision and
high ideals who refused to yield. Conspicuous among them were: Mr. John
Lowdon, Dr. Lloyd Edwards, Dr. P. J. O’Donnell, Mr. J. C. Meggitt, Colonel
J. Arthur Hughes, and Captain R. Davies, Dock-master. Through their
persistent efforts a Dual School was ultimately secured, but only for 200
pupils, although the Barry representatives maintained that a provision of at
least 200 places was necessary to meet the needs of the town at that time.
The increase in number of pupils year by year more than justified their
claim.
Unlike Schools in
the rest of Wales which were built by public subscription, the Schools of
Glamorgan were built from County Funds, the local communities having only to
provide a site. How wise Barry was in its selection of a site is being more
and more realised from the standpoint of health and of town development.
The first
headmaster-was the late Mr. H. R. Norris, M.A., LL.B., B.Sc., but he did not
long remain. Among the early members of the Staff were two, Mr. Thomas Keen,
M.A., and Miss A. L. Mountain, Domestic Science and later Senior Mistress,
who gave exceptional service to the School and left an indelible impression
on their pupils. Mr. Keen composed the music of the School Song and laid the
foundation of that excellent modern language teaching which has been such a
marked feature of the Schools to the present day.
Barry has always
had a progressive spirit. In 1899 it shared with Festiniog the distinction
of being a pioneer of the policy of educating Pupil Teachers in a Secondary
School, and of being a forerunner of the Bursar system, which has also
become obsolete.
In December, 1898,
I was appointed Headmaster and commenced duties on St. David’s Day, 1899,
when the number of pupils was 157. My first impression was one of keen
disappointment when I entered the School buildings and was confronted with a
dark narrow corridor, the walls of which were of uncovered common bricks.
Nor was there a Central Hall, a serious defect still unremedied.
Within a year of my
arrival, however, the Glamorgan County Governing Body, as the Education
Committee was then called, decided to enlarge and rebuild part of the
building, thanks chiefly to the efforts of County Councilor Dr. O’Donnell.
In 1900, therefore, we were compelled to seek temporary accommodation and
were fortunate to secure fairly adequate substitutes in two empty unlicensed
hotels in Woodland Road, now occupied by the Y.M.C.A. and the Town Clinic. I
recall that my office had engraved on its windows in large letters, “Jug and
Bottle Department,” to the amusement of staff and pupils.
The enlargements
gave us Chemistry and Physics Laboratories, a Lecture Room, and a slightly
widened Corridor. In 1901 the first additional block was built and formally
opened by Sir George Kekewith, Secretary to the Board of Education. It
consisted of the Gymnasium, the Woodwork Room, two small dining rooms, and
the Caretaker’s house. Two temporary blocks were later added. More than ever
today is there need of a new building worthy of the School.
Several new
members of the staff joined us in
1899,
among them
Miss Gilpin, a very popular Senior Mistress until her marriage to an old
Science and Senior Master, Mr. H. P. Lunn, in 1908,
Mr. A. E. F. Henderson, M.A.; a little
later, Miss Edith Howells, B.A. (now Mrs. Kingston), and Mr. Jenkin James,
Classics Master, upon whom recently the honorary degree of LL.D. was
conferred for his services to the University of Wales, as Secretary of its
Committees.
Several pupils of
this early period have distinguished themselves in various ways. Our first
graduate and our first Civil Servant was W. J. Pryce, who has recently
retired from the Patent Office. One of our most brilliant pupils, the late
Ethel C. Jones, after twice gaining Honourable Mention for the Gold Medal of
the Central Welsh Board, won an Open Scholarship in Somerville College,
Oxford, took a First Class in Modern Languages, was awarded a Research
Fellowship at Somerville, and took her degree of Docteur-ès-Lettres in the
University of Paris.
Another old boy
distinguished himself in quite another direction, D. G. John, the
cartoonist, creator of” Dai Lossin.” The School may well be proud of having
produced two famous cartoonists, John, and some years later, one of wider
reputation, Leslie G. Illingworth, who stands today in the first rank of
British cartoonists, sharing with E. H. Sheppard the honour of the central
cartoons in “Punch,” and brightening with his brilliant drawings the pages
of the “Daily Mail.”
