Goddard Society Lunch 10Th September 2016 I: Spencer Leeson Spencer Leeson, Headmaster from 1934 to 1946, Was, of Course, a Gian

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Goddard Society Lunch 10Th September 2016 I: Spencer Leeson Spencer Leeson, Headmaster from 1934 to 1946, Was, of Course, a Gian Goddard Society Lunch 10th September 2016 I: Spencer Leeson Spencer Leeson, Headmaster from 1934 to 1946, was, of course, a giant. He was Chairman of HMC seven times, and was to become Bishop of Peterborough. Leeson was immensely proud of Winchester College. Few things, even the Nazis, perturbed him. So when an anxious colleague asked him in 1939 what would happen when the Germans landed, Leeson responded that it would be time to think about that when the invaders got to Eastleigh. It is possible that there was only one thing that perturbed the formidable Spencer Leeson. John Dancy, in his biography of Walter Oakeshott, gives us a clue. He tells us that a bright young thing once asked Leeson “and how do you like being Headmaster of Winchester, Mr Leeson?” “Madam”, was the grave reply, “how will you like the Day of Judgement?”. II: The 59th Headmaster So how do I like the day of judgement? My wife tells me that for the first time in many a year, I am singing as I walk around our house. She is therefore, for her own part, very unhappy, as you may imagine, about our move. She last night reminded me that, after we were both privileged to be asked down here in June last year to discuss the headmastership with the Warden and Fellows, we went, once proceedings had ended, to Winchester Cathedral, and sat together there, in silence, in the nave. We paid our respects to William of Wykeham, and also to William Waynflete, one of my predecessors as Headmaster here, and Founder of my previous school, Magdalen College School. And, as we sat, we realised just how wonderful the heritage of this school is, and just what a privilege it would be to be asked to be in charge of it. And then it happened. III: All of you honoured guests As late as 1400, our illustrious Founder was thinking that it might be better use of his wealth to distribute it to the poor and needy than to continue to endow munificently an educational foundation. How fortunate we are that he continued with his plan. How fortunate today’s pupils, and the pupils of the future are, that you, like him, are willing to contemplate endowing further this magnificent school. IV: Conclusion So how am I enjoying the Day of Judgement? The answer is very much – its beauty; its traditions, and their effect; its spirit, and what makes that spirit. I’m very confident that you also will enjoy, whether metaphorically or actually – not least because of your munificence – the Day of Judgement. Thank you very much for coming today, and thank you all the more for your generosity, and your support. .
Recommended publications
  • Memorials Hilles Family
    MEMORIALS of the HILLES FAMILY More particularly of SAMUEL and MARGARET HILL HILLES of Wilmington, Delaware WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF THEIR ANCESTRY AND SOME DATA NOT BEFORE PUBLISHED ALSO EXTENDED REFERENCES TO THE LIFE OF RICHARD HILLES or HILLS PRINCIPAL FOUNDER OF THE MERCHANT TAYLORS SCHOOL IN LONDON, 1561.. THE FRIEND OF MILES COVERDALE, JOHN CALVIN, ARCHBISHOP CRANMER, BISHOP HOOPER AND OTHERS, PROMINENT IN -THE EARLY DAYS OF THE REFORMATION TOGETHER WITH A HITHERTO UNPUBLISHED SONNET AND PORTRAIT OF JOHN G. \VHITTIER WITH ILLUSTRATIONS SAMUEL E. HILLES CINCINNATI 1928 Copyright, 1928, by SAMUEL E. HILLES Printed in the United States of America Frontispiece SAMUEL HILLES 1788-1873 Photographed about 1870. To the cherished memory of SAMUEL HILLES and MARGARET HILL HILLES this labor of love is affectionately dedicated by their grandson "In March, 1638, the first group of colonists sent out by the Government of Sweden was landed at 'The Rocks,' a natural wharf at Christiana Creek, just above its junction with the Brandywine. The transport was an armed vessel named from an important port of the southern coast of Sweden, 'Key of Kalmar.' The photographic reproduction herewith was made from the miniature model in the Swedish Naval Museum. The ship was of less than two hundred tons burden, and the cargo consisted of adzes, knives and other tools, mirrors, gilt chains and the like, for trade with the natives. The leader of the expedition, Peter Minuit, was a native of Holland." -Courtesy of Wilmington Trust Company. FOREWORD HESE MEMORIALS, in mind for many years, have finally been undertaken, as a labor of love, by a grandson who was T named for the grandfather and closely associated with the later life of SAMUEL HILLES and MARGARET HILL HILLES, in their home in Wilmington, Delaware.
