login continuous email location arrow-point-to-right phone calendar translate search facebook

Welcome To

The Old Honitonians Club

Call Us Email Us Find Us

Latest News

  • OH Memorial Service 2023

    Sun 29 Oct 2023 David Woollatt

    We were absolutely delighted by the strong turnout of OHs at our annual Memorial Service, which took place at St. Paul's Church in Honiton on October 28, 2023. We extend our heartfelt gratitude to Cannon Chris Vallins for his exceptional leadership during the service, as well as his wife Beth, whose organ performance was superb. Patrick McCaig's bugle playing added a poignant touch, and Brigadier David Shaw's reading of the second lesson was deeply moving. Special thanks must also go to Tim Huxtable, who not only captured the day through his photography but efficiently managed the collection.

     

    We want to express our sincere appreciation to all who attended, even in the face of relentless downpours. Your presence was greatly appreciated.

     

    It was also, as always, fabulous to visit the Allhallows Museum in Honiton, a truly wonderful collection which will fascinate OHs and is well worth a visit.

     

    With gratitude, Seb Warner OH President

  • OH Golfing Success

    Sun 15 Oct 2023 John Pagliero

    Heartiest congratulations to everyone who represented the OHGS on 12th October in what was an excellent reclaiming of the 'Foresail Trophy' at West Surrey Golf Club. 

     

    Our team (in no particular order) comprised: Richard Heard, Roddy Wakeford, Roger Hopkins, Jeremy Page, Andrew Sanders and me - together with our team manager and chief critic, Lord Charles/Tim Pipkin of West Sussex.

     

    There were some great scores, mine didn't figure that prominently I'm disappointed to say, but our win was described by our hosts as 'convincing' so clearly all of us managed to accomplish what we had to well enough.  

     

    Adding to our day's OH successes were Roddy Wakeford who won the prize for the 'Best Individual Stableford Score', Richard Heard who claimed 'Nearest the Pin' and Andrew Sanders (now forever Anthony...) who outmuscled everyone to the 'Longest Drive'. 

     

    I would also like to say a special word of thanks to our reserves Jonathan Christie and David Danskin who, prior to the event, were they not to be needed for the team, most nobly agreed to play a friendly as neither the OEs nor the ODs could raise a team of 8...!!  

     

    We OHs ain't that bad after all, are we.....we rarely seem to suffer that 'lack of participation' problem that others have and a big thank you to all of you for your continued support.

     

    Finally, after the prize-giving, we were all able to drink a toast to our dear departed Roddy at what was his home club and following a match that originally was largely his brainchild.

  • WHAT HAVE YOU MISSED?

    Sun 08 Oct 2023 George Hayter

    Here are my top ten favourite articles from OH Magazine over the past few years. 

     

    Check out the list to see how many you remember. 

     

    10 in my selection is the article Rousdon Rooms Restored, which takes readers back to the main school building. But the rooms look more comfy than you remember. Barry and Anne Moore, then-owners of part of the mansion, allowed OH Magazine in to photograph the library and other familiar rooms lovingly refurbished by them as part of their new home: 2015 issue, page 24. 

     

    9 Watching for Enemy Bombers by Ralph Harding (B 36-43) is one of several dramatic reminiscences by wartime pupils. This one puts WW2 into the context of a family’s long loyalty to the school. Ralph himself had been at Honiton only a year when the shock move to Rousdon was announced. And pupils had barely completed tidying up the new premises when war was announced, bringing fresh demands on pupils’ time. To combat rationing, Ralph had to look after the school’s chickens. 2016 page 18 

     

    8 Plans of the Rousdon mansion provided by the late former master Graham Jones were printed in a centre spread. The use of each room in the Peeks’ time was labelled. The following year the ground floor plan was printed again, with a key describing the new use of each room after the school moved in. 2018 page 20. 

