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WAR MEMORIAL DEDICATION 1949 A
very reverent and very impressive service took place at the School in the
afternoon of Saturday, the 13th of November. This was the unveiling and
dedication of the War Memorial Tablet in the garden of Remembrance in the north
quadrangle in grateful memory of the seventy-six Old Boys who gave their lives
in the war. The afternoon was grey and still with patches of late autumn
sunshine and the School Hall, where the service of remembrance was held, was
filled parents with and relatives of those who had fallen, members of the
staff, old boys, and friends of the School. The service, which had been
arranged almost in its entirety by Dr. P.B.Whitt, the Second Master, was
conducted by the Rev. J.C.Ellis formely Second Master of the staff and now
vicar of Northfield, Birmingham. With him were Alderman Chaplin, chairman of
the School Governors, the Headmaster, Mr. Stirrup, two Old Boys, candidates for
the ministry, F.C.Carpenter and A.F.Auckland, and amongst those present were
the Mayor and Mayoress of Walthamstow (Councillor Miss D. Wrigley and Mrs. M.
Crosier), School Governors and local officials. The School choir occupied the
rear of the platform and led the singing, and Mr. Belchambers played the
introductory music and accompanied the service. After sentences from the
Scriptures, Psalm 23 (Brother James Air) and Collects, the hymn, The Supreme
Sacrifice, was sung. This was followed by readings by Carpenter and Auckland
from "Ecclesiasticus" and "Revelation" and then the Rev. J.C.Ellis gave an
impressive and touching address. He claimes to be representative of the
four elements associated with the afternoon's ceremony in that he was a parent
of one of the seventy six boys who had died in the war, had known nearly every
one of them, had been a member of the teaching staff for nearly twenty years,
and was a priest of the church and a veteran of the First World War. The
present state of the world depressed and distressed. On two occasions in the
life-time of those who were his age, there had been no alternative but to
choose the evil of war, the lesser of the two evils, whether to fight
regardless of the cost, or to stand aside and make way for the rule of wrong
over right. On looking back on our choice our consciences were clear. We
were troubled because events were threatening to shape themselves into a
colossal hammer, which might shatter every hope and dream the young men had
died for. We asked ourselves: "Is human nature never going to improve?" We were
struck by this jarring note in human progress and were searching for a way of
life to see that the awful price of victory was used and not wasted. When
we dreamed of a better world what were we to put our faith in? Could we put it
in the pursuit of material comforts, in schemes of social amelioration, in
child welfare and free education, in housing campaigns and increased wages? Our
only hope for a better world, concluded Mr. Ellis, lay in the reawakening of
the knowledge that we cannot do without God. We needed a reawakening of the
worshipping heart of man. This meant a change of heart in each individual, and
without this change of heart it meant that our boys had died in vain. This was
the grim and inescapable challenge they had left behind. There was no other
way, no other hope. "Apart from Me ye can do nothing." That was the message he
heard from those Monoux boys. After the address the hymn, Jesus lives! thy
terrors now, was sung and then followed the Lord's Prayer and the Benediction.
Those taking part in the unveiling ceremony together with the relatives then
filed out into the quadrangle and took up positions facing the memorial Tablet.
The ceremony was relayed by loud-speaker to those remaining in the hall.
The Last Post was sounded by cadets of the Walthamstow squadron of the A.T.C.
An Old Monovian, N.A.C.Bignell, who served in the war, then unveiled the
Memorial Tablet, which was dedicated by Mr. Ellis. There followed two minutes'
silence, the Reveille, and a prayer, and then the Garden of Remembrance was
handed over to the Captain of the School by Flt.-Lieut. P.A.C.Jermott, D.F.C.,
D.F.M., another Old Monovian. The School Captain, on accepting, recited
Laurence Binyon's beautiful and well known lines beginning "They shall grow not
old as we that are left grow old," then followed the National Anthem and the
simple yet unforgettable ceremony was at an end. Relatives and friends
placed wreaths and bunches of flowers at foot of the Tablet, and later in the
School library old acquaintances were renewed and old memories evoked as
masters, parents, and old boys met for awhile before dispersing. R.
MEMORIAL GARDEN POOL 1949
The pool is 24 feet long and 12 feet wide, and has a paved surround 6 feet
wide. There is a margin of shallow water but elsewhere the depth is two and a
half feet. It is unfortunate that the pool cannot be planted for the
Dedication Service on November 13th: this must wait until May. Plants to be
grown in the margin include marsh-marigolds, water iris and musk, while
water lilies are to be grown in the deeper water. Various kinds of oxygenating
plants will be grown too. Fresh water mussels and water snails will be
introduced when the pool is planted. Fish will be added later. The plants
will be obtained from Messrs. G.and R.Perry of Enfield, who are specialists in
water gardening. A representative of this firm has visited the site and given
us detailed advice on the selection of the plants. The many who have helped
in the work of construction must feel that they have contributed in a very
practical way towards what we hope will be a worthy memorial. Mr Ames, of
course, has done a great dael and perhaps the mos6t active of the boys have
been Lidbury, J. and P. Tavernere, Rumble, Childs, Joliffe, Kay and
Merrett. We hope that during the next Summer term we shall have the same
enthusiasm for diging and preparing the rest of the quad.
A.G.B.
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