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ST. MARY'S SCHOOL, CALNE The .sixtieth anniversary of St. Mary·s School, · Caine, was celebrated on Saturday. The ceremonies began with a service of commemoration in the Parish Church with which the school is so closely associated, the sermon being preached by the BISHOP of SHERBORNE, who consented to come in the absence, through illness, of the Bishop of Salisbury. At a meeting in the afternoon the CHAIRMAN of the GOVERNORS (the Archdeacon of Wilts) was in the chai.r. The HEADMISTRESS (Miss Matthews), in her report, referred to the two great influences which, since the school was founded, have played so large a part in its life: the surrounding country: and the close connexion with the Parish Church and its organist, Mr. W. R. PuUein (who has been on the staff of the .school for 47 years). Mr. A. M. DUNNE, K.C., and SIR ERNEST GOWERS spoke. After tea a performance was given by the girl of As You Like It. the Touchstone of a school performance of 50 years ago being among the audience.
I
/
e--
y . . A>
I
s.
MARY'S SCHOOL, CALNE.
1873--1933.
I
J
s.
Mary's
School,
Caine.
1873--1933. 1873.
Opening of S. Mary's School on The Green. Founder and sole Governor for thirty-three years . The Rev . Canon Duncan. Vicar of Caine. Lady Superintendent.
Miss Ellinor Gabriel.
First Headmistress.
Miss Richardson.
1910.
Death of Mrs. Murray ,
1911.
Miss Donaldson Headmistress.
1915.
Miss Matthews Headmistress.
1917.
Addition of S. Prisca's.
1919.
Addition of Playing Fields.
1920.
Addition of present Class Rooms.
1923.
Addition of S. Bridget's. Addition of Jubilee Buildings.
1877.
Miss Jones Headmistress
1925.
Addition of Sanatorium,
1879.
Lady Superintendent.
19 2 7.
Archdeacon Bodington leaving Caine.
1880.
First Endowments.
1883.
Miss Pelis Headmistress .
1928.
Addition of S. Faith's.
1885 .
Miss Leeson Headmistress.
1929.
1886.
Mr. Pullein's Appointment.
New Scheme of Administration sanctioned by the Board of Education.
1888 .
Miss Dyas Headmistress.
1929.
Death of Archdeacon Bodington.
1900.
Death of Miss Ellinor Gabriel.
1933.
Diamond Jubilee Celebrations.
1906.
Appointmen t by Canon Duncan of first Body of Governors.
190 7.
Death of Canon Duncan .
Mrs. Murray.
The Rev. E. J . Bodington Chairman. 1908.
Removal of School to present site. Mr. Dunne joining Governing Body.
Archdeacon Coulter Vicar of Caine.
VISITOR.
HEADMISTRESS.
The Lord Bishop of Salisbury.
RESIDENT STAFF.
GOVERNORS. The Ven. Archdeacon of Wilts.
Miss Matthews, M.A. Cambri dge.
(Chairman.)
Miss E. M. Alexander, Senior Mistress. Miss L. F. Anderson, B.A. O xford.
J.
F. Bodinnar, Esq., J.P.
A. M . Dunne, Esq., K.C. Sir Ernest Gowers, K.C.B., C.B.E. The Marquis of Lansdowne.
Mademoiselle Antoine, Brevet Su perieur. Miss R. F. Frewer, M .A. Oxford . Miss G. M. Grover, F.R.H.S. Miss G. Haywood, Gloucester School of Domestic Science.
The Marchioness of Lansdowne.
Miss M. J. Hendry, Reading University Teaching 0.iploma in Fine Art.
The Bishop of ShE}(borne.
Mtss M. A. James. B.A. Oxford.
Th.~ l,,q~cl
Miss V. James, Final
Warrin~ton. Qf Clyffe..
Sc~ool
of Mathematics, Oxford.
Miss M. L. Jennings, L.R.A.M, Miss C. M. Maclachlan, B.Sc. Edinburgh. Miss D. Mosse, N.F.U . .Miss E. D. Prior, A.R.C.M. Miss A. I. Snell, Bedford Physical Training College.
VISITING STAFF. Mr. W. R. Pullein. Miss Christine Allen, A.R.C.M. Miss E. Pound, L.R.A.M. Miss lsborn. Mrs, Watling. Mr. R. L. Culley.
SENIOR FORM VI.
PRIZE
LIST , 1933 .
Head of the Sc hool. (give n by the Ven. A rchdeacon of Wilts.) M . Ogle Classics. (given by the Rev. Hugh Duncan .) M . E. Wilson. French . (given by Mr. Dunne.) M . E. Wilson.
PROGRAMME. 3.0 Speeches.
History. (given by Lady Lansdowne.) V. M. Armstrong.
The Chairman.
(given by Mrs. Bodington, in memory of Archdeacon Bodington,) F. C. Leigh-Mallory. LOWER VI. Form Prizes. (given by Sir Ernest Gowers.) S. W. Goodden. C. A. Hall. (g iven by Mrs. Dunne .) W . M. Heath. W . Osman-Jones. MUSIC.
(given by Miss Jennings.) (given by Miss Prior.)
ART.
B. M. Kirke . E. M . Minnis.
Report of Headmistress. Presentation of Prizes by :- A. M. Dunne, Esq., K.C. Sir Ernest Gowers, K.C.B., C.B.E. J. F. Bodinnar, Esq., J.P.
B. M. Brooke.
GENERAL KNOWLEDGE. Senior (gi ven by the Headmistress) V. M. Armstrong. Junior. M. F. Glynn.
OLD
GIRLS,
1933.
CAMBRIDGE UNI V ER S ITY. M. F. Hort Modern and Mediaeval Lan guage Tripos. Part I. Class 11. Division I. B. M. Rice.
Historical Tripos. Part I. Class 11 , Divis ion I.
4.0 Tea. 4.40
"As You Like It."
FORM OF SERVICE IN
"
Commemoration of the Sixtieth Anniversary
OF
S. MARY'S SCHOOL, CALNE. 24th
JUNE, 1933.
路 " Whatsoever He saith unto you, do it."
The School Hymn. " Consider the Lilies."
ORDER OF SERVICE. . Hymn No. 165 (A. and M.) "Lord, Thou hast been our refuge from one generation to another."
0 Goo , our help in ages past, Our hope for years to come. Our shelter from the stormy blast, And our eternal home.
A thousand ages in Thr sii:ht Are like an evening gone ; Short as the watch that en ds the ni ght Before the r ising snn .
Beneath the shadow of Thy Throne Thy Saints have dwelc secure; Sufficient is Thine Arm alone, And out· defence is sure.
Time, like an e'•er-rolling s tream , Bears all its sons away ; Thev fly forgotten, as a dream Dies at the opening day.
Before the h ills in order stood, Or earth received her frame, From everlasting Thou art Goo, To endless years the same.
O Goo, our help in ages past, Our hope for years to come , Be Thou our guard while troub les last , And our eternal home. Amen.
The Archdeacon of Wilts will say:-
'\Ve are met here to commemorate in humble thankfulness before Almighty God the sixtieth year of the life of our School of the Blessed Virgin Mary in this place, in faith and hope that He will accept this our work in the fut.u re as in the past, and help us to make the school ever more and more a place of sound learning, Christian education, and happy life. Let us pray for His grace and blessing.
Child of the Church, upon thy forehead wearing T he virgin flower of i\Iary, 1\fother mild , T hyself like her God ' s handmaid thus declaring Obedient, humble, true and undefiled, Like her thy Master's joy and sorrow sharing, Be faithful unto death , S. Mary's child.
C hil d of the Church, when friends and fortunes fail Th ee, T ake up H is cross and let His will be done. Thy foes press on all eager to assai l thee, Look up , ere ni ght the battle shall be won . What in the crash of battle can avail thee? Nothing but this, the faith of Christ, her Son .
S . Mar y's Child , like the white lily growing , The Holy One of Israel watcheth thee , The Sunshine of His presence round thee throw ing Thy shad ow in the noontide fury He , Sweetness and grace and uprightness bestowing And most of all His spotless purity.
Words b31 R. E . D. Donaldson. Music b31 W. R . Pullein.
Commemoration of Founders. Let us remember with thanksgiving and honour before God, John Duncan Penelope Frances Murray Ellinor Gabriel Eric James Bodington who by their joint works founded this school. Rest Eternal grant to them, 0 Lord, and may light perpetual shine upon them. Silence. Hymn 5 51 (A. and M.) •• The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the Love of God, and the communion of the Hol31 Ghost be with 31ou all."
i\lay the g race of CHRIST our SAVIOUR, And the Father's boundless love, With the HOLY SPIRIT 'S favour, Rest upon us from above.
Thus may we abide in union With each other and the LORD, And possess in sweet communion, ] oys which earth cannot afford. Amen.
Our Father: 0 God, the source of all Light and Love, the giver of all good gifts, we beseech thee to bless and prosper the work of this school with the fulness of Thy Holy Spirit. Grant to the Governors, the Headmistress, and all who work with her, wisdom and devotion that they may set Thy holy will ever before them, and that their labours may be of service to the children now in their care and to . those that shall come after, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. Psalm XV.-Domine, quis habitabit? Lord, who shall dwell in Th y Tabernacle ; or who shalf rest upon thy holy hill? 2. Even he that leadeth an uncorrupt life : and doeth the thing which is right , and speaketh the truth from his heart .
4. He that setteth not by himself , but is lowly in h is own eyes; and maketh much of them that fear the Lord. 5. He that sweareth unto his neighbour. and dis appo in teth him not: though it were to h is own hindrance.
3. He that hath used no dece it in his tongue, nor done evi l ta his neighbour; and hath not slandered his neighbour.
6. He that hath not given h is money upon us ury ; nor taken reward against the innocent. 7. Whoso doeth these things: shail ne,·er fali.