     

    7 A different sort of layout, this time of the Rousdon grounds. Research by editor Emily showed the course of the meandering farm track later replaced by today’s grand entrance drive. Emily’s research revealed that the well in the chapel quad had been the farm’s well, from which water used to be drawn by a girl aged 12 walking a treadmill. 2022 page 14 

     

    6 The headmaster in 1952 appears to have been a perfectionist frustrated by what he considered the school’s low academic performance. Victor ‘Val’ Hill (headmaster 48-65) expressed his dissatisfaction in a secret report to the chairman of governors written in 1952 and revealed for the first time 66 years later in the magazine. 2018 page 10 

     

    5 The magazine’s most consistent article contributor has probably been Richard Anderson (M 67-71). One of the funniest essays from the prolific former head of school was his view of the arrival in 1969 of the first girls. 2019 page 14 

     

    4 Travel executive Steve Bath (Chu 66-71) brought to life plans for an article about surviving Allhallows buildings at Honiton. He agreed to fly a light aircraft over the town. At ideal altitude and angle, he achieved the perfect aerial photo for a double-page spread clearly showing all the sights relevant to OHs curious about the school’s history. 2014 page 16 

     

    3 Everybody loves Mr Allhallows, Derek Blooman. In a fast-paced page about his life, the popular former master squeezes in everything from the school’s demise to his own education, and from 60s hairstyles to 2nd XI cricket tactics. 2011 page4 

     

    2 When we were pupils in the grand Rousdon mansion we all marvelled at the wealth of the Peeks, never imagining that one of us was a descendant of Sir Henry. But if you were there in the late 1950s, one of your colleagues was. Alec Crawford (55-60) was a great great great grandson of Sir Henry Peek. Alec was persuaded by editor Emily Banting to tell his story. He hadn’t known the situation himself till he had been at Allhallows a year. His parents had been entertained at Rousdon in the 1920s and 30s and his mother even took Alec around dormitories, telling him how luxurious the rooms had looked then. 2022page20 

     

    1 The top spot came during the three-edition tenure of editor Emily Banting. That’s when the mag zoomed to its zenith with a moving double-page from Sean Day-Lewis, the Daily Telegraph journalist and son of the poet laureate. Emily’s scoop was the most perceptive writing about Allhallows I have seen. It’s the main reason I went ahead with this top ten, because at OH events I asked people about what Day-Lewis wrote but it seems many OHs had overlooked his brilliant essay. Provocative, funny, emotional. 2021 page 25 

     

    Back copies stacked in your attic or garage are not the only place to see these articles if you want to. You can also find them on the OH website, by clicking on the “news & events” pull-down menu. 

     

    Sorry I’m late posting this, my October website comment. I’ll try to get back on time with my next monthly contribution, due November 1st

  • Roddy Long - Thanksgiving Service

    Thu 21 Sep 2023

    Roddy Long's Thanksgiving service will be held on Wednesday 15th November in Milford (Near Guildford) at 1.30pm. 

     

    If you can attend, it would be much appreciated if you could RSVP to Roddy's son Charlie here chaz_and_liz@mac.com, so the family can have a rough idea of numbers.

     

    The MacMillan Nurses cared for Roddy at the end. If you would like to make a donation to support their cause, please visit - https://www.macmillan.org.uk/donate You may also choose to sponsor Charlie as he runs the Royal Parks half marathon on their behalf, which Roddy would certainly have approved - https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/charles-long-macmillan

     

  • A Memorable Westcountry Lunch Reunion - September 16th, 2023

    Mon 18 Sep 2023 David Woollatt

    What a delightful day it was on September 16th, 2023! The sun was shining, the sea breeze was invigorating, and the camaraderie was heartwarming as we gathered at the beautiful Victoria Hotel in Sidmouth for our Westcountry Lunch. It was a truly wonderful occasion that brought together so many of us.

     

    There's an old saying that goes, "Old friends are like stars; you don't always see them, but you know they're always there." And indeed, it was a day to rekindle old friendships, reminisce about school days, and make new memories together.

