• Welcome to the Bideford & District Community Archive

    Welcome to the Bideford & District Community Archive

    ...The Gazette Newspaper 1856 onwards.

    Read More
  • Welcome to the Bideford & District Community Archive

    Welcome to the Bideford & District Community Archive

    ...The Gazette Newspaper 1856 onwards.

    Read More
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  • 1 Hartland postman retires

  • 2 Practical sympathy at Northam

  • 3 Olympic riders to compete at Bideford Horse Show

  • 4 Safe door weighing two tons

  • 5 Sixty-two year old Picarooner makes ready for season

  • 6 Finished in 1876

  • 7 Afternoon tea in the park

  • 8 No laughing matter

  • 9 Record player of 80 years ago

  • 10 Westward Ho! combined op

  • 11 East-the-Water sets town an example

  • 12 Sweets derationing

  • 13 Shipbuilding hobby at Hartland

  • 14 Salmon netting at Bideford

  • 15 Fishing light goes out at close of poor season

  • 16 Thorn-apple found in Littleham conservatory

  • 17 New Lundy stamps

  • 18 Housing progress at East-the-Water>
  • 19 Gloves fit for a king!

  • 20 Ships at Bideford

  • 21

    Appledore boys beat mums at football
  • 22 Head Barman appointed Torrington Town Crier
  • 23

    10-year-old scrambler practices
  • 24 Bideford's new market opens next week

  • 25 All aboard the ark

  • 26 Repair work on Long Bridge
  • 27 Revenge in style

  • 28 Bideford's private wharves busier

  • 29 Picking the pops

  • 30 Childrens' model of Torrington

  • 31 Fish nearly pulled him in

  • 32 New Estate's view of estuary activities

  • 33 Puzzle corner at Bideford!

  • 34 Appledore's new lifeboat

  • 35 Town's second woman mayor in 392 years

  • 36 Fundraising trip for RNLI

  • 37 A lost Bideford 'island'

  • 38 New fire and ambulance stations

  • 39 Bideford Liberal club new lounge bar opened

  • 40

    School of Dancing's Annual Display
  • 41 New life for Hartland organ

  • 42 Death - and birth - of a telephone exchange

  • 43 Torridge graveyard of wooden hulks

  • 44 Peter poses for TV film

  • 45 Bideford has built over 500 post-war homes

  • 46 Gateways with rhymes>
  • 47 Bideford Zoo's first baby is big draw

  • 48 Local glove-making factory advertising for staff

  • 49 They are parted pro-tem

  • 50

    Womens Skittles Competition in Buckland Brewer
  • 51 Symbol of Lundy independence

  • 52 New choral society's growing response

  • 53 To build racing cars in former blacksmith's shop

  • 54 Sailing to victory at Appledore

  • 55 Ten year old scrambler

  • 56

    Married in 1908
  • 57

    First prize
  • 58 Little 'Big Ben'

  • 59 Torrington's enterprise's new extensions

  • 60 Designed all furnishing of new chapel

  • 61 In their new robes and hats

  • 62 Daisy's pride and joy

  • 63 Barley from Bideford to Bonnie Scotland

  • 64 Bideford electricity window display qualifies for area competition

  • 65 Littleham cow tops 70 tons mark in milk production

  • 66 Old Girls revisit Edgehill

  • 67 Prizewinning babies at Torrington

  • 68 Wilfred and Mabel visit schools and hospital

  • 69 Instow local art show was 'tremendous success'

  • 70

    Gift from Bideford Town Council
  • 71 Can-carrying over cobbles has disappeared

  • 72 A story to tell!