The Lesson·-Ecclesiasticus xliv, 1-15,
Then shall the Preacher (The Bishop of Sherborne) proceed to the pulpit and shall say '· The Bidding Prayer. Ye shall pray for Christ's Holy Catholic Church throughout the world, especially for the Church of England and for the provinces in communion with it over the seas; for the King's Most Excellent Majesty, and all the Royal Family; for the Ministers of God's Holy word and Sacraments, especially for Cosmo, Archbishop of this Province of Canterbury, for St. Clair, Bishop of this Diocese of Salisbury, and for the Priests and Deacons thereof, particularly for the Archdeacon of Wilts and the Vicar and Clergy of this Parish of Caine ; for all who take part in the work of the Church, but especially in its colleges and schools, among which you shall particularly make mention of our school of S. Mary, in close connection with this Church, and for all who labour or have laboured therein. Ye shall pray also for the King's Government, for the High court of Parliament and for all local governing bodies, especially for the Mayor and Corporation of this ancient borough; that all these may live in the faith and fear of God and in diligent service to their country. Ye shall pray also for the peace of the World, that the peoples may be free to pursue the spiritual life. Finally let us thank God for the holy lives and good examples as well as the good deeds of all men and women who have lived and worked in this place in the Christian way of life, such as were Robert Grosstete, Archdeacon of Wilts, and Edmund Rich, both Rectors of Caine and Treasurers of Salisbury Cathedral in their day and generation, and many others, praying that we like them may follow Christ and be made like unto Him, that hereafter we with them and they with us may enter into His unending joy, through Jesus Christ our Lord, in whose words let us sum up our petitions, saying Our Father. (Please turn over)
The Sermon. Hymn 298 (A. and M.) "Praise the Lord, 0 m.v soul; and all that is within me praise His Hol.v Name. "
PRAISE, my soul, the King of Heaven, To His feet thy tribute bring ; Ransom'd, heal 'd, restored, forgiven, Evermore His praises sing; Alleluia! Alleluia ! Praise the everlasting King .
Father-like, He tends and spares us, Well our feeble frame He knows ; In His hands He gently bears us; Rescues us from all our foes ; Alleluia! Alleluia! Widely yet His mercy flows .
Praise Him for His grace and favour To our fathers in distress ; Praise Him still the same as ever, Slow to chide, and swift to bl ess ; Alleluia! Alleluia 1 Glorious in His faithfulness.
Angels in the height, adore H im ; Ye behold Him face to face ; Saints triumphant, bow before Him, Gather'd in from everr race ; Alleluia! Alleluia! Praise with us the Goo of grace. Amen .
For the Past and Present Members of this School. We beseech Thee, 0 God, remember all those who have gone out from us into the world; pour out upon them Thy Holy Spirit to strengthen, guide and purify them, that giving themselves up to Thy service, they may reign with Thee in life everlasting, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
We give Thee humble and hearty thanks, 0 merciful God, for the lives and examples of all who have served Thee in this school; for their high ideals and aspirations; for their cheerfulness and courage; for their steadfastness and self-sacrifice. We praise Thee for the heritage into which we have entered, and pray Thee to make us worthy to maintain and strengthen all that is good in our traditions. May the spirit of loyalty and devotion bind us all more closely together, may Thy wisdom guide and prosper all our life here, that we may grow in the love of all that is true, honest, lovely and of good report. And when we go out into the world may we carry with us the ideal and the power of service, Amen. which Thou dost give us in Thy Son, Jesus Christ our Lord. 0 Eternal Lord God, who boldest all souls in life : We beseech Thee to shed forth upon Thy whole Church in Paradise and on earth, the bright beams of Thy light and heavenly comfort; and grant that we, following the example of those who have loved and served Thee here and are now at rest, may at the last enter with them into the fulness of Thine unending joy, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
The Blessing. Then shall be sung as a solemn act of Thanksgiving to Almighty God for so mercifully preserving the life of this school, The Te Deum. The Congregation will please remain in the Church till the School has passed out.
S. MARY'S SCHOOL, CALNE.
"AS YOU LIKE IT."
June 22nd and 24th, 1933.
[Repr inted from " The Wiltshire Gazette," June 29th, 1933.]
ST. MARY'S SCHOOL, CALNE. Diamond Jubilee Commemoration. GREAT GATHERING OF PAST SCHOLARS AND FRIENDS. Interesting Story of Crises Overcome. BISHOP OF SHERBORNE'S ADDRESS. The diamond jubilee of St. Mary's School, Caln e was celebrated on :Saturday with a ser vice of t h ank sa'.v ing in the parish church, followed by the prize distribution in a marquee in the school grounds. It was a big day for th e sch ool, and the proceedings lasted from noon until the earl y part of the evening. The school was founded in 1873 .by the l ate Rev . Canon Duncan , vicar of Caine . who for 33 years was t h e sole governor. As will be seen by tlhe r emarks of Mr. A. M. Dunne, one of the aovernor s the school has h a d it .ups and downs, b ut fo r n~w pra ctically 20 years it ha s become firmlv established as a high-class l ad :es' school, the number of scholars being 111, of whom 88 are boa rders. So far as is known, there was no one present at Saturd ay's festivities who attended tlhe opening of the school, but there was a link that connected with 60 years ago by the presence of Mrs. Whitehead, wife C!f Bishop Whitehead, who spent so many years m Incha . DAUGHTER OF THE FOUNDER. Mrs. Whitehead is a da ughter of Can on Duncan, and came to r enew h er acquaintance both -w ..th the school and old friends. There was a very large number of parents of presentday s0holars presel!t from all parts of the country, and a good m a ny old girls attended, some who had left a year or so, a nd others who had left for more than a decade. It was a happy m eeting ground for :Qenewing old friendships, a nd also for m aking n ew ones. The ar r a ngem ents for the day were capitally made under the direction of Miss Matthews, the h ead路mistress fo r the pa-st 18 years, to whom high tribute was paid, and to whom , without the slightest shadow of doubt, t h e su ccess of the school in r ecent years os p r incipa lly due. What 5t. Mary's would be without Miss Matthews at i ts head it is impossible to imagine, and though 18 y ea rs is a fair span, the fervent hope of all is that she will be s pared to preside over St. Mary's for at least another 18 years. The school has a resid ent staff of 14 mistresses, besides six members of the v'siting staff; the senior mistress is Miss E. M. Alexander. who ha s been at the school for a good many years, and whose loyalty and devo tion h as gained the esteem of both parents a nd scholars. An in-
t eresting fact m entioned during the day was that )fr ._ W. R. Pullein (the organist of the parish church) has been connected with St. Mary's for 47 year s . Tha t is, of course, before the m embers of the present staff were even born, bu t Mr. Pullein '.s still fu ll of youtlh and vigour. The governors are :-The Ven. Archdeacon of Wilts (chairman), Mr. J . F. Bodinnar , J.P., Mr. A. M. Dunne, K.C., Sir Ernest Gowers, K .C.B ., C.B.E., The Marquess of Lansdowne, the March:Oness of Lansdowne, th e B ishCJiP of Sherborne, Lord Warrington of Clyffe.
Thanksgiving Service. During the morning merry ~eals were rung on the church bells, and the thanksgiving ~er颅 vice was held a t noon, tJhe church bem" crowded . Parents and friends first assemblecf, and just prior to the commencement of t h e serv'.ce the girls, all uniformly attired. filed in. They were h eaded by the head fj'irl (M. Ogle) carrying t h e school ba nner, fo llowed by M. E. Wilson and V. Armstrong, ea ch of whom carried la urel wreaths which wer e pla<:ed en the m emorial tablets to Archdeacon B odmgton and C-anon Duncan. Then the girls took their places in the sea t s rese r ved for them, and choir and clergy, h eaded by the warden s (Messrs. E. Pound and R . S,. Heath . t h e latter acting for Mr. R . P. R edman ), entered the church, the hymn " O God, ou r help路" being sung a s the processional. In a ddjtion to th e B ...shop of Sherborne, the clergy (robed ) included Archdeacon J . W. Co ulter, R evs. A. Browne a nd T. Johnson (Cal n e, t he la t ter carrying the pa storal staff), R evs. C . P arry Okeden (H anwortb , Middlesex), F. L . Bl athwayt (Dyrham ), A. Ogle (East Ilsley, B erks), E . Cross (Ea st Knoyle). E. F. H all (iLeus don, Devon), C. Palmer (Christ church, Bra dford-on-Avon), and I. G. Cameron (Mere). After tJh e h ym.n the Arohdeacon, who conduct ed the service, said :" We a~路e m et h ere to comm em orate in humble thankful ness before Al mighty God the sixtieth yea r of the life of our Sch ool of the Blessed Virgin Mary in th:s place, in fa~th and hope that H e will accept this our work m th e future as in the past, and help u s to m ake the sc~ool ever more and more a place of sound lea rning,
DRAMATIS PERSONAE. THE DUKE, living in banishment.
M. N. E. Mansergh.
DUKE FREDERICK. his usurper. AMIENS } JA QUES
M. C. Parry-Okeden. B. M. Brooke.
in attendance on the banished Duke. V. M. Armstrong.
LE BEAU
A. B. Carver.
CHARLES, wrestler to Duke Frederick.
B. R. Leigh-Mallory.
}sons o f s路ir ORLANDO (in love with Rosalind) Roland de Bois.
S. W. Goodden.
ADAM, faithful servant to Orlando
K. R. Macaulay.
I.
DANCE-four Greek Studies.
2.
DANCE
3.
DANCE-The Forest Gnomes.
4.
SONG-" Under the Greenwood Tree."
Arne.
5.
SONG - " Blow, blow, thou winter wind."
Arne.
6.
DANCE-Stanes Morris.
7.
DANCE - Hymen.
8.
DANCE - Chelsea Reach.
Sarabande for Two.
M . Ogle.
OLIVER (in love with Celia)
TOUCHSTONE. a Court fo9l.
D . E. Bradford.
CORIN, an old Shepherd
L. B. M . Wollen .
SILVIUS, a young Shepherd in love with Phebe .
D. E. Waller.
ROSALIND, (alias Ganymede) daughter to the banished Duke. F. C. Leigh-Mallory. CELIA, daughter to Duke Frederick. PHEBE, a Shepherdess.
R. Aldworth. D. C. M. Maitland.
T. H Bridgman.
AUDREY, a country wench. HYMEN.
K. B. Bulmer.
LEADERS OF THE DANCE
E. M. Minnis. A. P. Sadler.
LORDS AND LADIES. FORESTERS.
COUNTRY FOLK. GNOMES.
[Repr int ed from " The W ilt sh ire Gazette," June 29th, 1933.)