     

    We want to extend our heartfelt gratitude to everyone who attended the event, making it such a resounding success. Your presence added immeasurable warmth and meaning to the day. The laughter and stories shared were a testament to the enduring bonds we've formed over the years.

     

    A special mention must go to David Richardson, who took on the monumental task of organizing this event.  Thank you!

     

    While we eagerly await the full write-up of this memorable event in our upcoming Newsletter, we wanted to share some of the photographs from the day. 

  • THE MYSTERY BEFORE THE DRINKS

    Sun 27 Aug 2023 George Hayter

    Who in their right mind would want to miss the AGM? The annual general meeting – yes, I know it sounds dull – has in fact always been an opportunity to see who is running the club and to question them, and also to applaud them.

         The AGM is also an opportunity for a sit down! When you’ve been on your feet all day and you’re looking forward to an evening on your feet at a drinks party, it makes sense to take a seat for half an hour.

         And another pragmatic point: If you’re like me – not always punctual – then aiming for the start of the AGM guarantees not missing the start of the drinks.

         To some OHs, the annual general meeting is a mysterious rigmarole preceding the real event. For me, it’s always been a vigorous highspot among OH events, with suggestions being aired and policy discussed. You can have your say. (Keep it short though, please!)

         But this year the AGM is going to change, or so I gather. The club’s top brass apparently have in mind something less starchy, less formal. Less rhetoric and more entertainment, by the sound of it.

         I had an interesting email from our president Seb Warner, reminding me that we are lucky to still have a club. There is no longer a school to support it and he pointed out that this year Allhallows has been closed 25 years. So this year Seb wants the AGM to celebrate the club’s continued existence, he told me, adding: “It will be more of a club update, rather than a formal constitutional event.”

         Seb and his new mini-committee seem to be livening up the OH scene. I expect we’ll get more details of the new-look AGM on the website in weeks if not days. Until then, it’s a pre-drinks mystery.

         The AGM and drinks, at the Royal Automobile Club in London, will be on Thursday evening, November 16th.

     

    l Next website offering from monthly contributor George Hayter: 1st October.

  • IF YOU DIDN’T LIKE SCHOOL

    Wed 02 Aug 2023 George Hayter

    For most of my five years at Allhallows I was discontent and sometimes I still wish I had gone to another school. 

        In my opinion the standard of teaching was low and most facilities below standard. 

        I was considered a bright pupil at prep school but by the time I left Allhallows my academic ranking had dropped. 

        Like everybody else in the 1965 intake to Venning, I was bullied, beaten, humiliated and discouraged. 

        And like Sir Francis Peek himself, I found parts of the actual location depressing, with its forbidding flint walls, its ghostly mansion and its dispiriting fog. 

        My housemaster wasn’t my type and, as an uncompetitive coward, I resented Saturday afternoons having to cheer others at play. 

        Allhallows was all boys until the first girls were introduced in my last year but oh dear I didn’t really get a look in. There were only six of them. 

        Too much of the teaching was boring and one master’s lessons were frightening, although Mr Blooman and Mr Christian were among staff who inspired me. 

        Some admirable OHs took a more positive view. They loved everything about Allhallows. Apparently they didn’t even notice the violence, the harsh conditions and the chaos. They thought the teaching was brilliant, they weren’t bullied and they didn’t even mind being beaten. They gloried in Rousdon’s isolation and they weren’t forced to watch the boring XV because they were in it. 

        These go-ahead people who shone in the examination hall and triumphed at sport are often to be heard at OH events. 

        And you might think that sceptics like me, who squandered their schooldays joking and sneering at swots and goody goodies, would be attracted to an OH gathering as they would be attracted to a minefield. 

        Yet I am an Allhallows doubter who is active in the club. And I’m not alone. Some of the most troublesome retrogrades you knew at school are these days regularly in the midst of happy chat at OH gatherings. Sports heroes and maths geniuses do not monopolise the attendance. Neither are prefects and heads of school the only ones there. There are loads of rogues like you and me. 