  • 73 Hartland Abbey outdoor staff 60 years ago

  • 74 Amsterdam to Bideford double success

  • 75 New Lundy air-mail stamps

  • 76 Shoes certainly not made for walking

  • 77 Bank Holiday weather was beach weather

  • 78 Two kinds of hovercraft at Bideford

  • 79 Smiling welcome to Hartland visitors

  • 80

    FA Cup Match for the Robins
  • 81 Down at the 'Donkey House'

  • 82 Jumble sale fever

  • 83 Down at the dump something stirs

  • 84 Light reading for the lighthouse

  • 85 Hartland's invitation

  • 86 Circus comes to town

  • 87 Pet squirrels at Monkleigh

  • 88 Saving money, wear and tear

  • 89 Preparations for new Clovelly Court

  • 90 Bideford's first triplets for 12 years

  • 91

    Mrs Whapham finds ferret in Bridgeland Street while shopping
  • 92 113 years at Instow

  • 93 'Out of Appledore' sailing memories

  • 94 Appledore skill brings 'Hispaniola' to life

  • 95 Artisans' Club

  • 96

    Holidaying in north Devon
  • 97 New look in the hayfields

  • 98 Quads at Thornhillhead

  • 99

    Was a missionary
  • 100 Teenager Peter Jackson Makes Horror Film
  • 101 Broomhayes £1,000 Surprise
  • 102 Bideford loses training ship

  • 103 They set out for Bideford and became lost

  • 104 Not Bideford's answer to the moon rocket!

  • 105 Northam footballers of the future

  • 106 Six footed lamb

  • 107 Bideford's gift to Sir Francis

  • 108 Speeding communications: Bideford firm's new installation

  • 109 New look for Torrington Lane

  • 110 Bideford regatta

  • 111 Filming at Hartland

  • 112 Lundy memorial to John Pennington Harman V.C.

  • 113 Clovelly nightmare

  • 114 From Bobby to Brian

  • 115 Broomhayes children will keep their winter pet

  • 116 Mayor becomes engine driver>
  • 117 Open-air art exhibition by 'under 40' group

  • 118 Bideford A.F.C annual dinner
  • 119

    Reds Womens Team Are First To Compete Throughout Season
  • 120 Appledore tugs fete London Tower

  • 121 Community centre opened at Westward Ho!

  • 122 So this is the mainland!

  • 123 Where Bideford rope-makers walked>
  • 124 Tibbles home again - and fish supper

  • 125 Braddicks furniture ad.>
  • 126 One of the luckier farmers in getting in the problem harvest

  • 127 Alwington School closing after 120 years

  • 128 For crying out loud!

  • 129 Liked holidays here - so starts business

  • 130 Bridging the stream

  • 131 Homage to a well-loved sovereign

  • 132 Simple Item 138
  • 133 Gift plaque on Clovelly council houses

  • 134 Polish custom on Pancake Day

  • 135

    Building works
  • 136 Jalopy joy for children of Shamwickshire

  • 137 Warmington's garage ad

  • 138 Tide sweeps under and over the old bridge

  • 139 Entente cordiale in Bideford

  • 140 Bideford School Junior Choir Sing in France at Twinning Ceremony in Landivisiau
  • 141 Christmas tree on Bideford Quay>
  • 142 Faints as she wins national competition

  • 143 Celebrations for 103rd birthday

  • 144 Launching the 'Golden Hinde'

  • 145 Torrington's shelter for the aged

  • 146 Wine and beer merchants for 150 years

  • 147 Bideford triplets' first birthday party

  • 148 Boys win hockey on the sands challenge

  • 149 Bideford-Torrington road gets 'carpet coat'

  • 150 Lady Churchill congratulates Bideford artists at nursing exhibition

  • 151

    Inter-school Road Safety Quiz Cup Winners
  • 152 Train returns to Westleigh straight

  • 153 Royal prince visits Torridge-side

  • 154 Police station view of Bideford

  • 155 Bicycle now does donkey work

  • 156 A Weare Giffard speciality - delicious strawberries

  • 157 Eight and a half million pound Taw development scheme

  • 158 Panel sprint for Bideford broadcast

  • 159 Success to Festival of the Arts

  • 160 Off on a great adventure

  • 161 Beach search for mines takes longer

  • 162 Grenville House for Bideford R.D.C.