In still another
field, John Lowdon served as Consul General in Cologne, and at the outbreak
of this war in Algiers.
Our buildings may
be crude, crowded and inadequate, but it seems to have little effect on the
success of the School in work and play, a success due to a remarkable
sequence of able and devoted masters and mistresses throughout the years.
The result of their work is partly shown in the records of successes
obtained not only in Scholarships, in School, University and other public
examinations, but also in the distinguished positions to which Old Barrians
have attained in so many varied branches of public activities and in the
cultural and commercial life of the nation. A notable feature of Academic
achievements is the varied character of the subjects in which success has
been attained. In addition to the more usual subjects of Modem Languages,
the Classics, English, History, Mathematics, and Science, marked successes
have been gained in Medicine, Engineering, Economics, Law, Archaeology,
Philosophy, and in such an unusual language as Russian.
In French, the
School has for several years distinguished itself in the Annual Competition
organised by the journal “La France.” On three occasions the School was
placed third in the list of British Schools competing, but in 1937 it was
awarded First Place, a success of which Mr. G. C. Hughes has reason to be
proud. The tradition of Mathematical Scholarships originated by Mr. E. P.
Evans has been admirably maintained by the fine team-work of Mr. Young Smith
and Mr. David Jones, and of University Scholarships in History and in Geneva
Scholarships by a series of great History teachers.
The Academic and
teaching quality of the Staff is also shown by the positions many of them
have filled later in the educational life of Wales and beyond its borders. A
considerable number have proved successful Headmasters and Headmistresses.
Among them were Messrs. Thomas Keen, M.A., Ballahouston Academy, Glasgow;
H.P.Lunn, B.Sc., Yardley School, Birmingham; E. P. Evans, B.A., Caernarvon,
a wizard in teaching mathematics; J. Elwyn James, M.A., Canton, Cardiff,
recreator of the Orchestra after the first World War; J. Morgan, M.A.,
Brecon; H. W. Newcombe, M.A., Abergavenny; Ben M. Jones, M.A., B.Sc.,
Hawarden; Miss Esther E. Morgan, B.A., Barry; Dr. Ellis Lloyd, Cathays,
Cardiff.
On College Staffs,
Mr. Henderson, M.A., became Vice-Principal of the Johannesburg Training
College, South Africa; Mr. David Williams, M.A., has recently been appointed
Professor of Welsh History at Aberystwyth College, and he has been succeeded
as Lecturer in History at Cardiff College by Mr. Ivor B. Powell, B.A. Two
old members who are Lecturers in Welsh at Bangor and Aberystwyth
respectively, Dr. R. Williams Parry and Mr. D. Gwenallt Jones, are not only
Chaired Bards, but are generally regarded as among the greatest Welsh poets
of this generation. Our French Mistress, Miss Annie Ffoulkes, became
Secretary of the University Appointments Board and was editor of the
excellent Welsh Anthology, “Telyn y Dydd.” Dr. D. J. Roberts is now Regional
Director for Wales, Ministry of Works.
Many others deserve
honourable mention, but space prevents my naming only those who have passed
away: T. Davies Williams, B.A., “Tim” to all who loved him and wondered at
his inspiring teaching skill, was to our grief and loss, killed in the last
days of the first World War; his successor, Lowell Rees, a popular old boy,
remembered for his football prowess, also an enthusiastic teacher of
History; one of the best loved and respected masters of all time, E. H.
Davies, scientist, philosopher, athlete, and founder of the first School
Orchestra; E. J. Richards, keen teacher of Welsh and devoted and unselfish
supervisor of the Debating Society; J. C. Carpenter, able French Scholar and
skilled producer of plays; Miss M. L. Peacop, a brilliant French teacher;
and finally, two victims of the present war, Major F. W. Batey and T. E.
Worthington, two Rugby and Cricket enthusiasts. Sorrow for Worthington’s
death in a Japanese prison camp is still fresh and keen; he will be long
remembered for his Spanish scholarship, his teaching ability, his attractive
personality, and for his coaching in Rugby and Cricket of many juniors who
later became the backbone of the first teams
It has been the aim
of the School to develop a full life with a wide range of interests outside
the usual curriculum, in Games, Athletics, Music, Drama, Art Appreciation
and Poetry Reading. It would have been impossible to achieve this aim
without the loyal co-operation and self-sacrificing devotion of the Staff.