        The Allhallows grateful and ungrateful mix together better than the milk and powder in school custard. I should know. At school I was a cigarette-smoking wastrel who one year trampled his housemaster’s prized tomato plants, yet at OH events I have immensely enjoyed talking to the school’s former sporting and academic elite, not to mention swapping memories with former enforcers of school discipline. 

        Everybody is after a good time at club events. Come and have a good time with other old boys and girls this year, even if you’re among those of us who didn’t have much of a good time at Rousdon. 

    Club events in 2023 include lunch, remembrance and drinks. 

    Respectively in Sidmouth, Honiton and London. 

    September 16th, October 28th and November 16th. Details: OH website. 

     

    •  Next website offering by monthly contributor George Hayter: 1st September 

     

  • Roderic Wilfred John Long ‘known as Roddy’.

    Sun 09 Jul 2023

    It is with great sadness that the OH club announce the passing of our esteemed former President Roddy Long on the 9th of June 2023.

     

    Roddy was not only the longest-serving President of the OH club but also a gentleman, a leader, an all-round sportsman and a good, learned friend to so many multi-generational OH's. It seems without doubt that the OH club continues today due to the singular commitment and hard work of Roddy and of course his wife Sheila and we remain indebted to them both. 

     

    Roddy had a remarkable school career at Allhallows culminating in his Head of School appointment in September 1962. Before that he was Head of Baker House, Senior Under Officer in the CCF and of course School Prefect and House Prefect. He had many sporting colours, playing Cricket, Rugby and Hockey and he continued to play sports with and organise sporting events for OH's many years after leaving the school in 1963. Roddy was a stalwart of the OH Golf Society and a champion of the OH Cricket week and his work in organising these events over the years is appreciated by many. The OH club has received letters and emails each affirming gratitude to Roddy, a deep respect for his nature, his work, his sportsmanship and of course of how much he will be missed with a common theme that he emulated the values and ideals of his school days and applied them to his life thereafter -something of a role model to us all.

     

    “RIP Roddy; the memory of your wonderful, trademark, smile lives on.”

     

    "I remember so well how very kind and welcoming
    they both were to me, the new boy at my first OH function. Everyone there was kind, of
    course - that is the OH way - but Roddy and Sheila were even more so and Cricket Week,
    a super event, was to become one that I frequented for many years afterwards". 

     

    "It goes without saying that Roddy was a first class president and a very active golfer and organiser....Roddy you gave your all for school and club...Fantastic..You will always be a star and fine example".  

     

    "Aside from golf, Roddy was a quite outstanding President of the OH Club and nobody
    could have done more than he did not only to ensure, but to strengthen, the health and
    vitality of a club that sought to continue on even after the closure of Allhallows." 

     

    “He had a tactical brain and was a great motivator to team players.” 

     

    “He was a serious and responsible leader at school, but enjoyed his more relaxed times, normally with a pint in hand. I will miss seeing him at our golf meetings. We have lost a great guy, kind and generous by nature, and good company on and off the course”. 

     

    “How clever that his grandchildren called him 'Groddy'!” 

     

     “I liked Roddy Long even before I met the man.  

    Roddy’s easy-going jollity always ensured a good atmosphere wherever he presided, and anyone who went to club events benefited from that”.

     

    “Instead, quite to the contrary, thanks to Roddy’s hard work, much of it

    behind the scenes, enthusiasm and sense of fun, the Club flourished and

    arguably became more active.” 

     

    “His sense of humour was ever present….we seemed, at those cricket

    weeks, to play card games, designed to reduce one’s bank balance, until the dawn or more

    likely, mist rose over the Rousdon landscape. I am not sure who, on one of those weeks, left

    Derek Crawshaw’s car minus its wheels on the hard tennis court but Roddy seemed to have

    an excess of oil on his hands the next morning”. 

