LongfordLad
Toronto
Thread starter
|
4 of 32
Fri 19th Feb 2016 10:52pm
You were not entirely wrong in your assessment, johnwright, the academic streams of Foxford (sets 1 through 3 with 4 as the borderline) were - more or less similar to grammar schools. Perhaps to set your mind at rest, nobody was sent to Foxford from outside its immediate cachment area that was not grammar school or much the same as grammar school material. If memory serves, Windmill Road became - as Longford Park - a secondary modern school. Your attending that school before the change, had you been less than academic material, would have placed you outside the catchment area for Foxford.
In other words, if you lived in Longford village, or close thereto, the only way you might have moved on to Foxford Comprehensive was by dint of your performance in the 11-plus exams. The young people in the practical sets - 5 & 6 (later 5, 6, 7 and 8) - were not academically inclined. I had friends in school from Coundon, Wyken, Radford, even Styvechale and Cheylesmore. Many of the students at Foxford - had there been no Foxford - would have attended fee-paying schools because the parents were well-heeled.
Now, having told you how innately bright you were because of your attending Foxford alongside the like of me, be prepared to be called upon when the Longford Park crowd give me a hard time.
By the way, should you need to talk to someone closer to home about the merits of comprehensive schools, drop Rob Orland a line. There were people back in the day, johnwright, who attended a comprehensive school to enrich - intellectually - what was there already. Needless to say, I was not one of those, but I was a local that might have attended the school because of an accident of birthplace, but actually attended the school because of intellectual wherewithal. I suspect, johnwright, that you and I attended Foxford for the same reasons, but had we both been less blessed in the dome, I would still have gone to Foxford, you would not. Does this help?
A warm day beside Lake Ontario - merely minus 2 Celsius. A bright sky has given us a clear view across the lake. Not that we might have seen anything - it's 45 kilometers wide at this point. There are a few miles of west end of the southern lake frontage that is Ontario - chiefly the towns of St Catherine's and Niagara-on-the-Lake - the rest is upper New York state, no major urban area, though, until you reach Rochester, some many miles to the east of us. |
Derrickarthur
Coventry
|
9 of 32
Wed 17th Aug 2016 9:53pm
I attended Foxford 1962-1967 and was in Mars house. I would probably have been a 4th year when you started, Potters Green Lad. When I left the Head was still Mr Dodgson. Mr Knight was I think housemaster of Neptune.
I took the sciences (Biology, Chemistry & Physics) so only took metalwork & woodwork in the first year or two. The metalwork teacher was an old fellow called Mr Barry & woodwork was taught by Mr Linacre.
Mr "Stan" Mills was gamemaster but he wasn't married to Mrs Fantom. She was Headmistress of Mars house and was married to Mr Fantom (also a swimming coach). Mr Whittaker was Head of Mars house and supposedly he hardest "caner" in the school. I believe Stan Mill's wife was secretary to the Headmaster and drove a lilac coloured Morris Minor 1,000,000.
Head of Mercury were Mr Clayton & Miss Foerckler.
Some of my friends & classmates from Mercury House were:
Gerald "Ged" Kelly, Martin "Russ" Adams, Dave Prewett, Lawrence Clark, Bill Pateman, Dave Garland, Graham Carrier, David Wilson, Kathleen Whittam, Catherine Chesney, Janice & Jacqueline Rogers, Anne Edwards, Graeme & Mick Cann.
In Mars there were Steve Henderson (who I worked behind the bar at the Edgewick club in 1969), Robin Moorcroft, Robert Moore, Roy Adams, Paul Davies, Ramesh Lal, Raymond James, Stephen Rushton, Mick McMahon, Michael Aristides, John Armstrong, Christopher Pusnik, Kevin Hilton, David Crozier, Tony Squire, Alan Pargetter, Alan Bee, Alan Buttriss, Solmon Choudry, Michael Neophytou, Stephen Caldwell, Tony Diston, David Smith, Roy Dumbleton, Nigel Salt, John Winowski, Bernard Brindley
Janet Ponting, Elsie Lowe, Julie Benn, Mary White, Terina Ward, Jayne Calvert, Sandra Stoneystreet, Veronica McKenna, Heather Bate.
Another Mars pupil was Steve Waugh, son of the then Lord Mayor of Coventry.
I still maintain that my main claim to fame is batting in the same cricket team as Steve Waugh.
JUPITER
Roy Reading, Colin Reading, Bill Gardner, Brian McAllister, Ken Drakeford, David Johnson
Yvonne Carter, Marilyn Staff
NEPTUNE
John Sherriff, Alan Sayers, Keith Leedham, Peter Tunkle, David Turner, Brian Chester, (Keith ?) Lombard, Michael Shirley, Foster Cooper, David Archer, Robert Oldham, Paul Collier
Shirley Mutch, Christine Robinson, Lesley Carter, Catherine Jones
SATURN
Roger Coles, Sindo Singh, John Bottomly, Stephen Hackett, John Hackett, Michael Gawthorpe, Alan Tidman, Malcolm Ingram, Ian Foster
Susan Taylor, Sandy McCranor
OTHER PUPILS
Sohan Singh, Peter Bagley, Louis Holland, Ian Ridley, (Alan ?) Whittingham, Geoff Collins, Alan Bull, Norman James, Norman Wilkins, Clive Elliot, Melvyn Shields, Vic Brindley, Alan Brindley, Glyn Davies, Ken Makepeace, Dave Makepeace, Alan Brick, Alan Quinney, Paul Weightman, Phil Dunkley
Leonora Galbraith, Sandra McCranor, Elizabeth Lewis, Susan Adams, Jennifer Bond, Gillian Duncan, Avis Hartopp, Angeline Brindley, Carol Davies, Jean, Pauline & Elaine Moore
TEACHERS
Headmaster : Mr C Dodgson
Mr Ridley, Mr Vernon, Mr Bryant, Mr Gibson, Mr Coles, Mr Mancey, Mr Harris, Mr Hefford, Mr Clarke, Mr Morgan, Mr Linaker, Mr Barry, Mr Head, Mr Hilditch, Mr D Jones, Mr J Jones, Mr S Mills, Mr Fantom, Mr Wyman, Mr Pegg, Mr Leadbetter, Mr Whitaker, Mr Clayton, Mr Hill, Mr Knight
Miss Tan, Mrs Brown, Miss Powell, Mrs Fantom, Miss Foerckler, Miss Wilde, Mrs Lee, Miss Hutchison, Mrs Maxwell, Miss James
My name is Derrick Oldham by the way
|