ST. MARY'S SCHOOL, CALNE. Diamond Jubilee Commemoration. GREAT GATHERING OF PAST SCHOLARS AND FRIENDS. Interesting Story of Crises Overcome. BISHOP OF SHERBORNE'S ADDRESS. 'l' he diamond jubilee of St. Mary's School, Caine was celebrated on :Saturday with a service o'f thanksg'.ving in the parish church, followed by the prize distribution in a marquee in the school grounds. It was a big day for the school, and the proceedings lasted from noon until the early part of the evemng. The school was founded in 1873 by the late Rev. Canon Duncan, vicar of Caine. who for 33 years was the sole governor. As will be seen by tJhe remarks of Mr. .A. M. Dunne, one of the go,·ernors, the school has had it •ups and downs, but for now practically 20 years it has become firmlv established as a high-cl<ass lad :es' school, the number of scholars being 111. of whom 88 are boarders. So far as is known, there was no one jJre ent at Saturday's festivities who attem eel the opening of the school, but there was a link that connected with 60 years a~o by the presence of Mrs. Whitehead, wife ~f B1sh~p Whitehead, who spent so many years rn Indrn. DAUGHTER OF THE FOUNDER. Mrs. Whitehead is a daughter of Canon Duncan, and came to renew her acquaintance both· w ..th the school and old friends. There was a very large number of parents of presentday s-::holars preEel!t from all i:tarts of the co untry, and a good many old guls attended, some who had left a year or so, and others who had left for more than a decade. It was a happy meeting ground for ~newing old friendships, and also for making new o.nes. The arrangements for the day were capitally made under the direction of Miss Ma tthews, the head·mistress for the past 18 years, to whom high tribute was paid, and to whom, without the slightest shadow of doubt, the success of the school in recent years :s princi.J?llllY due. What t. Mary's would be \vithout Miss Matthews at its hea d it is impossible to imagine, and though 18 Years is a fair span, the fervent hope of all is that she will be spared to preside over St. Mary's for at least another 18 years. The school has a resident staff of 14 mistresses, besides six members of the v:siting staff; the senior mistress is Miss E . M. Alexander. who has been at the school for a good many years, and whose loyalty and devotion has gained the esteem of both parents and scholars. An in-
teresting fact mentioned during the day was that Mr. W . R. Pullein (the organist of the parish church) has been connected with St. Mary's for 47 yea.rs. That is, of course, before the members of the present staff were even born, but Mr. Pullein :s still full of youth and vigour. The governors are :-The Ven . Archdeacon of Wilts (chairman), Mr. J. F. Bodinnar, J.P .. Mr. A. M. Dunne, K.C., Sir Ernest Gowers, K.C.B., C.B.E., The Marquess of Lansdowne, the March '.oness of Lansdowne, the Bishop of Sherborne, Lord Warrington of Clyffe.
Thanksgiving Service. During the morning merry [leals were rung on the church bells, and the thanksgiving service was held at noon, tJhe church bein" crowded. Parents and friends first assem blecf. and just prior to the commencement of the serv'.<:e the girls, all uniformly atti.red. filed in. They were headed by the head girl (M. Ogle) carrying the school banner. followed by M. E. Wilson and V. Armstrong, each of whom carried laurel wreaths which were placed en the memorial tablets to ATchdeacon Bodington and Ca non Dunca n. Then the girls took their places in the seats r eserved for them, and choir and clergy, headed by the wardens (Me~srs. E . Pound and R. S.- Heath. the latter a ctrng for Mr . R. P. Redmau), entered the church, the hymn " O God, our h elp " being sung as the processional. In addition to the B .shop of Sherborue, the clergy (robed ) included Archd eacon J. W. Coulter, Revs . .A. Browne and T. J ohnson (Calne, the latter carrying the pastoral staff), Revs. C . Parry Okeden (Hanworth, Middlesex), F. L. Blath wayt (DyTham, A.. Ogle (East Ilsley, Berks), E . Cross (East Knoyle). E. F. Hall (iLeusdon, Devon), C. Palmer (Christ church, Bradford-on-.-lvon), and I. G. Cameron (Mer e). After tJhe hymn the Arohdeacon. who conducted the servi ce, said :"'We al'e met h ere to commemorate in humble thankfulness before Almighty God the sixtieth year of the life of our SchC!ol of the Blessed Yirgin Mary in th 's .Place, m fITT:th and hope tJhat He will accept this our work m the future as in the past, and help us to make the scl!-ool ever more and more a place of sound learnmg,
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lJhr1stian ·ectucation ,and hajppy 111e. .LJLe 15th Psalm followed, and the lesson from Ecclesiastes, xliv., "Let us now praise famous men," was read by the Rev. E. Cross. The school hymn " Consider the liLes" (the mu sic of w'hich was by Mr. P ·ullein, who was at the organ ) was sung, the girls themselves singing the second verse, and afterwards there was the commemoration of founders, in the following words:-" Let us remember with thanksgiving and honour before Goel, John Duncan, Penelcwe - Frances Murray, Ellinor Gabriel, Eric Jam es Boclington, who by the: r joint works founded this school. Rest Eternal grant to them, 0 Lord, and ma.y ligiht perpetual shine upon them." &ilence was observed for a brief space, broken by the hymn " May the grace of Christ our Saviour," sung kneeling. THE BISHOP'S ADDRESS,
The Bishop of Sher·b orne then proceeded to the pulpit and saia the Bidding Prayer, afterwards preaching. His text was:" 0 pray for the peace of Jerusalem: they shall prosper that love thee. Peace be within thy walls: and plenteousness within thy palaces. For my brethren rand companions' sakes I will wish thee prosperity. Yea, because of the house of the Lord our God I will seek to do t hee good."-Ps. 122, 6-9. The Bish~ said :These words come to us from a far country and· from a far past. The psalm is a meditation made during a Jewish festival. The fir st verse expresses the author's joy when he is invited to go to the feast; the verses tha.t follow tell us of his exultation at finding himself once more in the holy city; the text is a prayer and a request for prayer on behalf of the city itself. Many of you !have come,_ I know, from great distances to join in this haµpy commemorat'on. You have, I dare say, been counting the cla.y s and hours till you should find yourselves once more in this well-remembered place, and now that you are here vou cannot look again upon this Church and Selhool without exper :encing a quickening of the pulse, a pure and otherworldly jov. 'Dhat is natural; perhaps more th-an natural. The reverence for holy places is an inst-net widespread, if not universal, in the human race. We find it both in the old and in the modern world; it is common to Pagan and Christian alike. The pride of Greece in "shinino- Athens," the awe and (sometimes litera l) ';;doration of " immortal Rome/' find the:.i· counte1·part with us in our devot10n tu our spiritual homes. But now1h ere has this love of the holy place been more deeply-rooted than in Jewry and J erusalem. -othing coul d, or can, oblite"rate the 1p assionate loyal t y of the Jewish race to Zion. Exile and separa t10n served but to intensify it. " By the waters of Babylon we sat do-w n and wept, when we remembered thee, 0 Zion "; " if I forget thee, O Jerusalem .. " At this day it is as strong and vocal as ever it was. And surely we can claim that this powerful and pathetic instinct,_ bhi s emotion so vivid and selfless, f elt and cherished by so ~any of the noblest. and most gifted of mankind is a charactenst _c. of lliuman nature a.t its b~st. Rave we not the highest of all sanctions? Devotion to Jerusalem has been consecrated for ever, consecrated in sorrow by our Lord Himself. "vVhen He was come near, He beheld the city and wept over it." The devotion that was our Lord's in sorrow may be ours in joy. We may pray_ fo r peace, while He foretold destruction, and ::n so domg we may find a blessing for ourselves. " 1 hey shra ll prosper that love Thee "-the words rmg true. We think poorly of anyone who is chs_loyal to his or her institutions: we hold, and with good reason that such disloyalty is a sign of somethino- ~adically wrong iu the character. Sudt thou~hts are far from our minds to-day. " Rejoice" ye with Jerusalem and be glad with her . all ye that love her." But we hasten to remind ourselves that th is devotion to holy places, for which we venture to claim the blessiDc~ o! God and the .".xa•mpl~
of our Lord l:Lmselt, 1s no mere sentfmen a attachment to beautiful scenery or venerable stones. It is not lovelin ess of nature or splendour of arehit".cture that expla ins or justifies the local l oyalties of Pagan, Jew , or Christian. " For my brethren and companions' sakes 1 will wish thee presperity ." It is, after al l. not things but persons that ench·ain the human sp:rit. lt was for the sake of their personal associations that the writer of our psalm loved and prayed for the palaces of Zion. There it was in former ages that kings of the house of David ruled and priests of Aaron's line performed the service of the sanctuary. The glorious memories of the great ones of the past sprang to his mind and clutched his heart as he looked a~a'.n u,p on the royal city, the place which God nad chosen to put His name there. Nor is it otherwise with us. Already in this service we have rendered thanks to God for the lives and examples of all men and women who hwve lived and worked in this place in the Christian way of 1".fe ; and among them we have mentioned two-Robert of Lincoln anrl Edmund Archbishop of Canterbury, whose names will live for ever in the 1history of our country. They rest from their labours long since, but their love and their prayers are with u s still. Nor has the desire of their hearts for this place been unfulfilled. The Psalmist speaks not only of the past, but of the present and the future. "For m y brethren and companions' sak es." He had joyfully accepted the invitation of his friend s to go up to Jerusalem; he had found many more when he arriver! there. His delight when he found himself within the !holy precincts would have been im1p ossible without the greetings and the sympathy of his companions. So with you. One main element, I cannot doubt, in your happiness is the renewal of intercourse with old friends. School friendships (I speak that I do know) are among the most precious g'fts of life. Cultivate and cherish them, you who are still here; o-uard t4em and keep them when you have leh u s. It is, I suppose, inevitable in these overcrowded days, that in some cases -probably, alas, in most-there should come a "drifting apart." But you will be unfortunate if some, perhaps only one or two, of your School friendships do not endure for life. BeLeve me, friendships made at school and college can a.nd do become a lasting and eternal union of souls, which is indeed a, strength and stay in life's battle, " a sweet refreshment " in the dust and heat. It has always seemed to me that one of the special virtues of a school commeIQoration consists in this, that it gives to our lives the right perspect:ve. Just as the author of this psalm takes past and present and future into his purview, so we see ourselves, "at such a time as this," privileged for a brief moment to receive the torch of knowledge and to pass it on to those that come after. It is our part a nd duty to see that it suffers no risk of extinction as it passes through our ha nds. To-day we look back over 60 years of growth and of ach.'.evement. Vast changes have passed over the world '.ill that half century and more since this School was founded-changes political, social, and economic. A greater contr3st can harcUy be ima.g ined than that which lies between the deep Victorian peace in which this school was founded and these stormy and harassed times, when it seems as though all the foundations of the earth are out of course. · Yet through it all , the hand of God has brnught us to this present and will lead u s on. 1t is ours to pra.y and work for the generations yet to come for the cause of Ohristian learning in th is dear country, where true religion and sound learning h a,ve ever gone hand in hand. It was an observation of Edmund Burke in !his "Reflexions on the Devolution of France" that "people w :11 not look forward to posterity who never look back on the past." 'l'"o -day we do ·both, and for the sake of our compamons, for the sake of those who are ~·et for to come