  • 163 Photo mural in Bideford bank

  • 164

    Close associations with North Devon
  • 165 Thriving 'orphan of the storm'

  • 166 Disastrous dock fire at Appledore>
  • 167 First steel ship built at Bideford

  • 168 Joe the ginger tabby is 21

  • 169 Donkey work made easier at Clovelly

  • 170 'Les Girls' of Hartland

  • 171 Littleham family's five generations

  • 172 First tankers arrive at new depot

  • 173 An early 'special' to Bideford

  • 174 Torrington's new amenity

  • 175 Do recall the old windmill at Northam?

  • 176 Boys from Bideford school complete Ten Tors

  • 177 Battle of the gap at Westward Ho!

  • 178 Baby Kate goes home to Lundy

  • 179 Tomorrow' night's skittles broadcast from Bideford

  • 180

    Cadets are given certificates
  • 181 The cab at the corner>
  • 182 Thunderstorm destruction of 25 years ago

  • 183 Sunshine and shade at Appledore

  • 184 Calligrapher extraordinary

  • 185 Doing time - over 300 years of it - at Hartland

  • 186 Reed threshing 'putting the clock back' at Weare Giffard

  • 187 North Devon author featured in TV documentary

  • 188 Photo of town's first car wins prize

  • 189 Holiday traffic in Bideford High Street

  • 190 Championship Trophy for Hartland
  • 191 Signed scroll momento of Queen Mother's visit

  • 192 Centenary of Gazette

  • 193 Golden Bay Hotel ad.>
  • 194 Children's procession with foxgloves

  • 195 Torridge wins on time schedule

  • 196 Last train from Torrington

  • 197 Alverdiscott is proud of its new parish hall

  • 198 New civic medallions

  • 199 Bideford shipyard workers cheer new minesweeper

  • 200 School crossing patrol begins

  • 201 Tramps camp by riverside throughout arctic weather

  • 202 New gateway to King George's Fields

  • 203 Thrush builds nest in cauliflower

  • 204 Ancestral home nestling in lovely combe

  • 205 No ancient Grecian temple this

  • 206 Capers on the cobbles

  • 207 Emergency ferry services

  • 208 Escaped crane moves into Kenwith Valley

  • 209 Westward Ho! sand yacht to challenge speed record

  • 210

    Bidefordians
  • 211 Thirty bridges cross Torridge

  • 212 Fishermen of Greencliff

  • 213 At Bideford Arts Ball>
  • 214 A bird of their own!

  • 215 The art of the thatcher

  • 216 Church renovation rejoicing at Northam

  • 217 New addition to Quay front

  • 218

    Toasted with musical honours
  • 219 Some mushroom!

  • 220 Unique holiday adventure!

  • 221 Future of Torrington almshouses

  • 222 They never miss a game at Torrington

  • 223 New Post Office

  • 224 Appledore schooner broadcast

  • 225 Over the bank together>
  • 226 Centenary of Landcross Methodist Chapel

  • 227 Appledore's largest

  • 228 No sale of Springfield House

  • 229 Weare Giffard potato

  • 230 Television comes to Torridge District

  • 231 Meeting at 10 Downing Street

  • 232 Students help model St Sidwell

  • 233 Bideford firm develops new non-spill paint

  • 234 No ancient Grecian temple this

  • 235

    Double Baptism on Torridge
  • 236 Torrington Church's new organ

  • 237 Found the answer waiting for him>
  • 238

    Jinxed School Trip
  • 239

    Gus Honeybun meets local children
  • 240 Record pebble-throwing day

  • 241 Colour TV salesman at eight

  • 242 Buckland goes to County Show

  • 243 Bideford skifflers, they're no squares

  • 244 Weare Giffard Hall sold for £11,300

  • 245 Puppet characters introduced

  • 246 One thousand visit zoo at Whitsun

  • 247 Water Board mains spread through villages

  • 248

    Hamburger is part of modern life
  • 249 The Geneva marionettes

  • 250 Bideford 'What's my line?' challenger

  • 251 Spring-cleaning the Ridge

  • 252 Dismantling of wireless mast

  • 253 Clovelly custom

  • 254 Bideford inquest on French trawlermen opens

  • 255

    Youth Clubs Join Together For Entertainment
  • 256 A roof-top view - where?

