ECHOES OF A YOUNG ANARCHIST
REMINISCENCES OF SCHOOLDAYS
BY
BARRY VAN-ASTEN
Having attained an age
whereby I think it is fairly safe to ascertain that most of the illustrious
creatures and sado-masochistic beasts that had a hand in my educational years have
passed from this world of excess and depravity into more pleasant pastures, I
bethought it wise to recall a few haunting escapades and glorious moments from
my school days before it is all lost to oblivion. My only excuse is to preserve
these simple tortures for the benefit of history. My initial dilemma has been
one of discretion: should I change names to protect the innocent? And then I
thought to hell with it, most of them are probably decrepit or gracing their
graves and busy fuelling the fires of Hell so I shall present an honest
account. It is not my intention to cause unnecessary offence or to be
exceptionally insulting or to ‘get my own back’; I am just presenting my
opinion from the perspective of the young boy who was there!
I attended Perhaps the only real period I enjoyed, if being incarcerated for the best part of the day and made to do things one doesn’t want to do can be called enjoyment was my first year at the school when everything seemed new and strange. All the older boys seemed like big men to us small boys and they seemed to do what the hell they liked and get away with it; breaking the rules and sticking two fingers up to the teachers! They were a strange mixture of Mods, Rockers, Skinheads, Punks and Teddy Boys … all flouting the school uniform regulations.
There was a decidedly
unwholesome Welsh element to the teaching staff from the Headmaster Mr.
Griffiths; I’m not sure if the Deputy Head Mr. Rough, affectionately known as
‘Daddy Rough’ was Welsh or not, but there was also the P.E. teacher Mr. Roberts
known as ‘Taffy’ who sported a moustache, and the bearded Mr. Kirkby who took
Geography. Each morning began with an Assembly in the Hall as we awaited the
presence of Mr. Griffiths to utter his words of wisdom leaning on his lectern
like some mad dictator following the strains of Elgar’s Pomp and Circumstance
march!
My form teacher for my
first year of school was Mr. Evans, a large bearded Welsh man who taught
woodwork and rugby, not being greatly interested in sport the latter filled me
with horror for I had and still have a very real aversion to mud! And it always
seemed to be so bloody cold when we played either at the school or on Billesley
Common!My absolute nightmare at school was mathematics, perhaps that’s not quite true for I quite enjoy the subject now but why is it taught by such evil bastards at school that they make it detestable and spoil the subject for any future learning? Throughout my years at the school there was one who walked those ghastly corridors who was pure evil personified; a man so detested by me that he was nothing short of the Devil incarnate! The teacher in question was the mathematics teacher, or at least one of them named Mr. Hobbs. He was a pint-sized, portly, pipe-smoking old man who I believe had been in the RAF as far as I knew; a man who wore the air of a hero and didn’t mind reminding everyone of it that he single-handedly defeated the German Luftwaffe! If he was in a good mood, i.e. not breathing fire or pulling the heads off small boys you only got the chalk thrown at you; if he was in a bad mood it would be followed by the wooden blackboard rubber! His gruff and croaking voice would rise and fall and some of his talk would be almost inaudible and to show his contempt, which he did often, he would give a great sniff as if to say ‘you’re not fit to lick my shoes boy!’ I believe it would be safe to say that he wasn’t overly keen on foreigners or anything that was not ‘English’ and having a foreign name myself that swiftly put me on his list of ‘pupils to destroy with utter misery’ and he took great delight in his tasks! He would set us our work to do and sit at the front of the class casting glances and directing vitriol towards us as he flapped and fouled himself like a great bird of doom before it was time at the end of the lesson for him to squawk in that hideous voice which to this day torments me: ‘Homework!’ I passionately wanted to do what Mr. Hitler had failed to do – kill Mr. Hobbs! I spent my dinner hour (lunch in less enlightened counties) pondering the many and most inventive ways of murdering him and in class whenever he would cough and splutter I looked expectantly towards him, praying for him to fall to the ground in agony and expire before the class to cheers and clapping of hands! It never happened!