we pray . that their efforts and ours may not be in ,-a m. h' . . h \i at ural bea u ty, '.ston e memones" umau t'- all these th e 1h1ll of Z10n h ad ill ab unlies-;;;; yet it wa s no t for th ese a lone that the c antm'i st lo,-ed h er. " Because of the house of r~a Lord O LLI' God I will seek to do thee good." Zi~n wa s not only a fai r place but a holy place. -. 11 and bulwark s . t owers and palaces, were ~\ rbe circum feren ce. of h er Lfe. Its centre w~ s t he san ctua .r.,-. the mner s hnne where dwelt in awfu l and silent mai esty the God of Isr~el. The . I saiah sa w Hllll r eign. Then ce Ezekiel sa,/him depart and thither r eturn. 'o ·thly ci ty is complete without i ts. t e.mple, 1 ~~ sc hoo l wi t h out its ~an ctuary. This cs, . or sh ould be, tb e focal po mt of its sp1ntual life, the glo wing hearth . from '~h ich the da~ly ·outine may r eceive illumma.tion a nd true d i~1 ·t I will not att empt t o clescnbe the fee tf~Js· or the m em ories which th:s &a n ctu ary e>~kes in you, but I would ask l.ou tR con~~der how you can se.ek to do you r Z10n go~~l , to become in the literal sen se of the word b!lnefactors" of yo ur School. I put tw o suggest10ns t~ -ou The fir st concerns the things of the mi~d. · Of all ordinary departme~ts . of a sc hool life the intellectua l . tandard is rn comparably tihe most i m portant. For a low rntellec tua l standard n oth :·ng. can compensat e, neither efficiency, n or o~·ga n : sat10 n, nor a thle~ic di stinction, nor auytlung else. Nor i ~ its maintenance simply the . affa ir of a ..few; it depends on just two t hrngs, the a biL t v and the keenn ess of all wh o teach and of a 11 who are ta ught i n school. Of this I am very sureand my life rhas brought me , and still keel?s me. in close touch wi t h schools- t1:1at t h ere is no hi "'h er ser >ice (except one) which you can r ende ~ to your Sch ool t~an to do all tl:~ at i_n you lies t o show .bhat. in a school which is whol l v hers the Ii.ston e Ch·u rch of our l ancl can ma intain and develop a n i~1tell ectual standard that is second t o none rn the countr:y. Ther e is one higher serv1ce still , anc! that i s to h old loya lly and to commend q m etly . tJh e faith that you hav e learned . her e. There is a. r eal clan"'er that sch ool . religion . may b~corue exclu si vef v connect ed with school. Don t let it all go ·: n the holidays. (You parents can help or hiucler u s here more than I can say.) Dgu't let your r eligion go when you leave. but take it with you and 1pass it on . That is the high est good you ca n do to .vour J erusalem. To u s, a s Christia ns, all h ol y places are syml::-Olic. They represent t o u s. not the ol,1 J e~·u salem that now is. b.ut the Jerusalem wlh1ch is above" a n d "free and the mother of u s all," "th e city tha t hath foundations whose builder
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and maker :s Goel." Those foundation-s are laid too deep those tower s a.r e built too strong, for a ny cha:h.ge to overs.e ~. Of that hea_venlS: ci tv we have h er e a visible counterpa1t, as little unworthy as a visible ~o.unterpar.t can be. Yet while we love a nd re301 ce i!l t his our earthly city, we dare nut forget tha t its P'!- ttern is laid lLP :n heaven; tJhat there a ~one i s the true home of the soul, there alone is the tr~e goal of our pilgrimage, as B ernard of Morla1x has put it in words that haunt the m emory: 0 home of fa deless splendour, Of flowers that bare no thorn , Where they shall dwell as children ' Vl10 h ere as exiles mourn. Where wisdom knows no limit. Wher e knowledge has no bound, _ The beautific vision shall gl a d the sarnts around. P rayers were offered for the past a nd pre~ent m ember s of the school, and after the Bless:n g, the T e Deum was sung t o Smart's setting ,as a n act of t h a nksgi vi ng to Goel for so mercifully presei'..-ing t he life of the school.
The Prize Distribution. Luncheon in the school grounds was followed by the di stribu t ion of prizes, .A.rchcleacon Coulter presided, SUJppor ted by Sir Ernest Gowers and Mr. A. M. Dunne, K.C. (governors), ancl Miss Matthews. 'I'h e ,p roceecliigs were h eld beneath a large marquee, which was filled with the schola r s, paren ts, and friends. Ham ~qll h ea.)•ily during the earl y p art of the ga thering, and ma n y u m brellas were perforce opened, but a fter a while it abat ed. THE CHAIRMAN . Th e Ch airman, in opening the procee dings, a pologised for the absen ce of the B :-s h op of Salisbury, who woulcl h ave preached the sermon at the t h a nksgiving service, .b u t they all knew the r eason the Bishop wa s not present. They wer e grateful to the Bish op of Sherborne for takin g his pla ce at some inconvenience. The Ma rquess and Marchioness of Lansdowne were a lso unable to attend, bu t they wer e glad lo know that Lord Lan sdowne W'3S going on very well. Lord Warri ngton of .Clyffe and Mr. J. F. Boclinnar also apolog:sed for absence. Proceedin g, the .A.rchdeacon said his duty on behalf of the govern ors was to welcome them all there on t h at h appy, if wet, afternoon, to mark the 60th anniYersary of t h e founding of the school. H e did not know if there wa s anybody present who co uld remember the actua l opening of the school. H e himsel f could not claim such knowledge, a s wh en t he sch ool was found ed he was not old enou gh to know what wa s going on in Caine or in any school at all; : n fact, he was blissfu lly ign orant of wha.t was before him (laughter); hut if n obody pr esent could r em ember the opening of the school t her e were, at all even ts, a few people in Oa lne who could, a nd he had discovered th is week t hat the man who was a cu r ate in Ca lne a t the time was still alirn-~r. Godley, who was in Caine from 18715, and who was still r ector of a p a r :sh in Dorset. As schools went, theirs might not sou nd a long t ime. but they could claim tha t the 60 years h ad been a n honourable age, and .they could be proud of the sch ool's history, chequered though that history had been. The story of the: r past was unusu al a n d inspiring. The sch ool was born in Ca lne and h ad continued in it ever sin ce. The outside world might not think i t was a great distinction to be born in Caine, but a great man once cla.'me d Caine as his birthplace, t hough he was r eally born in London and he knew it. That was Charles La mb, of whom the Archdeacon told one or two humorou s st ories relative to the pla ce of his birt h and who had said " I sha ll be born in whatever place seems good unto me" (laughter). At any rate Caine was the birthplace of St. Ma r y's School, w1hich wa s born in the fertile and far seeing brain of Canon Dlll1can. He desired to pay his tribute of gratitutle a nd admiration for the work Canon Dunca n did, not only in conn ection with the school but in the work of the church and parish genera lb-. Some of them r emembered him very wefl. Ee often envied his great gifts of organisa tion and determinat',on. H e a lso envied lhim in another r espect. He was told th at if Canon Dunca n wanted £300 for any ,p articular obj ect he went out after lunch and when h e got ba ck for tea h e carried hom e with hjm three cheques for .£100 each. H e was happy in having thr ee chan cellor s of the exch equer. Canon Duncan was the founder of the school, a nd for 30 yea rs h e watch ed assiduously over it . Trhen the school m'ght be said to have been r efounded by his _immediate predecessor. Archdeacon E. J . B oclrngton, who was very deeply interested in education, a nd who was a man of vision. His \ name woullcl always be inseparablv conn ected with t1:1e school (applause). He was fortu~ate :n h a ,·rng a Clhancellor of the exchequer, 'Ylth-
out whoin what he did h e could noY not have done, or the school might ha•ve ceased to ex'st. 'foot chancellor of the exchequer was with them that afternoon in the p erson of Mr. Dunne (loud applause). to whom they were extremely grateful. .He had done a tremendous amount for the benefit of the school the history of which was locked in his bosom, and he hoped he would unfold some of it for the benefit of themselves and those who came after . As he said, during the last 60 years they owed a great deal to the two Vicars of Caine and a great deal to their chancellors of the ex: chequer, but to nobody.did they o~ve more than to t h e present headmistress, :\11 ss Matthews (hear, hear ). The amazing success of the school during the last 20 years, or almost, was very !argely due to her. He was no t forgett:n"' th e girls th emselves, or the excellent staff , and ~'e chd not forget the parents, who were so very important, when he said that a hove everythin u el e th e wonderful position the school held to~ day was due to Miss Matth ews. They all aareed with that (hea r. hear) , and he hoped she '~ ould continne as their head for many years to come . She sometimes talked about gettinu old but no~ody believed her Oau~hter), for sfie w~s young m h e r outlook, and tnat wa t he chief th 'ng. As to the future. thev could face it without fear and with a brave- h eart. They could say, Ill the words of the Bishop of Salisbury who preached. 10 years ago, " the Lord !hath' done great thmgs for us, wh ereof we r ejoice." In His name and in His strength th ey step ped out with confidence into the unknown future. Some of them h ad read in that day's papers that Dr. Norwood (headmaster of Harrow) stated that "no r,ea l c~aracter can be formed except on true r el g10n. ' That had been t-he belief a ll down th e 60 .rears of that school. It was because of that, and going on in that way that he thou1:1ht great things lay before the s~hoo l. Those of them who lived to be present at t<he centenar.'· in 40 years' time would, he felt sure, be able to speak of greater thinus being done than po sibly they had ever dreamed of. Humorously, the Archdea con said it would be a great advantage to hini personally if the school clo eel , because it was expressh- stated in the tru t deed that if :t came to an end all the money gained by the sa le of the property aud the endowments would go to the upkeep of either the Vicar of Cal n e or the assista nt pries.ts (laughter \. In spite of that, he was not praymg for their dem ise; far from it. He should be !indeed sorry to lose the pre, en ce of so much young life in the parish and in the church. He said with all his heart. in the word s so often sung- " God who made thee mighty, make thee mightier still." HEADMISTRESS'S REPORT. Miss )fatthews, giving her report said (the cros -headings are Qurs, not her's) : " It is delightful to welcome so many friends to-day to what we like to feel is a very big, friendly birthday party; just a family gathering, as it were, devoid- as far as possible--0f formality and the l ike. We all know that the simp lest birthda.y par ties are probably the happiest, and so to-day we have invited no d istinguished stranger tQ address ,us, no one who would claim so col d a title as an educationist, but we are relying just upon our own Governors to help u s to the celebrations which we think due to so important a step as that we are now takin~-our entrance into the seventh decade of this little schoQl. "There are very few girls' schools which have much history, so that a life of sixty years is, comparatively speaking, no mean record, and we like to look back on it. We like to think we had our birth in those far-off days when a national conscience was first being aroused to the education of uirls . We can almost date the rena issance of girls' education to the years j ust before Oll;r founc!,a.tion, when the great pionee r, Miss Emily Da vies, was rns1shng that the education of girls shou ld be in cluded in the work of th e Taunton Commission, which had been appointed to enquire into the education system