    [Show full text]
  • Founder and First Organising Secretary of the Workers' Educational Association; 1893-1952, N.D
    British Library: Western Manuscripts MANSBRIDGE PAPERS Correspondence and papers of Albert Mansbridge (b.1876, d.1952), founder and first organising secretary of the Workers' Educational Association; 1893-1952, n.d. Partly copies. Partly... (1893-1952) (Add MS 65195-65368) Table of Contents MANSBRIDGE PAPERS Correspondence and papers of Albert Mansbridge (b.1876, d.1952), founder and first organising secretary of the Workers' Educational Association; 1893–1952, n.d. Partly copies. Partly... (1893–1952) Key Details........................................................................................................................................ 1 Provenance........................................................................................................................................ 1 Add MS 65195–65251 A. PAPERS OF INSTITUTIONS, ORGANISATIONS AND COMMITTEES. ([1903–196 2 Add MS 65252–65263 B. SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE. 65252–65263. MANSBRIDGE PAPERS. Vols. LVIII–LXIX. Letters from (mostly prominent)........................................................................................ 33 Add MS 65264–65287 C. GENERAL CORRESPONDENCE. 65264–65287. MANSBRIDGE PAPERS. Vols. LXX–XCIII. General correspondence; 1894–1952,................................................................................. 56 Add MS 65288–65303 D. FAMILY PAPERS. ([1902–1955]).................................................................... 65 Add MS 65304–65362 E. SCRAPBOOKS, NOTEBOOKS AND COLLECTIONS RELATING TO PUBLICATIONS AND LECTURES, ETC. ([1894–1955]).........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Hampshire Bibliography
    127 A SECOND SUPPLEMENT TO HAMPSHIRE BIBLIOGRAPHY. BY REV. R. G. DAVIS. The Bibliography of Hampshire was first attempted by the Rev. Sir W. H. Cope, Bart., who compiled and printed " A LIST OF BOOKS RELATING TO HAMPSHIRE, IN THE LIBRARY AT BRAMSHILL." 8VO. 1879. (Not Published.) The entire collection, with many volumes of Hampshire Views and Illustrations, was bequeathed by Sir W. Cope to the Hartley Institution, mainly through the influence of the late Mr. T. W. Shore, and' on the death of the donor in 1892 was removed to Southampton. The List compiled by the original owner being " privately printed' became very rare, and was necessarily incomplete. In 1891 a much fuller and more accurate Bibliography was published with the following title:—" BIBLIOTHECA HANTONIENSIS, a List of Books relating, to Hampshire, including Magazine References, &c, &c, by H. M. Gilbert and the Rev. G. N. Godwin, with a List of Hampshire Newspapers, by F. E. Edwards. Southampton. 1891. The List given in the above publication was considerably augmented by a SUPPLEMENTARY HAMPSHIRE BIBLIOGRAPHY, compiled by the Rev. Sumner Wilson, Rector of Preston Candover, printed in the PAPERS AND PROCEEDINGS OF THE HAMPSHIRE FIELD CLUB. Vol. III., p. 303. A further addition to the subject is here offered with a view to rendering the Bibliography of Hants as complete as possible. Publications referring to the Isle of Wight are not comprised in this List. 128 FIRST PORTION.—Letters A to K. ACT for widening the roads from the end of Stanbridge Lane, near a barn in the Parish of Romsey.
    [Show full text]
  • The Life and Amazing Times of William Waynflete
    The Life and Amazing Times of William Waynflete by Anna Withers Among the occupants of the chantry chapels of Winchester Cathedral, William Waynflete impresses by reason of his longevity, living as he did until the age of 87 (if he was born in 1399) and under the reigns of eight kings, four of whom died by violence. To preserve life and high office during the turbulent loyalties and internecine feuds of the Wars of the Roses was a feat indeed: one might suppose that Waynflete achieved it by studious avoidance of political prominence and controversy, but in fact nothing could be further from the truth. Fig 1 Effigy of William of Wayneflete in Winchester Cathedral Photo: Julie Adams He was born in Wainfleet in Lincolnshire, possibly as early as 1395. His family name was Patten, or sometimes Barbour. Henry Beaufort had become Bishop of Lincoln in 1398, and it has been suggested that he assisted the young William to study at Winchester College and then at New College, Oxford. However, there is no contemporary evidence that he studied there or indeed attended Oxford at all, other than a letter written to him in later life by the Chancellor of the University, describing Oxford as the “mother who brought [Waynflete] forth into the light of knowledge”. He took orders as an acolyte in 1420 in the name of William Barbour, becoming a subdeacon and then deacon (this time as William Barbour, otherwise Waynflete of Spalding) in 1421, finally being ordained priest in 1426. He seems to have been marked out early as a young man of ability and potential.