In this brochure
others have written of various School activities, but I should like to
emphasise the debt of the School to those stalwarts who have built up and
handed on a tradition in these activities for which the School has so long
been distinguished.
In Cricket, our
debt to Mr. George Young Smith, himself an old boy, is immeasurable. Before
his day, Mr. Keen, Mr. Lunn, and Mr. J. R. Johnson, good cricketers and
great teachers all, had taken an active interest in the School teams. But
every summer for over a quarter of a century, G.Y.S. has spent almost the
whole of his leisure time in coaching young players and supervising games.
Without his enthusiastic aid the unique success of the Eleven in the
Schofield Shield Competition in the early 1930’s would have been impossible.
The School is
similarly indebted to Mr. Fisher for the excellence of its Rugby. He can
well be proud of the three International players the School has produced,
Ronnie Boon, Gus Risman, thrice member of British Rugby League teams to New
Zealand and Australia, and Captain of the recent team, and Dan Evans, who
still plays as skilfully as ever.
Up to the division
of the Schools, Hockey was confined to girls, who were coached by Miss
Esther Morgan, herself a skilful Hockey player and a former captain of the
Cardiff College XI, and Mr. H. Leonard Davies. On Mr. Perkins joining the
Staff he started Hockey among the non-Rugby boys and soon by his enthusiasm
and good coaching brought the team to a high pitch of efficiency, several
members of the team gaining International, Glamorgan County, and Cardiff
College Colours.
Track
Athletics and Cross-Country Running will always be associated with two of
Wales’ greatest athletes, the Olympic hurdler (Athens,
1906), Mr. D. W.
Walters, who served the School so well as Chemistry Master for over
40
years,
and that never-ageing holder of a record number of Championships, Mr. D. J.
P. Richards. Thanks to their efforts the School has produced excellent
athletes, who have distinguished themselves in Inter-school events and later
in Welsh A.A.A. and other Championship meetings.
Nor should
one forget that at two periods in its history the School ran Cadet Ccrps.
About
1904-5
a
Cadet Corps was formed jointly with Pontypridd County School. Our contingent
was under Lieut. H. P. Lunn’s command, and the annual Camps at B2rry Island
were greatly enjoyed. In the first World War, a strong company was formed
under Lieut. G. C. Hughes’s command; its photo now hangs in the corridor.
I have
recently been reading with intense interest some of the early School
Magazines of
1900
onwards. I could not help
comparing their size and format with the large well-produced numbers of
recent years. For more than
25
years Mr. J.
H. Francis has added to his daily task of preserving and raising the high
standard of the English of the School, the responsible and often thankless
work of Editor and Business-manager of the Magazine; he greatly deserves our
gratitude.
The Literary and
Debating Society has a long history. One of its earliest and most eloquent
members is now a Member of Parliament of weight and influence and a leader
of British Jewry, Barnett Janner. The Society has since produced many other
first-rate speakers, among them, Dr. llltyd David, the Reverends Idris
Evans, W. Priestley Phillips, Howard Ingli James and Glynmor John, Gareth
Jones, Gwynfor Evans, and Hrothgar Habakkuk. For many years the late Mr. E.
J. Richards watched its proceedings with fatherly devotion.
When we think
of the Orchestral Music of the School we realise how extremely fortunate the
School has been in having such an exceptional conductor and trainer over a
long period of years as Mr. Christopher Whitehead. The successful series of
Orchestral Concerts, in which were performed most of the best known
overtures, and many of the Symphonies of Mozart, Haydn and two of
Beethoven’s, was a remarkable tribute to his skill, enthusiasm and
persistence. Nor should we forget the pioneer work of Mr. E. H. Davies and
Mr. Elwyn James, who so raised the standard of playing that the Orchestra
won the prize for School Orchestras at the Ammanford National Eisteddfod,
1922.
It was always
a pleasure to see so many of the Staffs playing their part in the Orchestra.