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-other than elementary-of the coun try. T he resul t of the enquiry showed an appalling state of affairs, and it was the report of the C:ommlssion which led directly to the establi.shm.ent of high sch~ols fQr g~rl~ and the foundation rn 1!!72 of the Gu-ls' Pubhc lJay School Company, which has founded hi"h schools all over the country. The same yea ; saw the birth of other wellknown schools founded under the auspices of the Church, especia lly St. Mary's, Wanta ge. THE STORY OF THE FOUNDL'1"G. "Th ere is a le<>end I believe it to be founded on fact, that Caiion buncan's det ermination to found our school arose brgo::ly in cons_equ ence of his discovery that a girl 111 the pansh who had just left her school was unable to add corr ectly a simple column, n Qt knowmg whether to be!rin with the units or hundreds. Whether that i's true or no (a nd if not, it is characteristic of the products of many sch.o ols of the time). he appealed in 1872 to one of the Sisterhoods to come to start a school in Calne. (Th at he app ealed in vain is a fact for which I , personally. am a lways grateful, for had ~he 51sters been in a position to respond to this call, my life's work wQuld have lain elsewhere.) Nothing daunted, h e turned to a friend in Caine, l\Hss Ellinor Gabriel, asking her help. a nd it was rn Janua ry, 1873. in a house on the Green. that Miss Gabriel had h erself bought, and furmshed with the h elp of subscriptions from interested friends, that St. ;Mary's was launched upon h er career. " One of the original g:irls writ es of the opening day : ' I was then thirteen years of age, and was very proud of the fact that my n8:me was the first sent in to be r eceived as a pupil, when the school was ready to be opened. Many difficulties, and much opposition. had to be faced, but anythino- that was taken in hand by Canon Duncan was always worth doing, and came through successfu ll~-. and at last St. Mary's r each ed its opening clay in January. 1873. There "-e re present at that opening the three founders -Mrs. )\[urray, Miss Ellinor Gabriel, and Canon Duncan-and Miss Richardson, the first headmistress, and seven pupils. The Vica.r welc~med Miss Richardson, and presented each pupil to her bv name and then addressed the girls, pu tting befoi·e t~ em their responsibi lity as beina the leaders 111 a new venture on a small seal:, which h e hoped would be carried on by all concerned in it to a much la r ger scale. He then nam ed the School, and after prayers he g'ave _us his blessing, and the founders left us to Miss Richardson.' THE EARLY DAYS. "Had we time, it WQU !d be interesting to go throuuh further records of these earliest days, and t~ picture the little school with its original seven pupils-a number that increased but slowly. and never iu the first der'>.cle to more than twe nty-six. But this stands out clearly : the devotion of the fQunders to St. Mary's; their belief in her future; and their amazing generosity. "For the first seven years Miss Gabriel held the post of lady superintendent, a IJ<?Sition involvina a considerable annual expendit ure. She was fo1Jowed in 1879 by Canon Duncan's mot herin-law, Mrs. Murray, and for the n ext twent yseven years all the accounts and minutes are in her own handwriting. The balance sheets for these days make strange rearling. When the schQol had been in existence nine years the salaries of the whole of the assistant staff amounted to the princely sum of £H 10s. (to this must be added £2 14s. paid to the drill sergeant), while the household bills for the whole of 1882 reached a total of £62. Our Governors to-day may think with enyy of t hQse simpler days, but perhaps they were not so simple as m ight be expected, as even with so modest a n expenditure Mrs. Murray was paying off t h at year a consider able deficit. T HE DEVOTED WORK OF THE FOUNDERS. " It m u st hav~ been the gen erosity of Miss Gabr iel and Mrs. Murray that a lone saved t he school. We h ave in our possession_al~ t !J.e
accounts for the years 1873-1906. With the exception of one year, there appears this regularly occurring ite~ (soJ!letimes a very substantial one)-' Deficit paid by Mrs. Murooy.' Surely we owe a great debt to those whose faith in St. Mary's was strong enoug)i to bear for so Jong a financial burden. But it was not only of mon ey that our founders gave: another old girl t ells of Canon Duncan's Scripture lessons every Wednesda y morning: 'We are never likely to forget {sh.e writi;sl h~s bright, breezy entrance and beammg smile; . it was a happy mornin"' when he had the leisure to stay and r ea d a favourite poem of Wordsworth or '.ten~y son.' And in the days when money for salaries wa s scarce we r ead : ' Mrs. Murmy h elped the sch ool by giving lessons in French and literature: her d.aughter, Miss Murray, ill French and music. while, for the same r eason, in order to h elp the fund s, Mrs. Duncan. an accomplished .a rtist devoted the whole of Thursday afternoons" for ma ny years to t eaching drawing, pa inting, geometry, and p~rspecti.ve. ,adding in the winter months lesson.s m dancmg. " Anoth er rem a rk that occurs annually in our first minute book r eads as follows:- ' The school was examin ed by the Vicar ; the children passed a satisfact ory exa mination.' I do not know why this custom fell into abeyance. I think the present staff would welcome its re-introduction, as a ffording a pl easant relief when examination week comes round ! " As we look back at those si..'Cty years, we mu st wonder sometimes what th e present St. Ma ry's school has in common with the little school on the Green. in which she was housed for the first thirty-six years of h er life. With a ll our munv advantages we r ealise, however, tha t we are on e and the same school, for the two great influences of the earliest days have remain ed unch anged, and will r em a in unchanged as long as the school lasts. " o school in England can owe more than we do to our surrounding country-no country school can boast connection with a more·b eautifnl p arish church. Those of you who were present this morning at our wondei:ful service of thanksgiving must have roolised that, and for all the sixty years of our school's existence it has always been the same. THE CIMSIS OF 1913. " We owe a deep debt of gratitude to our church, and to the Vicars who have served her: to Canon Duncan, our founder and only Governor for four and thirty years, and to our second founder, Archdeacon Bodington, our chairman for twenty years, who was so largi;ly instrumental in moving us to our present site in 1909. The long struggle to keep the school alive was r en ewed with the death. in 1910, of i\Irs. Murray, and the minute book bears witness to that. Time after time the precarious condition of the school w;as discussed; fina lly, in September, 1913, the Governors voted for its closing. But the Archdeacon refused to a cqui esce in wha t he felt would be an act of betrayal to the cause of true educa tion in Calne, and with the generous help of Mr. Dunne (whom we are so delighted to have with us to-day), he faced the future afresh. The .Archdea con's optimism was ;abundantly justified. To those of u s who knew and loved him there is a gxeat blank t o-day-his delight and prid e in the sc hool were n ever more obviou s than a t our gatherings. It was h e who drew up fo r us ten yea rs ago, on the occas ion of our fiftieth anniversar.r,. the fo rm of service we used to-day. 'fha t a lon e would be a reminder- were reminder needed-of what he m eant in the life of the school. It is six yea rs now since Archdeacon Bod ingt on left Calne, and those yea rs under our present Chairman have proved th a t the link between the Chu rch and the School is still as strong as ever. FORTY-SEVE N YEA.RS OF DEVOTED WORK. " But th ere has been another link- in our sixty years there have been three Vicars of Caine, but onlv two organists. What the school
owes to ~Ir . Pullein in his forty-seven year s of devoted work h ere is not ea ily put into words. We owe him a trem en dous deb t of gra titude. H e cou Id t ell us of ma n)· experien ces in his ea rl y days at St. Mary-'s . a nd c rtaiuly th e old records bear witn ess t o thi . and h is productions of the musical cantata which featured so largely on Prize Day. "So a ll through our histor y the re ha ..-e been these two un cha u 0 ing influen ces-our Church a nd our country ide. Of late years, of course, our knowl edge of the countryside has extended greatly, and our expeditions by oar reach places never dreamed of by our predecessors. But our walks must be just the ame. and it is a ca use of great satisfaction to think that the walkin" powers of the school r emain ·unchanged, an~ that long afternoon s and evenings afoot hav·e so many devotees. and this in spite of all our increased facilities for gam es.. It is interesting to note that gam es played theu part in our early days, and 'the care of t ennis grounds' figures m a ccounts as earl y as 1888, while an old iirl t ells us of the first school bazaar which raised money for tha t purpo e and for the school !ibrary. Some of th e books then bought are still rn u se, so that ev en the latest acquisition to the sc.hool, our beautiful Bodington Memorial Library, had its roots in our earliest days. Bath t ennis and the library seem to have been inaugurated by Miss Dya s, headmistress from 1888-~911, who is so gratefully remembered by old girls of her time. We re 0 ret very much that she could not be with us to-~ay but she sent us warm grnetings, and is not forgetting us. Our old account books bear record. too, to outside events. I~ 1885 we r oo d that' many pupils were absent owmg to the prevalence of fever in the town,' while in 1887 our predecessors must have ?een ~hril_led at the expenditure of £116s. ld. on illuIDlilations for Queen Victoria's Jubilee. DISCIPLINE IN THE OLD D.A YS. "There is not time to speak tcrday of all who have served the school so faithfully but we are not unmindful of them, especially ol Miss Little, for eighteen years the beloved second mistress. We greatly enjoy the reminiscences provided by girls who were in the school under them. To us the restraint and discipline of the earliest days under Miss Dyas' prodecessors seems strange indeed, when we read of the dreaded 'mark' or badge of shame, which was suspended by pink fape round th.e i;ieck of the first :;:irl who spoke without perm1ss10n during school hours. She in her. turn could hand it on to any other delinquent that she could catch sinnina · it was the girl wearing it when school closed "..;ho was punished. Nor do we wish to retUrn to cfossrooms decorated all round the cornice with such quotations as 'Do what thou ouahtest come what can,' 'Jielp thyself, and God wi:il help the~,' or the more shattering ' Be good, sweet ma.id, and let who will ·be clever.' But side by side with what appears to us as so stranae were many things we prize to-day. ;and of on~ thing I am s·ure, no present girl is more proud of her school than were those first pupils; oul' chapel cannot mean more to us than did the tiny oratory.opened in 1884 mean to the girls of that generation: our love for, and appreciation of, Shakespeare elates back to the very earliest days when the records speak of -pe°rformances of 'Henry VIII.'. ' Th e Taming of t]ie Shrew' 'T,he Merchant of Venice.' and '.As You Like It. . (The Touchs~one of fifty years a.go is, I believe, presen t with u s this afternoon. ) And we who are so favoured in our expeditions to Stratford-on-Avon (there have been no fewer than ~hree th !s ter~), or in listening to the beautiful readmgs given ·US by Miss Dorothy G:r~en, or ho?-our~c! <a s we ~vere last week by a nsit from 1'~1~s Lilian Bayhs, are only carrying 9n the ~racht1011 begun nearly sixty years ago rn the little schoolroom on the Green. That is why (though perhaps not so rich ju talent as in some years-we. have lost every single girl who fgured so well m our production two years ago) we are to-day. once more producing ;a Shakespeare play for our visitors.