    [Show full text]
  • Episcopal Tombs in Early Modern England
    Jnl of Ecclesiastical History, Vol. 55, No. 4, October 2004. f 2004 Cambridge University Press 654 DOI: 10.1017/S0022046904001502 Printed in the United Kingdom Episcopal Tombs in Early Modern England by PETER SHERLOCK The Reformation simultaneously transformed the identity and role of bishops in the Church of England, and the function of monuments to the dead. This article considers the extent to which tombs of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century bishops represented a set of episcopal ideals distinct from those conveyed by the monuments of earlier bishops on the one hand and contemporary laity and clergy on the other. It argues that in death bishops were increasingly undifferentiated from other groups such as the gentry in the dress, posture, location and inscriptions of their monuments. As a result of the inherent tension between tradition and reform which surrounded both bishops and tombs, episcopal monuments were unsuccessful as a means of enhancing the status or preserving the memory and teachings of their subjects in the wake of the Reformation. etween 1400 and 1700, some 466 bishops held office in England and Wales, for anything from a few months to several decades.1 The B majority died peacefully in their beds, some fading into relative obscurity. Others, such as Richard Scrope, Thomas Cranmer and William Laud, were executed for treason or burned for heresy in one reign yet became revered as saints, heroes or martyrs in another. Throughout these three centuries bishops played key roles in the politics of both Church and PRO=Public Record Office; TNA=The National Archives I would like to thank Craig D’Alton, Felicity Heal, Clive Holmes, Ralph Houlbrooke, Judith Maltby, Keith Thomas and the anonymous reader for this JOURNAL for their comments on this article.
    [Show full text]
  • 297 312 323 324 333 Unveröffentlichte Quellen 333
    VII. WYKEHAMS SELBSTVERSTÄNDNIS ALS AUFTRAGGEBER UND Einleitung SEIN VERHÄLTNIS ZUM KÖNIGSHAUS 297 Als William of Wykeham an einem Sonntag im Oktober 1367 von Erzbischof SCHLUSSBETRACHTUNG 312 Simon Langham in der St. Pauls-Kathedrale in London zum Bischof von Winchester geweiht wurde, war dies der Auftakt für die Realisierung eines der ˙ 9˙ DANKSAGUNG 323 bemerkenswertesten Bauprogramme des 14. Jahrhunderts. 1 In den folgenden vier Jahrzehnten seiner Amtszeit sollte der Bischof die Errichtung zweier für SUMMARY 324 die Entwicklung der Kollegienarchitektur wegweisender Colleges in Oxford und Winchester finanzieren, den Umbau des Langhauses der Kathedrale von QUELLEN- UND LITERATURVERZEICHNIS 333 Winchester maßgeblich vorantreiben, mehrere Bischofspaläste in Hampshire ausbauen lassen und eine Grabkapelle in Auftrag geben, deren Monumenta- Unveröffentlichte Quellen 333 lität und Originalität zeitgenössische Sepulkralwerke in den Schatten stell- London, British Library 333 te. Wykehams ambitionierte Bauprojekte wurden zielstrebig und in rascher Oxford, New College, Archiv (NCA) 333 Folge umgesetzt und durch reiche Bildausstattung geschmückt. Nur wenige Oxford, New College, Bibliothek 334 Auftraggeber gotischer Architektur, Skulptur und Glasmalerei können mit Winchester College, Archiv (Winchester College Muniments) 334 einem derart umfangreichen und geschlossenen Werkkomplex in Verbindung Winchester, Hampshire Record Office 335 gebracht werden. Wykehams Bedeutung als „arguably the single most lavish patron of ar- Gedruckte Quellen und Textausgaben
    [Show full text]
  • UNIVERSITY of LONDON INSTITUTE Jf EDUCATION
    UNIVERSITY OF LONDON INSTITUTE j f EDUCATION LIBRARY NOT TO BE REMOVED FROM LiBRART RELIGIOUS EDUCATION AND ITS UNDERLYING STRUCTURE. Andrew Sangster M.Phil Institute of Education, University of London. 1 X - / < I -Sol^S7 - 0 ABSTRACT Part 1 of this thesis is an historical survey of the legislation and development of Religious Education as a school subject. Part 2 is a study of the different approaches to the subject. The thesis outlines a continuing tension within the subject between those who see Religious Education as a phenomenological study; those who see it as a confessional opportunity; and those who view it as a broad discussion period or nurturing experience. There is also an examination of the issues relating to Moral Education within this subject. Part 3 summarises the historical perspective, examines the nature of the subject in the light of educational theory, makes a brief examination of the 1992 White Paper (Choice and Diversity) and finally sets out the idea that if the right approaches to the subject are adopted there is no need for the opting-out clauses in the Government legislation. 2 CONTENTS GENERAL INTRODUCTION p.4 PART I CHAPTER 1. A Brief History to 1944 p.8 CHAPTER 2. The 1944 Education Act p.25 CHAPTER 3. 1945-1959 p.43 CHAPTER 4. The 1960s p.56 CHAPTER 5. 1970-88 p.92 PART 2 INTRODUCTION TO PART 2 P.121 CHAPTER 6. Confessionalisra p.122 CHAPTER 7. The Moral Perspective p.139 CHAPTER 8. The Implicit Approach p.157 CHAPTER 9. The Explicit Approach p.171 PART 3 INTRODUCTION TO PART 3 P.186 CHAPTER 10.
