Previous Page  18 / 60 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 18 / 60 Next Page
Page Background

16

ST EDWARD’S

r

h

u

b

a

r

b

A History of the

School Archives

by

Chris Nathan

School Archivist (G, 1954-1957)

took many photographs and also archived

those taken by the famous Victorian

Oxford photographer Henry Taunt and

others. Included are many of the earliest

sporting groups that survive till this day. He

maintained a whole host of handwritten

notes of his ‘historical observations’ over the

years he was involved (1880-1937) and set

up a modest archive ‘and museum’ in what

is today’s Macnamara’s as early as 1883. His

records, memory and knowledge enabled

him to edit the first ever School Rolls in

1890, 1898 and 1907 and, he was considered

an invaluable historian and archivist for the

School, priding himself in remembering every

pupil ever to attend.

Cowell certainly did not carry the burden

alone and was assisted by John Millington

Sing and the Reverend William Ferguson,

the fourth and fifth Wardens, Harold Rogers

(B, 1888-1895), an architect who designed

many of the School’s buildings and Dallas

Wynne-Wilson, an early Set Tutor, who all

donated their own extensive photograph

albums to the school Archives. Later

Housemasters John Gauntlett and Peter

Corlett were also prolific cameramen and

chroniclers whose extensive photographic

collections were bequeathed to the School.

Without these gentlemen and others like

them our archives today would be very

lacking in strong visual evidence of times

gone by.

Between Cowell’s death in 1937 and

the next full-time archivist Jack Tate in the

1960s, there are no records of who was

responsible for the archives or even where

they were housed, although Corfe was

definitely used for a time. What is known

is that several members of the Common

Room took an interest in such matters and

were often quoted or deferred to especially

in the

Chronicle

. Bill Eardley (E, 1914-1921)

was always known for his encyclopaedic

memory of the School’s history as were

Philip Whitrow, Desmond Hill (author of the

School

History

in 1963), Hubert Beales (D,

1929-1932) and Roger Northcote-Green

(D, 1926-1931) – all of whom played some

part in the production of the School Rolls

between 1907 and 1963 and were noted

for their specific interest in the School’s

past. Without reference to and knowledge

of the school Archives, they could not have

completed their various publications.

There is historical evidence that from the

School’s earliest days, archival records

were established, originally by Algernon

Simeon the first Warden and then, over

many years, by Wilfrid Cowell the School’s

longest ever serving teacher. Cowell, in

addition to his many other duties, set about

the work most diligently ensuring he both

A R C H I V E S