     

    “Roddy liked to claim, rather than admit, that the only examination he ever

    passed first time was his Driving Test! His success and popularity in everything else stemmed from his unconcern about his lack of academic achievements and other things that he could not control.” 

     

    “I found Roddy a brilliant leader. Explain a complex difficulty to him by email and he would email back with a simple few-word solution that would have you wondering why you ever thought you had a problem to start with.” 

     

    The spirit and memory of Roddy Long will live on in the OH club: "He was, quite simply and in modern parlance, a legend".  

     

     

    Addendum: The OH club sincerely thank the many individuals who contacted us regarding Roddy Long and the significant number of contributions from OH’s and friends that have gone into this final piece. Quoted directly above are John Pagliero, Dudley Hopkins, Nigel French, RF Sherwood, George Hayter, John ‘Sid’ Harper, Giles Blomfield, David Shaw and indirectly many, many others! 

     

     

    To download this obituary along with all the photographs click here.

  • PRAISE FOR PERFECT PREFECTS

    Fri 30 Jun 2023 George Hayter

    Unfortunately, I was put in Venning, which was a luxurious building only about a year old. 

        My Venning contemporaries and I were envied by classmates housed in the main building, who had to put up with squalid basement baths and toilets, whereas we basked in gleaming new baths, showers and changing rooms. 

        But boys in other houses were wrong to envy us. Despite our modern surroundings, all of us in the 1965 Venning intake would have given anything not to be in Venning. We spent our first year paralysed in fear. Due to one or two chilling individuals, we were bullied more cruelly than boys in other houses. 

        But, looking back in the last year or so, I have realised that we were lucky in one way. We had wonderful prefects. 

        In those days prefects’ duties included administering corporal punishment to 13 and 14-year-olds with a hairbrush. A prefect would order the miscreant to bend over before delivering typically two or three strokes with the approximately nine-inch brush. 

        It was a difficult role for a prefect of any sensitivity, administering what these days would be considered criminal assault. Many OHs of that period thoroughly approve of Allhallows 1960s discipline but most concede that prefects tended to abuse their power, by beating boys for trumped-up reasons. OH author Sir John Lister-Kaye, head of school in 1964, has described the abuse he suffered as a junior: “Catching us juniors talking after lights-out was more about asserting power and providing sport for newly-appointed house prefects than it was a justified corrective.” 

        Our three Venning prefects in 1965-66 were not like that. They beat us only when rules required, and they did it as a duty, with distaste. 

        My research suggests that the three must have found it particularly unpleasant to beat their fellow students. 

        For example, the oldest prefect was really too old to be at school. He was 19 for most of his year as prefect. He had not joined Allhallows until he was 15 which suggests that, although he was expected to beat boys, he had joined the school too late to have ever been beaten by a boy himself. If true, what a difficult situation! 

        The next oldest also had not joined the school until age 15 and had to beat me and my contemporaries, despite probably never having been beaten by a pupil himself. 

        The youngest of the three was also in an uncomfortable position, being little older than his charges. He was appointed prefect aged just 16 years and five months. 

        All three prefects seemed studious types and my research, using the book Allhallows School Register and Record, shows that none of them were very sporty. 

        Thanks guys! All three of you were fair and decent but I didn’t appreciate that at the time. 

     

    l Next website offering due from monthly contributor George Hayter:  1st August 

  • South West Golf Week

    Thu 29 Jun 2023 David Woollatt

    I had a wonderful time meeting the OHs who participated in the South West Golfing Week tournament at Lyme Regis Golf Course yesterday (28/06/23).

     

    Special thanks to John Pagliero for organizing the event. It was a real honour for me to present the prizes at the end of the day. We captured some fantastic OH videos for our Youtube channel, which will be available in due course.

     

    Congratulations to all the players! Here is a quick shot I took to at the end of the afternoon.

Top