.'\.\JJUEVEAIENT F THE PAST YEAR. " To-clay is hardlv the occasion for a formal r eport on' the year's work. Develop?p.ents there have been, but not of a spectacular nature, though there is no doubt that the reorganisation of the kitchen a,nd the installation of our 'Aga' cookers have done much for our comfort. Shower baths we owe to a generous friend . While not dwelling on details, I ma:v mention that this has been a very happv and very healthy year, and that as far as public examina tions go we could not have done better. as every single candidate has been successful, from the VI. Form girl who was offered a vacancy at Girton, but was so young she decided. to wa it a.11:other year, to our sixteen School Certificate candidates who did better than we have ever done before, (all passing, four with honours. and winning distinctions in Divinity, Fren ch, Ma thematics, a nd the only one to 'be giv en in Biology), and t he day girl in Form IV .. who has earned off the first scholarship a t Sherborne School for girls. " These examination successes have been a great en couragement; it is a good thing for ~he school to h ave over 25 per cent. of the girls doing post School Certificate .work, . for t):ie majority of the girls who obtam their certificates stay on for several t erms, and it is that work clone no longer under the shadow of an examination that may be the most ..-aluable, althou.,.h those who are working with the U niversity° in view-a larger number to-day than usual-cannot escape that. "SOMETHING FOR EVERYBODY." " I noticed last week that the H eadma st er of Hanow is r eported to have said that the l eading "'Lrls' schools of this country are 'narrowly ~cademic ." We, of course, in no wnv claim t o to be ' leadin"' '· I h ope we can r efute the ch arge of being' nar'.'ro~ly academic.' Wh en , last year, the authorities decided to place a sign exa ctly at our "'ate of 'Road Narrows,' I was at first incli.~ed to resent it-as a matter of fact, it is a helpful sign to those visiting th e school for the first time. No one seemed to suggest, however, our life here is · narrow.' And if the H eadmaster of Harrow could vi 8it u s on almost a ny afternoon and see our activities---cookery, dressmaking', knitting, sewing, acting, gam es, m~sic, sketchm"' nature work, garclenrng, collectmg, carp entry, and allied h andicrafts,-or ~he odd jobs t h at h elp in the household, toppmg and tailing, apple peelin", and th e like, and , abo•e all .,.eueral reachng he would wonder, perhapsa s ·i;;cleed I often d~where time is left for t]ie work that is sticrmatised as purely academic. ..\ncl if a nyon e should raise the objection tha t we are attempting to offer too many m terests, m y reply is this : that one cannot. possibly offer too many. It is obvious that n o girl ca n und ertake more than a certain amount, though she can find interest in what her fellows are doing. But our obj ect is this: t o provide something for ever ybody so that those who under t.he old and narrower ' svstems might h ave b een ' misfits' mi o-ht fuel th eir ou tlet, and realise their avenues of ~sefn 1 service. The best t est of th e school is its beh aviour on a wet day or unexpect ed holiday : suffice it to say that I do not now dread thPse. "It r em ains now but, as the spokesman of the school, to tr,y to yUice our gratitude for all our bl essings, for the faith of our founders, for the bounty of our benefactors, and for all the love and friendship that is ours. I do not attempt to thank the st aff for all they do for the school, for , t ry as I m ay I can nevei· feel satisfied that my thanks do not sound patronising, and so ~nst it be if I try to thank the parents for be~ng so friendly so appreciative, and so encouragmg, or the Gov~rnors for being so kindly, gener0 1is, an.cl optimistic. But I end .with the hope that t):i1s happy birthdav gathermf! may h elp to r emmd the school of the long years that lie behind it. of those days of small things an~ small beginnings, that alone have made possible our present prosperity."
all
MR. DUNNE REVIEWS THE VICISSITUDES . Mr. Dunne._ before presenting the awards, said it was very kind of the Archdeacon to introduce h~m as the Chancellor of the Exchequer, but let him tell them that he repudiated that office altogether. Anything more boring than to be introduced to such a figure he cou ld not con· ceive (laughter). He desired them to recognise in his coming before them. that he came as an " old girl." Every association of his in connection .with the school had been the sort of association which would come, and could only come, from an old girl. Miss Matthews had wished that he. should fill up some of the details that had occurred in connection with the early history of the school and he was glad to do so. Continuing, Mr. Dunne observed that when he first came to Caine in 1907 a report had been made two years before, which was recorded in a Government publication, on St. ]i:[ary's School. It was then located in the Green. It might interest them t o hear what the report stated, beoouse it was one of the great pleasures that came to anybody who had been connected with the school to see what it was. In 1905 the Government stated : " This school is not in receipt of any Government grant and is supported by the income from endowments and by the payments of scholars, any deficiency being made up by Mrs. Murra y, The Highlands, Caine. There were, in the Easter term, 1905, 24 day scholars and i.o boarders, of whom eight were under 10 yea rs: 20 between 10 and 15, and six were over 15. The fees paid were-day schola rs £4 10s. a year, and for boarders £25 a year." The r eport, said Mr. Dunne. went on to describe the teaching sta.ff, which consisted of five, and stated that the school was under the sole control of Canon Duncan, )lfrs. Murray being act ing manager and treasurer. In 1908 the school removed to its present home. In 1907 it was a very small school with a very small income, and it continued for the next few years after it came to the present home. until Mrs. Murray died, on exactly the same lines. In 1910 Mrs. Murray died. Up to then she had always paid whatever deficit there was . and there a lways was one, and obviously would be if only £25 a year was received for boarders. When Mrs. Murray died a Yery difficult problem arose for those who were interested in the school, a problem which was very acute, beca-use in the interim a number of people had been m a de governors, amongst them himself. Before that. h e h a d never had anything to do with a girls' school, and he always understood, when he joined it, it was a sinecure office. .As he said, when Mrs. Murray died a very t errible problem arose, because it was perfectly obvious that money would have to b e found somewhere in order to oo~Ty on the school. There was a deficit of nearly £100 a year. Further people were added as governors of the school in 1910, and those "'Overnors amongst them got up a sm all guarantee fund, and with it the school continued as a losing concern until 1912. By th at year the positio·n had to be re-considered and faced, and it was thought by many who were interested in the school that it ought to come to an encl, that it was impossible for it to be cm-ried on. However, there was one who had to be considered in connection with the school, upon
whose word really the future of the school depended- Archdeacon Boclington; wh? felt. it was a question that affected deeply h~s enb:re conn ection with the pari sh. He considered it would be so g'rievous a breach of duty on his pai:t, and such an utter failure, thitt he said Ire would leave the p arish if the school closed. They ha d to endeavour to car!Y on, and in 1911 they secured a new h eadrrustress -1\Iiss Donaldson, who did noble work. They had at that t ime to make up their minds to cha nge the whose system ~f the scho?l, and lift it _from tl: e plane of berng one servmg the immediate n eighbourhood on very ~ow fees to one ~n v·hi!!.h _they_ hopec]j to make it, a school
I
wllich would be able to pay for itself. With tha t view they raised t h e fees . The new headmistress devoted heself to her task and t he sch ool carried on until 1913. They got a few more boa rders, but the pr<?spects were not ,·ery hopeful, and at that hU?e many conn ect ecl with the sc h~! thought it ought to be closecl. Th e~' were rn ..-ery grave doubt ab~ut it all, b ut th e last blow came when a notice was receiYed from the headmistress that she fe l t in th e fo!lo win,:: year she would like hi mov e to a s phere tha t opened mor!l prospects fo r h er work. In 1913 a meetmg of ~he "ll''e rn ors was held for the purpose of seewg ~vna t co nld be do~rn. with the ~chool. It was alway s in the ongrna l deed intended to be t r eated as affi liated to the Woodard schools, a nd the Archdeacon determined at tha.t ti~e th at h e would make an effort to affi!1ate it ·rnd aet t h e ·woodard people to take i t over. Ther: were negotiations, 1?ut the .legal d~ffi culti es that ar ose · mad e it practically imposs ible for th em to make over the school to the ·w ooda rd trus t. Mr: Dunne proceeded. to read p ri rnte letters which had passed with Archd eacon Bodington and the R ev. A. L. Scott (th e secreta r~· t o t h e gov eu~ors) upon t he positi on of th e school. and contrnuecl that in 1914 th ~y got n ew pupils. By the following year the rn com e h ad exactly doubled, and f r om thaf\ tim e to the present, the school had n ernr looked ba ck (applause) . The mom~nt th.ey decided to go abea~ and carry on with th e school and t a ke then chance, t hey went on adding to it bit bY bit, and the truth of t h e matter n ow was · that St. Mary's was a unit in i tself that had made. the scho~l w~at it was to-day. From that tlllle the girls mcr eased and they could look back upon the sc l~ ool'~ past with .credit and .to the future what th ey were going to make i t . THE AWARDS . Mr. Dunne then presented the following a wards:Form vi.-Head of the school (given by the Ven . Archdeacon of Wilts ), M. Ogle. Class i~s (given by the Rev. Hugh Duncan), M. E. Wilson. French (given by Mr. Dunne), M. E. Wil son . History (given by Lady Lansd_owne), V. M. Arm strong r (aiven by_ 1'~rs . Bodmlrto~ , in memory of Archileacon Bodrngton), F. C. Leigh-Mallory. . . . Lower vi.-Form pnzes (gi ven by Sir Ernest Gowers), S. W. Gocxlden, C. A. Hall; (given by Mrs. Dunne), W. M. Heath, l;V. Osman-Jones. Music (Biven by Miss . Jennings), B. M. :Kirke; (giYen by Miss Prior), E. M. Minnis. Art B. 1\1. Brooke. General Knowledge-Senior (given by the headmistres s), V. M. Armstrong; junior, · M. F . Glynn. OLD GIRLS,
1933.