Another maths teacher was Mr. Ball. I actually liked Mr. Ball, known as ‘Uncle Jack’ as I believe his first name was Jack, because he was such a good sport. He was quite old and doddery and could be mistaken for a simple-minded man, yet he was sharp as a tack and despite his hard of hearing and his mumbling in class he was a good teacher. Many times during dinner time I saw him going to the local pub The Hare and Hounds in Kings Heath smoking his pipe. During one particular ‘April Fool’s Day’ the class had been taunting him rotten and he took it with good nature. I informed him at the end of the lesson that I had placed a sign on his back which read: ‘Kick me’ and he casually said ‘I know!’ On another occasion,
The only other maths teacher I recall was named Marsh and he was a great lumbering, clumsy man with a deep voice who didn’t seem to stay very long.
In my first year I
remember the music teacher, Mrs. Stevens, a lovely old lady with lots of
enthusiasm and energy for the subject; a woman who believed in what she was
doing and the integrity showed! She taught us to repeat the poem ‘Vita Lampada’
by Sir Henry Newbolt (1862-1938) with its ‘Play up! Play up! And play the
game!’ I was in the school choir, I have no notion of how I got there (just as
I have no notion of how I became a member of the school’s Athletics Team, but
there I am in the team photograph looking thoroughly bored) and I recall being
involved in only one inter-school choir competition; I can’t remember if we
won, probably not, and I think it was the first and last performance!
I also quite enjoyed
history and one of the history teachers was named Mr. Anney. This heavenly
bearded creature with the features of a squat King Edward also featured
halitosis that could stun a bull at one-hundred paces. Another redeeming
feature of the man was his eyes which were continually in movement as if in a
state of tremor and unable to fix a point to focus upon so it was difficult to
assess whether he was looking at you or not! He was an enthusiastic teacher and
I particularly enjoyed his classes on the ‘History of Medicine and Anatomy’!
Another History teacher and one of my form teachers was Mr. Whitby who sported
a fine ‘Walter Raleigh’ beard! We gave him the nickname ‘Buzzard’ due to his
habit of staring into space as if looking for prey to feed upon. He was an odd
man and I think a somewhat tragic figure; I remember some minor scandal
surrounding him and I saw him many years later at the I don’t remember who took us for Religious Education perhaps because I found it so dull, nor do I remember who took us for Computer Studies which bored me endlessly with its tedious inputting of data merely to write one’s name and print it! Technical Drawing was taught by Mr. Clayton, an elderly gent with an unremarkable personality if I remember correctly and I do not recall who took us for metalwork.*
For Biology there was Mr. Goldstein, a Jewish teacher with a hooked nose and piercing cross-eyes beneath a bushy brow wearing a lab coat. A nice enough fellow who failed to notice that I had drawn a swastika (purely for shock value) on my breast pocket which could only be seen in a certain light to replace my school badge which was a yellow cart wheel surmounted by a yellow crown on a black background! Chemistry was taught by Mr. Lacey, a fine fellow whose son would sit in on the end of the lesson after junior school finished and wait to be taken home. Physics was taught by Mr. Millward, a stern yet impeccably dressed man in a suit!
The delectable Miss Parker taught French and she was a very beautiful lady; Pottery was taught by a kind old lady whose name I think was Mrs. Hodgkins.
Art was given by the extremely laid back Mr. Judges and I remember attending a course at the Midlands Art Centre in
My attendance at school was quite poor to say the least, between 1983 and 1984 I had eleven weeks off school!
There was another
great menacing man whose cold stare could chill a boy from a hundred yards!
This ‘track-suited terror’ lurked and could be upon a boy with superhuman speed
and he was known by all as the P.E. teacher Mr. Ward, another of the great
moustaches at the school! The rumour was that he only had one of what most men
usually have two of in their trousers and according to legend he slipped at the
swimming baths and injured himself! I do not know if this is true or not but
the association stuck with him! Physical Education was a bore, I hated swimming,
rugby and wasn’t keen on cricket, basketball or football; athletics was dull
and so was weightlifting but I didn’t mind badminton so much and cross country
running which was a good excuse to get out of school and have a casual walk
round the streets or nip off for a cigarette!