    [Show full text]
  • Synod of the Missionary Diocese of Algoma
    A.D. 1950 Journal of Proceedings OF THE SIXTEENTH SESSION OF THE Synod of the Missionary Diocese of Algoma CLIFFE PRINTING COMPANY SAULT STE . MARIE, ONTARIO {J;tutral ~yunb of tbe arl1urtl1 nf fnglnnb in arnnnbn mnrnutn Attessinu Numher.· .. ·· ... .· . .· . ......... ...... ....... ... .. ... .. .. .......... .. ... THE INCORPORATED SYNOD OF THE Missionary Diocese of Algoma OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND IN CANADA Journal of Proceedings OF THE SIXTEENTH SESSION Held in the City of Sault Ste. l\'Iarie, Ontario, from June 6th to 8th in-elusive A.D. 1950. WITH ApPENDICES t:l:LERGY AND' OFFlcERS; DIOCESE <JF ALG'OMA.· ''l!he' Bisltop;' The Right Rev. William Lockridge" Wright" D'.D';, Bishophur'st, Sault 'Site. Marie';' O,n,t. The :Dean~ , TIre Very Irev. J. H. Oraigr' M.k) }) .]) ~ , Al1cbdeaeonS" , ___ ___ . __ _ tIle Veri:'. C. VV .. Balf&ur, M.A., Archdeacon emeritusf saurt See. Marie' The Ven-. J. B. Lilrdsell, Archdeacon of Muskoka ____ .. .. _,'___ _, . ____ _____,. Gravenhurst The' Vel'],. J. S ... Smedley'f L .'llh'1 Archdeacon~ of Algoma: _____ ..__ ~< __ _ Po.rt Arthm:-' HonO'rary CaU:ons: The Rev. F: W . ColIotoI1, E .A.,- B.D. __ ________________ _, ..__ __ _._ __ __ . __ ____ ~. __ S''3!ul't Ste: Marie' The' Rev. C. C. Simpson;, L.Th. (Retired) __ __ ______ __ __ _,_. __ __ __ ,____ ___ _____________ Orangeville The Rev. RIchard Haines _______________________________ __ .__ ., .... ___________ ____ ____________ Little Current The ReV'. H. A. Bilns ____ __ ___ _,_ _, ___ __ __. _'____ _______ _.__ ,_____ _-.' _ ___ __ '______ ___ ,_,'___ __ '.
    [Show full text]
  • Durham E-Theses
    Durham E-Theses The church colleges 1890-1944,with special reference to the church of England colleges and the role of the national society Boyd, Michael V. How to cite: Boyd, Michael V. (1981) The church colleges 1890-1944,with special reference to the church of England colleges and the role of the national society, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7517/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk 2 THE CHURCH COLLEGES 1890-1946, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND COLLEGES AND THE ROLE OF THE NATIONAL SOCIETY A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the University of Durham School of Education by MICHAEL V. BOYD 1981 ABSTRACT THE CHURCH COLLEGES 1890-1944, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND COLLEGES AND THE ROLE OF THE NATIONAL SOCIETY Michael V.