Cambridge University.-M. F . Hort, Modern and Medireval Language .Tri po!?, Pa.rt I; ~lass ii Division i. B. M. Rice, Historical Tripos, Part I; Class ii, Division i. PRAISE FOR THE GOVERNORS. Then followed a great surprise for the three governors on the platform-the gift of, a book each to the Archdeacon, Mr. Dunne and Sir Ernest Gowers from the schol ars. They were h anded to them by Miss Oi?le (the head. girl), who, in doing so. remar.Ked that that was one of the few opportunities the girls had of appreciating the kindness of those who gav~ prizes to the scholars.-The Cha~rman observ.eu they were most unexpected gifts, and. Miss Matthews informed the company that m a ll the years she had been connected with the school she had never known a girl do so much for it. Miss Ogle had been a perfectly splendid head· gfrl for two years (applause). SIR ERNEST GOWERS. Sir Ernest Gowers a lso expressed appreciation of the girls' kindness, saying they •were touched bv the surprising " turn of_ t!ie
.
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ta bl es," and proceed eel that the success of the school was a marvellous story of courage and faith vind icated . Mr. Dunne bad mimmised his own part in it, but if ever an epic stor.r came to be written by some one who could write . it impartially, they would all realise that 1\Ir. Dunne's name, no less than Archdeacon Bodiugton's, deserved to be written in letters of ~Id over the door of the school (apr:ause). J:l.e desired to pay his tribute to Miss Matthews. If he had 'to put his finger on the one thing which was at the root of the astoundin g su ccess of the school and its development during the last 20 years, it was because it was fortunate in having a headmistress with outstanding personality {apr lause), who had made tliat persona lity felt throughout the school. The srhool now had setablish ecl a position, with tradition, and he hoped none of th e girls. if asked what school they were at, would apologeticallv say they were at St. Mary 's, Cain e, but would boldly say so . The school had a cquired tracliticm :tnd tradition was a very valuable thing and a great inspiration, but also a great responsibility . As the Bishop had told them that clay, what they had to do was to see that the torch of learniuJ( was handed down undilllllled, and that the traditions were strengthened and maintained . In the words oJ' a wise man who lived 2,000 years ago, the best wav to keep good acts in memory was to refresh ·them with new. The usual cheers were given for the governors, headmistress, staff, and visitors. and tea followed, the day ending with au open air performance of .Shakespeare's " As you like it," which had also been given on Thursday and was given again on Wednesday Heniug.-1\faslen's cafe cat ered for both lunch and tea.
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Photo bu E. Gross, Calne. Standin~: Mr.
W. R. Pullein (on the stail' of the School for 47 years), Margaret Ogle (head girl), Sir Ernest Gowers, K.C.B., K.B.E. (a Governor), Mi s ) fatthews (Head Mi stress) , Mr. A. M . Dunne, K .C. (a Governor) . itting: 'Ihe Bishop of Sherborne (a GoYernor ), the Archdeacon of Wilts (Ch airman of th e Gornrnors ), l\frs . Dun!l~ . I
THE NORTH WILTS CHURCH
MAGAZ~ I
There has always been such a close connection b~tween the Church and St. Mary's School that it is only right a reference should be made here to the celebrations which took place at the end of June on the occasion of the school's Diamond Jubilee. The school was founded sixty years ago by Canon Duncan, Vicar of Caine, and it may be said to have been refounded by his successor, Archdeacon Bodington, nearly twenty years ago. It began in a very small way but it has grown into one of the best known and most popular of the leading girls' i;-chools in England. The Jubilee Service in Church on June 24th was most inspiring and will link Church and school together more closely than ever.
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Through the kindness of Miss Mat thews, t he adul t members of the Parish Church choir were entertained ·at St. Mary's School on Thursday, J uly 13th. Upon arrival at the school we were given a hearty welcome and then a display of dancing was given by the girls of the school. This display was much appreciated and enjoy ed by everyone present. At the conclusion of the entertainment Mias Matthews thanked the choir fo r their help in the recent Jubilee Service of the school as well as for their work week by week. The choir secretary suitably replied. Supper then fo llowed, a t the conclusion of which we all attended t he eveni ng service in the School Chapel, thus bringing a very happy evening ....... n nlnGA ,J R.
PROGRAMME. NATION.AL. 1.
Chelsea Reach.
2.
Minuet for Three .
3.
Stanes Morris.
4.
Al. Tambourine
for Three .
5.
Polish Sole.
6.
Scotch Sword Dance .
?.
Tambourine Dance . GREEK .
1.
Scarf Dance .
2.
Swinging .
3.
The Gnomes and the Boy.
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(The treasure is stolen and hidden under a tree - the boy captures a gnome and marks the tree where it is buried while he is looming for a s pade the gnomes mark all the trees.)
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PRIZE LIST .
v. v.
Form Frize.
K.R .Maoaulay .
Form Prizes.
• •Booker. R.A. Conybeare .
Upper lV.
Form Prize s .
P . D.Ede . M. U.Paris .
Lower lV.
No one re ached. pri ze standard.
Form 111.
Form Prizes.
Reading .
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Upper Lower
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Consolation .
D.M. de . F. O. Matthews . M.J. orris . 1
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Pianoforte Solos .
Rhapsmdy in G;M1nor by Brahms . Old English Dance arr by Grainger.
B.M.Kirke. K.M.Synge.
Wilberforce Centenary Celebrations. Introductory Talk.
F.C.Leigh Mallory.
"Abraham Lincoln" by John Drinkwater. Scene.
A small reception
r~om
Scene 111.
at the White House.
1st Chronicler • • • • • • , • • • • • • • • • • • • • 2nd Chroni c·le r • • • • , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Mrs Lincoln t ................... Susan •••••••••••••••••••• Mrs Goliath Blow • • • • • • • • • • .• • • , • • • • • Mrs Otherley • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • , •• Abraham Ltncoln • • • • • • • •. • • • • • • .• • • • • • Frederick Douglass (a white haired negro) • • • • • • •
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A Cookery Class.
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S. MARY'S SCHOOL, CALNE.
CONFIRMATION
1933.
Your
prayers
are
asked
for
SATURDAY.
Girls may be out with their parents from 12.4 5 until 8 o路clock. They must be back very punctually as Prayers will be read in Chapel by the Bishop of Salisbury at 8 p.m. It is much hoped that all the parents and friends will be at this short service , a路s the Bishop will give a special address to the parents after the girls have left the Chapel.
SUNDAY .
8 a.m. Candidates may attend the Cele bra tion with their parents, and may be with them until they return to school at 12.15 ; they will then have an early lunch and rest. 2.30 Con firmati o n service in the P a rish Church. Parents are asked to be there before 2 .1 5 ; special seats are reserved for them but no tickets are required. 3.30. All the parents and friends are a ske d to come up to the school for tea, d irectly after the service. After tea the girls may go out, but must be back at 7 o'clock for evening chapel. This will last about ten minutes and parents are invited. The girls may not go out a ga m a fter that.
the
Confirmation Candidates : Rhoda Eleanor Sara Amphlett. Audrey Elaine Barnes. Margaret Elizabeth Beloe. Marjorie Jean Blathwayt. Eleanor Milford Booker. Virginia Marshal Carver. Prudence Mary Clarke. Evelyn Betty Combes. Ruth Alison Conybeare. Sheila Mary Cathcart Dunlop. Mary Frances Glynn . Caroline Dymond Hall. Margaret Harris. Diana Suzanne Hobson . Millicent Mary Hotchkis Christine Avis Hoyle. Doris Jacqueline Leigh-Mallory. Marcia Elizabeth M atthews. Margaret Ursula Paris. Marion Evelyn Pollock. Elisabeth Remington-Wilson. Margaret Pamela Robinson.
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PR OGRAM ME.
1. Pianoforte Duet.
2. Unison Songs.
3. Pianoforte Solo.
4. Cantata.
5.
Pianoforte Solo.
6.
Unison Song.
7. Pianoforte Solo.
Kirgisian Dance. B. Lewis. P. Roe. a) The Wind. b) The Cuckoo. Juniors.
Milford.
Two Preludes. P. Parry-Okeden.
Chopin.
The Jackdaw of Rheims. Seniors.
Nicholson.
Valse in D. P. Pope.
Chopin
Come let us all this day.
Bach.
Gopak. B. Kirke.
8. Carols
a) A Christmas Carol. b) Mater ora Filium. c) As Joseph was a-walking.
9.
a) The First Nowell.
Carols for all.
