Crown Woods wasn’t the only comprehensive school delivering a fine education but it was the one I went to.
So it is a place I can talk about with confidence and a lot of affection. I arrived aged 16 in the September of 1966 having done five indifferent years at a secondary modern school, which if I am honest were a standoff.
The middle years had been troubled and were not happy ones and while I became more settled I was ready to leave. So nothing quite prepared me for Crown Woods.
Here were two thousand students, half of them girls, a building which was less than a decade old and a dynamic, young and talented teaching staff. This was all state comprehensive education was meant to be.
Every night there was something going on ranging from the usual sporting clubs, and music sessions to poetry evenings and the big set concerts and drama performances. And without much effort you got sucked into it. I performed a piece by Pinter with Michael Marland the head of the English Department, joined a mixed bunch hosting an evening of 18th century readings and music in a fine period house in Blackheath and co produced a radio programme on folk music broadcast to the entire school.
It was also the way you were left to take on bigger things. So when after a few months of going to a local folk group I fancied putting on a concert at school one evening all I had to do was ask. The details are now lost in the fog of the past but we did more than one so I guess it all went well. Then there was the teaching.
Never had learning been so exciting and meaningful before or since. These were the years of discovering Shakespeare, John Donne, and of watching as 18th century literature opened up the history of the period giving it context and depth.
It seems so obvious now but then the idea that before we read the set A level plays of Henry IV and King Lear we would immerse ourselves in the other great Shakespearian histories and tragedies.
Or that in preparation for the prose and poems of Samuel Johnson the 18th century writer we would look at the rhyming techniques of Alexander Pope and gaze over countless buildings of the century to understand the idea of balance and style.
Now for a working class boy who had just about reached his limit with Ian Fleming this was a revelation and a passport to another world.
And it extended out to theatre visits, from the National and Joan Littlewoods’s Stratford East to countless little rep companies across London. We were not just watching live theatre but for the space of two years were living it.
Amongst all this was a gentle assumption that the natural next step for many of us was University, a path which had only been trodden by one distant cousin in our family.
Finally there were the friends, some of whom have lasted through the last 55 years and of course the girlfriends none of whom sadly lasted more than a few months.
Now I was just 16 and I guess the cynical will shrug and dismiss it all as hormones. After all this is or should be when we live life in an intense and uncompromising way.
And there is also that creeping fog of nostalgia which makes the past a series of hot sunny days. But on balance for me and I think some of the other class of '68 this was a fine place to spend two years.
Pictures from the collection Anne Davey
Tomorrow; widening horizons and lots of fun
So it is a place I can talk about with confidence and a lot of affection. I arrived aged 16 in the September of 1966 having done five indifferent years at a secondary modern school, which if I am honest were a standoff.
The middle years had been troubled and were not happy ones and while I became more settled I was ready to leave. So nothing quite prepared me for Crown Woods.
Here were two thousand students, half of them girls, a building which was less than a decade old and a dynamic, young and talented teaching staff. This was all state comprehensive education was meant to be.
Every night there was something going on ranging from the usual sporting clubs, and music sessions to poetry evenings and the big set concerts and drama performances. And without much effort you got sucked into it. I performed a piece by Pinter with Michael Marland the head of the English Department, joined a mixed bunch hosting an evening of 18th century readings and music in a fine period house in Blackheath and co produced a radio programme on folk music broadcast to the entire school.
It was also the way you were left to take on bigger things. So when after a few months of going to a local folk group I fancied putting on a concert at school one evening all I had to do was ask. The details are now lost in the fog of the past but we did more than one so I guess it all went well. Then there was the teaching.
Never had learning been so exciting and meaningful before or since. These were the years of discovering Shakespeare, John Donne, and of watching as 18th century literature opened up the history of the period giving it context and depth.
It seems so obvious now but then the idea that before we read the set A level plays of Henry IV and King Lear we would immerse ourselves in the other great Shakespearian histories and tragedies.
Or that in preparation for the prose and poems of Samuel Johnson the 18th century writer we would look at the rhyming techniques of Alexander Pope and gaze over countless buildings of the century to understand the idea of balance and style.
Now for a working class boy who had just about reached his limit with Ian Fleming this was a revelation and a passport to another world.
And it extended out to theatre visits, from the National and Joan Littlewoods’s Stratford East to countless little rep companies across London. We were not just watching live theatre but for the space of two years were living it.
Amongst all this was a gentle assumption that the natural next step for many of us was University, a path which had only been trodden by one distant cousin in our family.
Finally there were the friends, some of whom have lasted through the last 55 years and of course the girlfriends none of whom sadly lasted more than a few months.
Now I was just 16 and I guess the cynical will shrug and dismiss it all as hormones. After all this is or should be when we live life in an intense and uncompromising way.
And there is also that creeping fog of nostalgia which makes the past a series of hot sunny days. But on balance for me and I think some of the other class of '68 this was a fine place to spend two years.
Pictures from the collection Anne Davey
Tomorrow; widening horizons and lots of fun
I was at CW from 65-70 and you are right it could be a very vibrant place,sometimes overwhelming ! Sadly l don,t think l took full advantage of all it offers ,but that’s life!
ReplyDeleteI went CW in 1968 left 62. I lived on the Avery hill Estate and saw CW being built. The problem for me there was the mix of staff, the state was very short of the teachers and unable to cope with post war baby boom. They cobbled together a mix youngsters not long out of teacher training college, and some old farts who needed retiring.
ReplyDeleteThe headmaster at the time was a bloke called Ross who always smelt of booze. I also remember the married couple the Barrels. A mister Newt, I’m trying to remember the name of the deputy head, I'm afraid her name escapes me. There was a young Irish english teacher who was given all the bad eggs for our last year, after a rocky start and somesome lost temper we all became friends, if it wasn’t for him my 4 years at CW would have been a waist of time. The day I left was the best day there, I remember walking out and not looking back.
If anyone can remind me of the young Irish teachers name I’d appreciate it.
O'Keefe was the English teacher, and Miss Dickson was the deputy head, disagree with you on most of what you say.
DeleteOh dear and why?
DeleteLeo O'Keef - great person!
ReplyDeleteI always had upmost respect for Mr Ross a WW2 fight pilot when he walked down the corridor the mad rush of students between classes just opened up an just upmost respect for the man
ReplyDeleteI had no idea that Mr Ross was a fighter pilot! Wish I’d known then. I guess he might be pleased that at age 73 I’ve achieved a lifelong ambition to gain my pilots licence.
ReplyDelete