I enjoyed going off
the premises at dinner (lunch) time which was strictly forbidden. I had set up
my own catering business (ah the delights of Thatcher’s entrepreneurial Mr. Griffiths the Head was the wielder of the cane but the preferred weapon of choice was the ‘slipper’ for minor offences. It was Mr. Ward’s honour to casually ‘slipper’ (actually an old training shoe) me along with three of my friends in the gym for going off premises and taking a trip to the local fish and chip shop in King’s Heath. He took a great run up and seemed to delight in the punishment, his moustache quivering with anticipation! This was on
Many of my friends
from Junior School went to my Senior School
and I remember one boy who I was not best friends with but I did know him and
like him. He had severe eczema and was eternally bullied because of it; he was
a scruffy little urchin and whenever I remember him he is always either
cringing from someone’s torment or looking over his shoulder. At Senior School
Mr. Ward came into our metalwork class and broke the news to us that the boy in
question had been hit by a bus and died, this was 1982 I think and I looked
round to see the rest of the class smiling, sniggering and laughing – I had
never seen anything so cruel and heartless! I didn’t learn anything about
metalwork that day but I learnt a lot about human nature!
Some of my friends
were also members of the 40th Birmingham Boy’s Brigade back in 75
where I was a member for about three years I think. Someone had told me how to
make a battery bomb and I made it to the specifications with the intention of
blowing up the Another memory is of playing with the bean bags and hula hoops watching the grown-up passers by walking outside the railings and thinking how lucky they were to be free, walking in the sunshine and that someday I would be able to be free like them! School seemed to steal the best hours of the day away from you, the hours before midday and then the time towards two-thirty; I always believed this throughout my school life and it was only after suffering all those years in the name of education that I came to appreciate fully those hours! I pity all children that have to be destroyed by the same methods! I also recall almost drowning at King’s Heath Swimming Baths, where we went with the school. I was limp and to all effects lifeless, not that anyone took notice of me except my friend who dived down and pulled me up! It caused a fear of swimming all through my school years and my young friend, a fiery tempered black boy who I looked up to, used to have pretend fights with me to try and impress the girls (which in his case it mostly did!). He even saved me from Mr. Warburton’s wrath one day as I was busy fighting a young ruffian who had been bullying me. The bully played the coward’s way and tripped my legs so that I hit my head. When Mr. Warburton came rushing to the disturbance my great black friend took a vial of theatrical blood from his pocket and poured it over his face, thus causing a distraction for me and the bully to make our escape! Of course I sought out the bully for a re-match but he smiled with what I thought was a small degree of admiration and no re-match occurred! Mr. Warburton also took a class to King’s Heath and we did some brass and grave rubbings at the
In fact it was at my junior school where I actually cried in front of a teacher! She was a lovely old frightening woman with a deep voice like ‘Peggy Mount’ who shouted a lot but I liked her (and feared her) named Mrs. Hackle. I remember having to learn the words to David Bowie’s ‘Space Oddity’ and make a cardboard replica of Dodge City. I also recall being in a school play and I had to play the part of a tree dressed in a flimsy see-through green gauze material. The reason why I was crying was because it was found I was intellectually above the class and had to be moved up along with my friend, a beautiful young Asian girl! I was reluctant to leave! Another play I was meant to star in as a munchkin was The Wizard of Oz; I remember the rehearsals with Mr. Warburton in the Assembly Hall but I never turned up for the performance! Other teachers at the junior school were Mrs. Brinkley, Mrs. Cran and Miss Bowman who was the music teacher and played the piano during assembly.
But I digress, back to
I really enjoyed English
Literature, although the rebel in me would not show any visible interest, I
loved books! The teacher, Mr. Goulding was a young idealistic man who had a
great enthusiasm for his subject. I regret deeply that I upset his lessons by
messing about and taunted him for I actually admired and respected him for
talking to us on the same level. He was a laid back, slightly long haired
fellow who wore round ‘John Lennon’ spectacles. I am pretty sure his name was
David and the class took to calling him ‘Davros’ (as in the character from
Doctor Who) and shouting out ‘brown shoes’ because he did indeed wear brown
shoes – such was the want of young boys to annoy their teachers with the
slightest fancy! Two memorable books we read in class were: ‘A Taste of Honey’ and
‘Of Mice and Men’. It was Friday 9th March 1984 and we had been
reading a book called ‘The Outsiders’ and Mr. Goulding had planned for us to
visit the Classic Cinema in Station Street where it was showing as a double
bill with ‘Rebel without a cause’ starring James Dean, a hero of mine! At the
cinema I sat with my two friends whom I shall give the initials as N. S. and P.
