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Selfless service to Brisbane Grammar School
Each day in many different ways, parents, Old Boys and other community volunteers are working to improve the educational experience for the boys at BGS.
Every rowing regatta, rugby match, Moogerah working bee, Open Day, music concert, Art Show gala opening and an ordinary day in the Tuckshop – just to name a few – involves countless hours of unpaid labour.
Many hands make light work, but some individuals choose to do the heavy lifting.
Old Boy and past parent Geoff Clarke ’64 and his wife Shirley are two such people, having volunteered hundreds of hours to those particular school activities over the last 25 years. Though their son Scott graduated in 1999, Geoff and Shirley have three grandsons who will attend the School in coming years, and their involvement in the BGS community has become a way of life.
Geoff says that like his Old Boy father, Morris ’39, he was a Life Member of the BGS Old Boys’ Association (BGSOBA), but it was Scott who reignited his connection to the School. When Scott started rowing, Geoff and Shirley were at every regatta and lent their own competitive spirit to putting up the supporters’ marquee. “We used to race the parents from other schools to see who could put their tent up first. BGS always won,” Shirley said.
Geoff has rowed in Masters regattas. His involvement with BGS Rugby also continued beyond Scott’s days at BGS. “Some of my mates’ sons were still at school so I would go along and help with the barbecue,” he said.
Today, Geoff gives his time to the BGSOBA and the Moogerah Support Group. He became OBA President in 2003 and served the maximum three years. Still on the committee, he’s a regular fixture at the Annual Reunion Dinner and mans the BGSOBA stall at BGS Open Days.
Through their family construction business, TC Clarke and Sons, Geoff and Shirley have generously sponsored several School and BGSOBA events. Geoff has also contributed his professional skills to improving the Outdoor Education program at Moogerah for several years.
“I’m in the building game and I enjoy the hands-on working bees. I find out what’s needed for the weekend, load up all the gear on the back of the ute and out we go,” Geoff said. “I’ve made good friends with the Outdoor Education staff. It’s a fun weekend.”
Shirley also has friends through volunteering. She was a Tuckshop Captain when Scott was at school, and 20 years later she and her fellow teammates still meet four times a year for breakfast, lunch or a Christmas function, where they raise money for a charity chosen by that year’s hostess. “I didn’t know anyone when I started,” Shirley said. “But we were all new to Tuckshop, and we had a lot of fun. You only get out what you put in to it.”
When asked why parents should get involved, Shirley’s answer is simple: “Someone did the same thing for my son,” she said. “Before we arrived parents worked to raise funds and create a great culture. I want to pay it forward and see other children benefit.”
The BGS Board of Trustees recognised Geoff’s ‘selfless service’ to the School in 2011, when he was recipient of the Betty Howell Award.
Despite the accolade, Geoff and Shirley’s involvement has never been about winning awards. Geoff didn’t know he had a LinkedIn profile – he says his kids must have put him on social media – but it’s short, in capital letters and to the point: “HARD WORKING FAMILY MAN”.