  • 257 Torrington Youth Club rewarded by party
  • 258 TV contest means big job for Bideford Guides

  • 259 Yeo vale road ruin provides a mystery

  • 260 Last of Bideford factory chimney

  • 261 Eleven million pound scheme's official opening

  • 262 Born 1883 - still going strong

  • 263 Westward Ho! public conveniences get go ahead
  • 264 Largest salmon caught in Torridge

  • 265 Loads of black and white

  • 266 Four hundred residents leave Bideford!

  • 267 When horses score over the tractor

  • 268 Brothers reunion 1947
  • 269 Picture bought for shillings may be worth thousands

  • 270 Torrington children build igloo
  • 271 Sooty is quick on the draw

  • 272 Centuries old but today busier than ever

  • 273 Quads join a Langtree happy family

  • 274 It really was the 'last time'

  • 275 Northam's almshouse

  • 276 Twenty-one yachts

  • 277 Parkham plan realised

  • 278 Pretty pennies at Beaford

  • 279 Cruising down the river

  • 280 Four sisters' nostalgic reunion

  • 281 Torrington school's sundial - fashioned by Headmaster

  • 282 Lots drawn to prevent dog fight

  • 283 Mural in the whimsical fashion

  • 284 Council agree to demolition of Chanter's Folly

  • 285 Meredith and Son ad.>
  • 286 What the television camera saw at Abbotsham

  • 287 Sight of a lifetime

  • 288 Bideford country dancers on TV

  • 289 Penny for the guy

  • 290 For South Africa from Westward Ho!

  • 291 Riverside mystery

  • 292 School's link with cargo ship

  • 293 Five generations link Woolsery, Clovelly and Bideford

  • 294 Blanchards ad.>
  • 295 Revived market off to splendid start

  • 296 What is future of railway goods yard?

  • 297 Dustmen of the days of yore>
  • 298

    Wynne Olley's styles impress International Hair Fashion Designer
  • 299 Making way for the double-deckers

  • 300 Holiday scene near Sandymere

  • 301 Appledore Juniors Football
  • 302 Caught in the act>
  • 303 Bringing shopping home by goat

  • 304 Floral dancing at Appledore

  • 305 Ship-in-bottle world record

  • 306 Cement-clad boats being built at Northam

  • 307 Northam wants to continue pumping from river

  • 308 Devil sent packing

  • 309 River scenes that enchant the visitors

  • 310 Pannier Market's future?

  • 311 Malibou boys are all-the-year-round surfers

  • 312 Meredith's ironmongers

  • 313 America's tribute to 'J.H.'

  • 314 All for the love of a lady!

  • 315 Appledore boy is youngest recipient of RNLI vellun

  • 316 Chess - their bridge over the years

  • 317

    Successful motor cycling team
  • 318 Picking the pops

  • 319 Second Monte Carlo Rally

  • 320 Rowing triumphs at Bideford

  • 321

    First Girls at Bideford Grammar School take part in Play
  • 322 Still hunting aged 80 and a Field Master

  • 323 New shipyard on schedule

  • 324 Royal prince visits Torridge-side

  • 325 Service with a smile

  • 326 Diamond Jubilee of St Peter's Church, East-the-Water

  • 327 Lady Godiva comes to Torrington

  • 328 Yelland potter's exhibition at Bideford

  • 329 Clovelly donkey film star

  • 330 Donkey and horses enjoy carnival drink

  • 331 Vessel built 300 feet above sea level

  • 332 A craftsman's 'potted' history

  • 333 Torrington acclaims 400th anniversary of granting of charter

  • 334 Modern living at Bideford

  • 335 Bideford schoolboy's courage recognised

  • 336 Getting up steam for tomorrow

  • 337 Cavaliers join the Hunt
  • 338 Inscribed Bibles and silver spoons for babies

  • 339 Bideford blacksmith wins English championship

  • 340 Bideford Liberals' fashion show

  • 341 What's the time?