    [Show full text]
  • Brief History of Great Screen
    A Brief History of The Great Screen of Winchester Cathedral by Jeannie Berridge Jeannie Berridge is a voluntary guide in Winchester Cathedral. Early in 2018, the Great Screen in Winchester Cathedral was thoroughly cleaned. The work was carried out by McNeilage Conservation, a husband and wife team based near Exeter; the effect has been dramatic as the screen had not been cleaned since the restoration of the late 19th century, and in places it was covered with a layer of dust half an inch thick. Before and after pictures are shown for the statue of William Waynflete in Figure 1. Fig 1.1 William Waynflete before cleaning Fig 1.2 William Waynflete after cleaning Photos: Simon Newman The Great Screen was probably planned during the episcopate of Cardinal Beaufort (1405-1447) but completed during the time Bishop William Waynflete was Bishop of Winchester (1447-1486). In many respects, the story of the Great Screen is mirrored in the wider history of Winchester Cathedral, starting with the great wealth and power of the medieval bishops, through to the destruction inflicted during the Reformation, and followed by years of neglect. Once religious images became widely accepted in the Church of England in the Victorian period, the screen was restored to something approaching its original form with new statues being commissioned to fill the empty niches. The Reverend David Warner, a former Winchester Cathedral guide wrote: “The wealth of Beaufort contributed to its splendour and the influence of Bishop Waynflete is evident in the moulding and decoration”. [1] This ambitious reredos was part of a wider design for the east end incorporating two further inter-related projects: a new shrine for St Swithun, and Cardinal Beaufort’s chantry chapel.
    [Show full text]
  • CONTEXTS of the CADAVER TOMB IN. FIFTEENTH CENTURY ENGLAND a Volumes (T) Volume Ltext
    CONTEXTS OF THE CADAVER TOMB IN. FIFTEENTH CENTURY ENGLAND a Volumes (T) Volume LText. PAMELA MARGARET KING D. Phil. UNIVERSITY OF YORK CENTRE FOR MEDIEVAL STUDIES October, 1987. TABLE QE CONTENTS Volume I Abstract 1 List of Abbreviations 2 Introduction 3 I The Cadaver Tomb in Fifteenth Century England: The Problem Stated. 7 II The Cadaver Tomb in Fifteenth Century England: The Surviving Evidence. 57 III The Cadaver Tomb in Fifteenth Century England: Theological and Literary Background. 152 IV The Cadaver Tomb in England to 1460: The Clergy and the Laity. 198 V The Cadaver Tomb in England 1460-1480: The Clergy and the Laity. 301 VI The Cadaver Tomb in England 1480-1500: The Clergy and the Laity. 372 VII The Cadaver Tomb in Late Medieval England: Problems of Interpretation. 427 Conclusion 484 Appendix 1: Cadaver Tombs Elsewhere in the British Isles. 488 Appendix 2: The Identity of the Cadaver Tomb in York Minster. 494 Bibliography: i. Primary Sources: Unpublished 499 ii. Primary Sources: Published 501 iii. Secondary Sources. 506 Volume II Illustrations. TABU QE ILLUSTRATIONS Plates 2, 3, 6 and 23d are the reproduced by permission of the National Monuments Record; Plates 28a and b and Plate 50, by permission of the British Library; Plates 51, 52, 53, a and b, by permission of Trinity College, Cambridge. Plate 54 is taken from a copy of an engraving in the possession of the office of the Clerk of Works at Salisbury Cathedral. I am grateful to Kate Harris for Plates 19 and 45, to Peter Fairweather for Plate 36a, to Judith Prendergast for Plate 46, to David O'Connor for Plate 49, and to the late John Denmead for Plate 37b.
    [Show full text]
  • Book Reviews PRAISE of GLORY
    82 THE CHURCHMAN that are offered. But I take a mental note of them all, endeavouring to weave any which may be helpful into the general structure of the service, and thus church worship becomes more and more the vital energetic channel of the grace of God, and worshippers learn the truth of the old dictum-" Man's chief end is to glorify God, and to enjoy Him for ever." Book Reviews PRAISE OF GLORY. By E. I. Watkin. iv and 280 pp. Skeed and Ward, 1943, 10/6. This commentary of thirteen chapters on Lauds and Vespers is by a Roman Catholic Ia·yman, who was received into the Roman Church at Downside at the age of twenty years. Mr. Watkin is knovm for his philosophical and theological writings and for his translation of Halevy's History of the English People " and Maritafn's" Introduction to Philosophy." The Catholic News-Letter has pointed out that "Jay scholars have exerted a very powerful influence upon the development of the Breviary," and it is there­ fore fitting that a layman should write a commentary showing such a keen understanding and appreciation of the Hours of the I{oman Breviary. The Roman Church is fortunate in having a layman so well-informed and so well­ versed in liturgiology that he is able to supply a running commentary on the Psalms and other parts of the two Offices, skilfully explaining the intricacies of the Common and Proper of Saints, proposing thoughts which will be helpful in interpreting the chief themes and in following the leitmotif of the days, and at the same time injecting little personal notes which considerably add to the interest of the book.
    [Show full text]