The Notes - Summer 2020 - Official Journal of the Dunstonian Association

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THE NOTES I SUMMER 2020

Meet our new archives volunteer

Iain Macdowall('81) Goosey House

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When did you leave St Dunstan’s college and what did you end up doing as a career?

I left St Dunstans in 1981. After university I “accidentally” got a job in the Lloyd’s insurance market (like so many others), and have spent the last 30 odd years there.

What is your fondest memory of St Dunstan’s College?

Lunchtimes in Room 4 (that’s the room on the right, just before the link to the dining hall). I won’t bore you with the details – suffice to say that boys will be boys....I also have happy memories of CCF camps.

Who was your most inspiring teacher and what impact did he/she have on your future career?

I have vivid memories of many of the teachers from that era – who could forget ROD Hughes, “Jack” Reynolds or Dai Rees, to name but a few? Whilst I can’t pinpoint one who had a particular impact on my career, I have fond memories of Ken Douie (Head of Lower School) – a very kind-hearted and generous man, Martin Preston who displayed endless enthusiasm and dedication to the school’s theatrical productions, and Peter Thompson who, as well as being an excellent History teacher, was possessed of a very caustic wit. Any sub-standard essays would be forensically (and hilariously) demolished in front of the entire class. Great fun, as long as you weren’t the author of the essay in question....

What prompted you to become a volunteer for the Archives?

I recently cut down to one or two days a week at work, and was keen to find a regular voluntary role. I had already come across SDC’s digital archives online, which I thought were an excellent innovation, so when I saw that SDC was looking for a volunteer archivist it seemed a perfect opportunity to reconnect with the school.

When you visited back the College recently, what is the first memory that sprung to mind?

I think I only visited SDC once between 1981 and 2020, so my recent tour of the school with Isabelle was a real trip down memory lane. Physically, much is unchanged, although a change of ethos since my time there (for the better!) was immediately apparent. While the “main sights” (Great Hall, dining hall etc) were much as I remembered them, a couple of unremarkable places gave me a startling sense of deja vu one was the “alley way” that leads from the changing rooms to the playground, and the other was one of the chemistry labs.

What would be your word of advice to our Year 13 students about to embark on their adult life?

It’s all downhill from here? Perhaps not...I would advise them, however, to maintain the friendships that they have formed at school. In my experience, these will stand the test of time.


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