  • 342 Westward Ho! Tennis Club Winners
  • 343 Bideford childrens' cinema opens

  • 344 Waldon Triplets
  • 345 TV features Bideford's New Year bread ceremony

  • 346

    Exhibition of school work
  • 347 Yeoi Vale House finally demolished

  • 348 First ship in 8 years

  • 349 North Devon Driving School

  • 350 Designed and made in Bideford

  • 351 Alderman Anstey's dream comes tru

  • 352

    Mums protest in Coronation Road
  • 353 Bideford's first woman councillor

  • 354

    Birgitta Whittaker
  • 355 Bideford computer stars

  • 356 John Andrew Bread Charity
  • 357 A sense of humour in advertising

  • 358 Bideford Bridge re-opens

  • 359 On her 'maiden' trip from Bideford

  • 360 Watch the dicky bird!

  • 361 Eight to strike and a race to win

  • 362 Huntshaw TV mast

  • 363 Mobile missionary

  • 364 Sweet success at Langtree School

  • 365 Move for oldest boatyard on Torridge

  • 366 The creative urge on Saturday morning

  • 367 A man and his wheel

  • 368 Decontrol of meat

  • 369 Space dominates Hartland carnival

  • 370

    Andre Veillett and Quentin Reed in Judo Demonstration
  • 371 Bideford - as Rowlandson saw it about 1810-15

  • 372 In the tortoise nursery - eight hatched at Bideford

  • 373 Panto time at Westward Ho!

  • 374 Spray dodging - the new pastime

  • 375 East-the-Water's call for new school

  • 376 X-ray shoe fitting

  • 377 Big develolpment at Calveford

  • 378 Torrington in 1967

  • 379 Variety in summer weather

  • 380 Out of puff!

  • 381 Burnard family reunion

  • 382 Safety-first dipomas awarded to Torrington drivers

  • 383 Life begins at 80

  • 384 Northam loses thatched cottage landmark

  • 385 Hartland Dancers
  • 386 Traditions and skills still there

  • 387 Happy Days!

  • 388 Champagne send-off for Torrington new factory

  • 389 Works at craft he learned over 65 years ago

  • 390 Eleventh hour bid to save last sailing barge

  • 391 Wishing well is pixielated

  • 392 Just over a year old

  • 393 Private home for public pump

  • 394 Wasps' nest in sewing machine

  • 395 Up-to-date Bideford!

  • 396

    Relatives all over the world
  • 397 The young smith of Abbotsham>
  • 398

    New gateway
  • 399 He beat the floods

  • 400 Torrington to have first woman mayor

  • 401 Clovelly's 91 year old horseman

  • 402 Can spring be far away?

  • 403 Bideford stock car racing entry comes in second

  • 404 Calf thinks of mare as mum

  • 405 Birds' convalescent home at Instow

  • 406 Recognise this resort?

  • 407 Buckland farm workers to receive long-service awards

  • 408 Some 240 exhibits

  • 409 Landmark at Bradworthy

  • 410 Harvest service in Bideford 'pub' bar

  • 411 New art gallery opened

  • 412 By pony and trap to market

  • 413 Larkworthy Family play in Shebbear's Football Team
  • 414

    Lenwood Squash Club
  • 415 Steep street of old Bideford

  • 416 Allhalland Street - then and now

  • 417 Passing of a Torrington landmark

  • 418 Bravery against bull at Shebbear rewarded

  • 419 Fleet of foot and fair of face

  • 420 Charter granted by Philip and Mary

  • 421 Farewell to passenger trains

  • 422 End of the line

3.5.1957 Robins win Hansen Cup

Robins Win The Hansen Cup

May 3rd, 1957

Bideford AFC pictured with the Hansen Cup after they had defeated Bude 2-1 in the final

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and suddenly it's spring

Cadds Down Farm

1 March 1974

Joined by Trixie, the pony

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  • Torrington May Fair Queen and Her Attendants

    Names from left to right:Joan Ricketts; Joan Newcombe; Jean Wernhem; Margaret Sweet; Enid Ovenden; Rona Elsworthy; Doris Short; (back row);
    Eileen Short; Miss Margery Bennett (Queen); Joyce Downman; David Fiddian (Page); Peggie Sussex;

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  • Seafield House - the "Spooky House" of Westward Ho!