Moritz.
b) Good King Wenceslas.
Moussorgsky.
Reinecke. Wood. arr Terry
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MARY'S SCHOOL, CALNE.
DECEMBER 15th, 1933.
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GIRTON COLLEGE. - CLASSICS. - Minor I Scholarships ..-:A. Duke (Perse School for Girls, Cambridge) ; J. Carter (Perse School for Girls, I Cambridge, and private tuition); A. M. S. Hole I (Bath Hig)l Schpol, G .P.D.S.T.); J. C .. ~.lien ' (Sutton High &hool, G.P.D.S.T.).-Exh1b1t1on. -H. R. Dupre (Blackheath High School, G.P.D.S.T.). HISTORY . .. . rm tr
or c oars 1p. . . ussey apnam High School, G.P.D.S.T.). Exhibition. - M . . E. Levick (Ha\vnes School). ENGLISH.- M in or Scholarships. -H. Hammond (Croham Hurst School, Croydon); R. M. Macdonald (Wycombe Abbey School). Exhibitions.-E. S. Fraser (Ladies' College, Cheltenham) ; M. A. Lister (Pate's Grammar School for Girls, Cheltenham).
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TELEGRAPHS. address e s may be who delivers this form. · telegrams by telephone.
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Prefix.
Time hand ed in.
Office of Origin and Service Instructions. .
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Jaa
27th. l
~i·
SfJ tbe imp rtar100
f oo
.erv1nB not
on17 a sohool $ne,ll 1n u111ba~e. but 1 t1nw.to ~oau s or its !deal ot ho•l1nosa and st Pl · l1v1nG, e: do te l t . . ~t our &·ohool supplios a apeoilll :.l e d , and, I!Wreover, • believe ·t hls nae. to ba r.manout 1n ·~ · eduoa.tional roqu1re . iits ot our o unt·r Y. ' e muat, theref<>r , mak<t solid tha e;oo h.!IVC' built up l) B1 iba oonstruot1 n r a olnas:roo ri blook. 2) By t o stio 1 rove nta of ur reetdent! al quart r •
Tba eohool . s at r>rasent ninoty bo rders and t wQnty-fi v6 day 1rls. l t l s for many years now bean quite .t u.ll, an • tho\.\eh it is tl1ft'1oult t .,auge, o 1uet, I think• at the present t1ltl6 be retusine; robabl;r about four or five ti s a UlBny irla as · e o it. I attribute tho po Ular1ty or 1.
so ool to+-
Its •¥11 .nl.\UlJM!rs. very lar a jor1ty sent in tba eohOol woUl.d not bave ooue
p
or
the Jirls at
t<.l . ua
bad we been
a l ·a rear sobool. ,1y ox};}G r1ence, s. oioll.ly t;>f l t , ha . beon. that many parents de!1n1 tt>lf prefer e iall so hool. 2. 3.
"·
Its hgmgl~Mli· l?ro.ot1oally everyone opeaka with oiation ot tho faot that we are o1 pl.o aobc,ol. :t;t,a mpderatt (e11.
~al
appre-
Thia la a great attre.otion, aapooially to
parents who hnvo several oh1lclron to eduoat0. ~ girl~tl!emselJlf
ebave ~en
drawn.
UDUSUS
are the beat a vortiaemsnt tor the sohool.
ly tortunate in the
h01ns
trOt Whioh
\VO
have
I ehould greutlJ deplore 8117 otter pt to alto tbio ocnool larger. e oould not c1o ao without entirely al.~e:r1nt3 its oharaoter, and p:robabl7 in doing ao woUl lose tho j,rls we are now attraotlng. On our preaent a1 te we oould not ho to oo pete with the gre ' -publ1o aobools, and t proble ~f;ht arlae ns to how to till a lar r aohool. (Had we tho necessary aooo1:imodation oould abaorb 'anothor ten girls and th t without an)' add1 t1on to the Statf, but at preaent e navtt no roor11 tor ·t he 1n tho dorm1tor1ea, tbrt Ohapel, d1n1l -room or oloak.room.)
we
- 2 Tbitre 1s a gn.tat demand tor ohoola 1th o arnta 1nolus1ve teas. Of tb ninety boarders at prosa~t :tn t a sch ol I doubt 1t e than thirt1-r1va or torty oould aot 1'ven a. small 1noreaae. t tha SOJ1'13 t11 e , I underst · nd from Hie 1·1 jesty' o Inspeotors t at so ho lu tar lesa e f1'1o1ant o art,11! oon~1derably
more .
l think the Governors I!li.ght aonaider an 1no:rea e of four Ol" tive SUineas a term, alwa.yo provided t t - as at >resent - small buraario·s l'!iight be off'ertt<l in oxoep 1onal case,, ..
e
st alwayo r
mbe r ·t hat not only tba 1
preBent dining- room nlso
1.
The Olasgropm blQQk .
1'l.a.~sroo:ns.
re t empor ary bui ldings.
Tbis 1s
ftvo,presutnl:
but th
sat1.etaoto:r.-y, end 10
always oonsidered very attraot but too Oov,,r~or'3 .mus .. face the prov1.s ion of a permonent 010.seroo 'blook and ohool Ball. These could be separate 1'rom the oentral boardiv. . hous~. I should aug · st th t plans oueht to be pr parod n'.>w tor these as 1 t would be wiser to oo plete them ~f ro a a 1188 in tba
Headship (1943) . Tbe present to pora.ry bu1·1 cunea ooUld toon be ut111med as a d1n1116-room, eto. 1 wh11G a pe:rmanont d1n1ngroo • k t to ian an a.id ' quane e were be.i ng bu1J.t.. (Th ai to tor this ill :pr obably be w ere t d the pr cu:i nt dinin .... roo and o'taft oottag - tho staff oould be well aooo· odated in t ha
praoent kitchen.)
2.
Bog41nc; ~~·· I think these are adequato· and oonven1ent (though t athroom aooo odatl on a.t .v .. Br1dg8t ' a and ' . Prisoa ' s 1s rather soanty} . The Ileadmistresa's ·qu0;rters 111 , nt so tinie, have to be oonsidered . The 1mn@diata require~nts ar two o. d~ tiona.l ol soroo . , as two rooms now used in tho board1 , house blcol<: arc urc,antly needed (l) as an auditional · itt i n .. roo tor too g irls (2) aa
sittina·room tor t he mn1 a.
Ac· ~ · 3o
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Feb 24th 1934.
Osmund and Moberly present
"THE ROSE AND T·c.rF~ RING" f __o_m~Th ,, u~.~----~----r ·· aO.£.:&X?Y· Prologue. Act 1. Sc 1. Ming's breakfast room. Act 11. Sc 1. rloodcutter Is cottage 2. The Court Room. 2. Gi glio's student roooo 3. King's breakfast room. 3. The Public Arena . 4. The Scaffold. 4. Gi glio 's student rooro 5. 1l'he Court Hoom. 0
Principal Characters in order of ..m?.~.12:fanq.§_. Jenkins Gruffanuf f Footman. Fairy Blackstick. Baron Glumboso. King Valoroso (uBurping king of Paflagonia) Emma {his ~ueen) Princess Angelica {their daughter) Countess Gruffanuff, Count Hedzoff.
Prinoe Gi~lio (rightfUl King of Paflagonia} Betsinda (alias Prinoess Rosalba}
P .Robinson. A.Nettelfield. J. Bl athwayt. E.Hocking. n . Matthews. M. Glynn. B.Kirke. :?.Parry Okeden. E.Waller. L. Wollen. H.Br
P.~~
.
n•.
0 .1.'te.."t:.tb.e'WB •
Woodoutte:r.
Oount Hogginarmo (General of Crim Tartary) Smith ) student friends Jones ) of Giglio. 1st Clown.
L.Roome. B.Lewis. R . Conybeare.
E.Booker. A.Barnes. T.Ti dman.
2nd Clown. King Padella {usurping King of Crim Tartary) I-I. Wal ton. Lj.on . C . Budgen . P .Philips . I1erald. B. Long . Page. Drummer Boy . D.Ede. R. Amphle tt . Monk. M.Glossop. P.Moss. B.Phulips . Soldiers. V.Tennant. A.V!fl:.iffer... A.Carter. J.Findlay. M. Wiltshire. Bridesmaids .
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S. Mary's School.
Greek & National Dancing,
July 4th & 7th, 1934.
PROGRAMME. JUNIOR
GREEK.
DANCES.
I.
Minuet.
2.
Little Jum p in g Joa n
3.
The Roundabout
III & ll
4.
Jack and Jill
Juniors
5.
In Mary's Garden
Juniors
K.G.
II
(Sh e wa ters the flow ers and cat ches a butterfly .)
6.
S in g a Song of Sixpence
K. G.
Swi ngin g
2.
The old man a nd hi s Turnip
Mu sic Benbow
Seniors
Juniors Traditional
(He sees a lar ge turnip bu t fa ils to pull it up till four me mbe rs of h is family h ave helpe d him .}
3.
Openin g Lily
Seniors
4.
Pastora le
Middle School
5. Friezes
Seniors
6. Study
E. Minnis
7. The Changelin g
Juniors
McDowell Arne Heller Schumann _Traditional
(Elves transfor m a child His mother is horrified and calls the ne ighbours who tell of a spe ll to restore h im i.e. boil water in an eggs hel l to make him laugh. It works an d there is a g en eral r ejoicing .)
COUNTRY. (English)
I.
I.
Merry, Merry Milkmaids
2.
Argeers
3.
Ne w castle
Seniors
6.
Cymba l
Seniors
7 . Finale- Garl a n d s and Scarves Grapes (Parry) - Ball (Poulenc ) Fin ale
Quilter (Borodin) (Poulenc )
(Scandinavian)
1. Swedish Masquerade 2. NATION A L
Rheinland e rpolka
D A NCING A t a Russi a n F e te
I.
H and kerchief
2. Tambourine 3 . G opak 4.
H u ngari an
5.
H and k e rch ief
(Music Traditiona l) Middle School Seniors
B. Bulmer S. Hobson. R. Aldworth Seniors
The School h as unde rtaken to h e lp se nd the H ead Girl on a "chool Gi rls' Tour t o Australia. A Sil v er Col lecti o n is bein g mad e a t each performance to hel p to ra ise the ÂŁ50 required.
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