Several
contributors have referred to the Shakesperian Plays as the happiest
memories of their School days. The performances were certainly of an
exceptionally high standard, which is due to a series of excellent producers
as Miss Gilpin, Mr. Lunn, Mr. Carpenter, and Miss Bateman, and to a number
of young actors and actresses of considerable dramatic talent. The names of
Flossie Prichard, one of the School’s most gifted actresses, whose Rosalind
and Katherine seemed to dominate the stage, Betty Morgan, Ben Murrell,
Gwilym Thomas, Noel Morris, Newman David, and that rare comedian, Roger
Price, come vividly to mind. And Mr. H. L. Davies’s artistry and ingenuity
in stage management and scene production made the plays a source of pleasure
to the eye as they were to the ear. My memory goes back to the very first
efforts of the School in the dramatic art. The senior girls performed
“Scenes from Cranford” in
1901,
and in December,
1902,
the
boys produced the ancient farce, “Box and Cox.” The caste was : Mr. Box:
Walter H. Davies; Mr. Cox: E. Guest Habakkuk; and Mrs. Bouncer: Lowell Rees.
Even in Welsh Drama
some excellent performances were given, with Mr. R. Williams Parry as
producer. Many of us still recall with pleasure the moving acting of Dorothy
Jones (now Alderman Dorothy Rees, J.P.) as the mother in “Ble Ma Fe.”
Early in the
history of the School the House system was introduced. The School was
divided at first into three Houses, Baruc, Cadoc, Dyfan, named after local
saints. But after the division in
1913,
a fourth,
Illtyd, was added in the Boys’ School. Their mottoes are: Baruc’s, “The
Utmost for the Highest”; Cadoc’s, “Bydd wir, bydd eirwir, bydd iawn”;
Dyfan’s, “Non sibi sed toti”; Illtyd’s, “Goreu oh y goreu ellir.” House
loyalty has almost rivalled School loyalty, and the struggles between the
Houses in games, sports, and the Eisteddfod have always been most keen and
spirited.
The year
1913
marked an
important date in the history of the School, for the Glamorgan Education
Committee, influenced by Miss E. P. Hughes, M.A., first Principal of the
Cambridge Secondary Training College for Women, decided to divide the
Schools and establish separate Schools for Boys and Girls. At Barry,
therefore, a new Girls’ School was built. In appearance and accommodation it
was a great advance on the old School for it had a Central Hall, the use of
which, thanks to the kindness of the Headmistresses, has often been granted
to the Boys’ School for their Concerts, and joint Dramatics.
Miss C. F.
Lee, M.A., Edinburgh, was appointed Headmistress, and she served the School
wisely and devotedly until compelled to resign through ill-health in
1919. To everyone’s gratification,
Miss Esther Morgan, who had been such an efficient, loyal and popular member
of the staffs of both schools for many years, was appointed to succeed her.
Several women members of the Staff went over to the new School, one of whom,
Miss Madeleine Jones, gave loyal and valuable service for
30
years.
I had long
formed the opinion that the orthodox type of Grammar School education,
leading to Matriculation, was by no means suitable for a large proportion of
our own pupils. I therefore, in
1914,
with the
approval of the Governors and the sanction of the Board of Education,
reorganised the School into what is now called a” Multilateral” School, with
four departments: General, Technical, Commercial, and Agricultural. Although
a member of the Staff, Mr. Walters had thoroughly qualified himself to teach
Agricultural Science, and though I circulated information of the proposed
departments to all farmers within the School area from Llantwit Major to St.
Fagans, only one response was received, so that the Department ceased to
function. The two other new Departments proved generally successful. The
Technical Department under Mr. H. Leonard Davies and Mr. F. J. Kingston,
filled a definite need as long as the engineering shops in the Barry area
were in full operation. We can be proud of the eminent success in
Engineering of many of our old boys who fill positions of great
responsibility in the great engineering establishments of the Empire (vide
lists). The Commercial
Department has been and remains a most valuable part of the life of the
School. It was great good fortune for it to have as its head yet another old
boy, J. W. Lennox. The success of his pupils in Economics in the
Universities and in business has been phenomenal, as a perusal of the lists
shows.
They also
illustrate the great variety of fields of achievement in the Academic world,
in the Civil Service, in Commerce and Industry in which Old Barrians have
gained distinction. Sir Charles Woolley, K.C.M.G., M.C., Governor and
Commander-in-Chief of Cyprus and in the future of British Guiana, heads the
list of a number of Civil Servants; two old boys have reached the rank of
Brigadiers during the recent war: Arthur Felix Williams, D.S.O., M.C.;
Stephen Windsor, M.C. I was informed that T. N. Coslett, who entered the
R.A.F. from School, was for a time, while on special service in America,
Acting Air Vice-Marshal. The
School
Magazine of
1946
proudly records the list of
45
War Decorations and Distinctions, and in this brochure there
is, to our proud sorrow, a long list of boys who have laid down their lives
for their Country in both wars.