    The house on the cliff edge known locally as ‘Spooky House’ or even ‘Haunted House’ , was built about 1885.

    The road was especially built to enable access to the house and was initially known as Seafield Road; later it became Merley Road.

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  • Christmas Eve at the Front

    An interesting letter has just been received by Mrs Packer, of Broadclyst, from her husband, Corpl Packer of A Company, 1st Battalion Devonshire Regiment, who is serving with the Expeditionary Force in Northern France. In the course of a letter he describes a remarkable incident which occurred on Christmas Eve between the British and German trenches.

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1911 Coronation Medal

Coronation Medal Presented on June 22nd 1911   Learn More

The Hoops Inn

The Hoops Inn close to Peppercombe Beach

The Quay at Appledore

Appledore Quay where Taw and Torridge Rivers meet 

 
Wynne Olley

Crowning Glory

12 October 1962

Their finest achievement to date...

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Shipyard goes into liquidation 1963

Liquidator appointed

4 January 1963

Difficulty in retaining labour...

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Three Exciting Days For The Twins

Bagpipes introduce BGS entertainment 

28.3.1958 BGS Slade twins

Thursday of last week was the end of three great days for Francis and Mary, four years old twins of Mr and Mrs T Slade, Lime Grove, Bideford.
Francis and Mary were among the most popular performers in a concert presented by Bideford Grammar School. In the concert they were also twins – but Russian children – part of the cast in a play from a Tolstoy story, entitled ‘Michael’.
One of the youngest pupils taking part provided a touch of ‘something different’. Twelve years old Jimmy Grainger opened the concert with a bagpipe solo, playing ‘Cock o’ the North’, ‘John Bain’, ‘Marquis of Huntley’ and ‘High Road to Linton’.
Another young performer was 12 years old Christopher Mortimer. A versatile and confident performer sixth-former Roger Crowther.
The full Gazette article is dated 28 March 1958

Appointed Head of Edgehill

Miss A M Shaw takes up duties in April

1954 Miss Shaw Edgehill

The Management Board of Methodist Residential Schools have appointed Miss Annie M Shaw, MA, headmistress of Edgehill College, Bideford, to succeed Miss H Lawson Brown, MA. Miss Lawson Brown has been appointed the headmistress of Dame Alison Harper School, Bedford.
Miss Shaw, who is at present on the staff of Queenswood School, Hatfield, was formerly on the staff of Hunmanby School, Yorks, and will take up her appointment at Edgehill in April. At Queenswood she is senior English mistress.
A native of the West Riding of Yorkshire, Miss Shaw was educated at Normanton Girls’ High School, Yorkshire, and Newnham College, Cambridge, where she obtained English Honours Tripos in 1941 and Cambridge Certificate in Education in 1942. Her first post was at the Girls’ High School, Chesterfield, where she was appointed senior English mistress.
Hunmanby Hall School, near Filey, is a boarding school under the Methodist Education Committee, as is Edgehill.
Miss Shaw, who is much attracted at the prospect at coming to Devon, has a brother, the Rev B A Shaw, Methodist Minister at Hinde Street Church, London, and her sister, Miss M H Shaw, is secretary of the Junior Missionary Association.

Gazette article dated 12 November 1954

Walter James Langford – a tribute

After the anxiety and the loss, the sorrow and the tears, come the memories and the need for a thanksgiving.

A time to recall one to the other the outstanding quality of Lang’s life and the way in which each of our own lives was enriched by his companionship, his enthusiasms and his generosity. 

A life spanning each of the decades of this century. A veritable twentieth century man.

God was generous with his gifts to Lang, almost to the point of prodigality, yet in all that I have read about him, and in the many judgements made in these last few days, I have found no hint at all of jealousy or envy, only expressions of admiration for how generously he used those gifts in the service of others, and of a shared pride in things that he had done or had organised so well.