S. B. and Mr. Goulding sat in front with his beautiful young wife whom we had
just met for the first time! I don’t think she stayed for the whole showing of
the films for it was not long into ‘Rebel’ when my friends and I noticed the
man sitting one seat away from me to my left. He must have been in his
seventies and he had a terrible tremor in his right hand which he kept between
his legs! He kept looking at me; probably because we were all wearing our
school uniforms and he couldn’t believe his luck! And then as the aroma of
stale salmon wafted through the cinema aisle Mr. Goulding casually turned round
and asked ‘is that man doing what I think he’s doing?’ to which we answered in
the affirmative and we all moved a few rows forward at his suggestion. Not
perturbed, the old man with his lobster eye winking in the light from the
projectionist, stood up and moved closer towards us, sitting down to resume his
business! Eventually he got up and left and my eager friends were all for
leaving too and following him and exposing him etc. but I was too engrossed in
James Dean’s performance to bother with that! It was also in 1984 on Friday 20th
July to be precise at the age of fifteen that I took up the art of smoking! I
had had the occasional smoke previously but I now took up this charming
activity with great enjoyment and even waltzed into the playground smoking a
cigarette to the astonishment of many lesser brave souls!
On Friday 28th March 1985 ,
the last day of term, a friend of mine brought into school a large tin of red
paint! Another friend and I went absolutely berserk and it ended up all around
the school daubed on walls and my friend had taken it outside school and
decorated a car with it! Of course I forgot all about it until term began on Monday 15th April 1985
and all hell broke loose! The next day the school caretaker named Wilkins, a
nasty vicious little thug made a citizen’s arrest on me and took me to King’s
Heath Police Station where I spent a couple of hours in the cell! It was my
first and only experience of the cells and I decided there and then that I
didn’t ever want to experience them again! On the following day at school Mr.
Ward made me write out a statement for the Headmaster which I did. The final
exams occurred in June 1985 and by August/September I was free from the hell of
school! I turned my back on all that useless waste of time, went to University
and made something of myself despite those early years preparing me for a life
of handouts and poorly paid work! I still have resentment towards authority and
on any occasion will defy and thwart it as much as possible, it’s the old
anarchist in me that will not die!
* I have since been informed that the sadistic man in question was named Mr Pemberton whom I remember had a liking for calling the boys 'Gladys'!
* I have since been informed that the sadistic man in question was named Mr Pemberton whom I remember had a liking for calling the boys 'Gladys'!
I was the year below you (81 - 86), and it was wonderful to relive the experience (thanks for the memories!).
ReplyDeleteThe only difference is that when I look back, I think I may have enjoyed my time there :-;
Some good (and familiarly bad) memories there. I was there 85-89 to a lot of the staff remained from your era.
ReplyDeleteI believe 'Cobbledick' was actually 'Mr Roberts'?
In about 92, a three of us who has made it to Uni went back in to meet up with our old Head of Year (Dave Bell, French teacher and bete noir to Griffiths) who told us that Roberts had died suddenly whilst out canvassing for his political party in the run up to a general election.
Whilst we were there, Miss Mathews came in from her maternity leave and spent several minutes pawing at us whilst remarking 'how big and strong' we'd become! She was very odd in that regards but I didn't push her away!
We went for a lunchtime pint up Kings Heath High Street with Dave Bell and Colin Judges, and got the inside track on the politics in the school - Griffiths was absolutely despised by all of them, several of whom were in some form of grievance or disciplinary process as a result of his dictatorial style.
If memory serves - they also told us that Mr Hobbs also died a short time after retiring in 1986. He was indeed a nasty bit of work...
It always strikes me when I compare the experience of my secondary school days with those of my wife. She has such fond memories of hers in a country school in Lancs, whilst mine - like yours - seemed more like a prison sentence designed to keep us out of (most) trouble whilst giving us the bare essentials to slot into a YTS or an apprenticeship.
What is illustrating was, for my year group, that within 2 years we had more kids either dead or in prison than we had go to university. As Dave Bell said to us, 'you've succeeded despite your school rather than because of it'.
Thanks for taking the time to share your memories.