The School has sent
out at least 37 Doctors and Dentists, some of whom have gained great
distinction.
It has been a
source of gratification that so many Old Barrians have been appointed to
positions of importance in the service of the town of Barry, as Heads of the
departments of Public Health, and Sanitation, as Borough Engineer, and
Deputy Engineer, as Heads and Assistants of our Primary Schools, and as
members of our Borough Council and of the Glamorgan County Council.
A feature of School
life up to the first World War was the Speech Days, nervous occasions for
Headmaster and all. He gave his report, the Principal Speaker his address,
and the School Choir and Orchestra performed their part generally very
satisfactorily except on one never-to-be-forgotten occasion when the
Orchestra had forgotten to tune up
It is a sad
pleasure to recall the names of distinguished men, now long since dead, who
honoured us with their presence and sought to inspire us with a speech: Sir
John Gorst, M.P., famous politician and President of the Board of Education;
Sir Lewis Morris, a well-known Victorian poet and one of the founders of the
University of Wales; Sir Isambard Owen, first Deputy-Chancellor of the
University, Sir James Hills-Johnes, V.C., hero of the Indian Mutiny, and
later Treasurer of the University (by the way, it was a pleasure to
introduce to this distinguished V.C., another V.C. of the Boer War, Charles
Ward, who as our P.T. Instructor, was in charge of a P.T. squad that night);
Dr. Thomas Jones, C.H., Deputy Chief Secretary to the Cabinet during the
first World War; my revered old Headmaster, Mr. Owen Owen, first Chief
Inspector of the Central Welsh Board; Principals T. F. Roberts, E. H.
Griffiths, A. H. Trow, and Bebb, and my old Latin Professor, Dr. J. Mortimer
Angus, one of the most honoured and best loved men on the staffs of the
University.
But I think that
all who heard it will agree that the most brilliant speech of the series was
that of the “silver-tongued” M.P. for Arfon, William Jones. Those of us who
were in the know were even more amazed than the audience generally. For we
knew that he had less than an hour to prepare his speech. The first topic on
which, as he told us at tea, he was going to speak, would have made him a
most unwelcome visitor to Barry. It was the unwisdom of establishing a
Training College in the town!
My
35
years as Head of the School
was the happiest period of my life, thanks to very likeable pupils, a most
loyal staff and a sequence of wonderful Chairmen, sympathetic and kindly
Governors and helpful Clerks. How fortunate the town of Barry and the School
was to have for
30
years a
Chairman of Governors of the rare quality of Mr. John Lowdon. He combined
vision and wise caution, and his faithfulness was unique; he rarely missed a
meeting of Governors during the whole of his period of office. And he was
succeeded by three men of exceptional ability and of a great sense of public
duty: Colonel J. Arthur Hughes, C.B., C.B.E., Alderman the Rev. D. H.
Williams, M.A., and Alderman Dudley Howe, J.P. To these four my gratitude is
profound for kindness, sympathy, and wise advice. Our new Chairman, the
first lady Chairman, Mrs. Digby Smith, brings to her office a first-hand
knowledge of educational problems, a love of the arts, and a boundless
enthusiasm; I wish her a happy and useful period of office.
I desire also to
express my gratitude to the three Clerks of Governors for their unfailing
assistance and genial courtesy: the first Clerk, Mr. Alfred Jackson, his
successor, Mr. R. Treharne Rees, both of whom served the school faithfully
for many years, and the present Clerk, Mr. E. Guest Habakkuk. It was a
source of gratification to me that the two former Clerks were succeeded by
an Old Barrian, distinguished alike Academically and in School games, who
carries out his duties so efficiently and helpfully.
The continued
successes of the School in Scholarships and Academic distinctions under my
successor, Mr. E. T. Griffiths, have given me pleasure and gratification.
From my heart I wish “Pob llwydd i Ysgolion Sir y Barn.”
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