That he had talents beyond the lot of normal man there is no doubt. He was, for example, an athlete of distinction. He captained his University, Reading, at rugby football, later playing for the Old Windsorian and Bideford clubs. ‘Langford dashing down the wing’, the newspaper report would say, to score the winning try. Bowled out for one in the old boys cricket match by an opponent named Jacobs he retaliated by taking six wickets to ensure a win for his side.

But above all he could run like the wind and the vignette that I like most is the photograph of the final of the 100 yards event shown in the local press of 1925. There he is, breasting the tape, arms raised high. A real ‘Chariots of Fire’ situation. He ran that 100 yards on grass in 10 secs. Dead. ‘And’ said the local pressman, ‘our National amateur record, set up two years ago by Eric Liddell at Stamford Bridge, is only 9.7 secs’.

He had an attractive tenor voice and, as a choirboy, a training in musicianship that enabled choral singing and oratorio to be a major interest in his life.

But it was his mathematical acuity allied to his powers of leadership that would pave the way for his later success. His Professor of Mathematics at Reading, E H Neville, one who was to become a lifelong friend, said of him ‘He was able to learn anything that I could expound to him in detail, and he learnt much more beside because he had the ability to extract a subject himself’. He read the mathematics Honours course in two years, instead of the normal three, and was awarded a first and several University prizes. Later he would take a Masters degree in mathematics, his research topic, if I remembered correctly, being elliptical functions. He filled his final year at university with private study and busied himself being President of the university Union of Students and, at the same time of the National Union of Students. The only non Oxford and Cambridge man at the time to have held the post.

The Warden of his hall of residence commented ‘that he possessed an extraordinarily engaging and tactful personality, and equally unusual powers of leadership among his fellows. I believe he will have a distinguished career’. Prophetic words.

Leaving the University Lang made the choice to go into teaching. He may have considered a University post, but in the 1920s the higher education sector was very small by today’s standards and the competition for lectureships was fierce. Looking back we might judge him a diplomat in the making, but that career was closed to Oxbridge and the right families. Whatever his reasons the teaching profession gained a recruit of the kind that was most need and, as one of his referees said, ‘the school that lands him will be fortunate indeed’.

His first appointment in September 1926 was to the Bec School in Tooting, with Stanley Gibson his former headmaster from Windsor. The school, newly founded, was a challenge. Gibson with the help of Lang and others built it up from 100 to 500 pupils in six years.

By March 1937 Lang, Doreen and Andrea, who had arrived on the scene and was now 4, were ready for a move. At Bec Lang was Senior Maths master, 6th form master, Games master and Housemaster, carrying all those duties as Gibson wrote ‘with distinction and apparent ease’; this ability to manage different responsibilities concurrently being a hallmark all his life.

So Lang looked for a headship and I have read what his referees said of him. How much I admire, by the way, their ability to write an appreciation of a man with a precision in the use of English that is rarely matched today. Listen to his Vice Chairman of Governors talking of Lang. ‘He is a thorough man of business, methodical, fertile in resource, embued with a rare sagacity and with a judgement quick and decided’.

Lang applied for the Headship of Bideford Grammar School in North Devon. One of 423 applicants for the post he was selected and appointed in April 1937. There began eight years of happy involvement of Lang and his family with the life of the school and the society of the town.

It cannot have been easy taking over a school at the age of 32, with several of the staff senior in years to him, and with a governing body containing Old Boys and leading figures in the town, though at least the latter group could take some responsibility for his actions since they appointed him. It is difficult summarising the activity and challenges of those eight years at the school, building up its numbers from 160 to its target of 240, enlarging the Sixth form, which at one time numbered only twelve, establishing broader links the parents and community.

But it was the outbreak of war two years after his arrival which really challenged the scene. He lost staff to the armed forces, children evacuated from London swelled the intake into the school, whole schools with staff were transferred to the provinces, and Land hosted Selhurst Grammar School from Croydon, staff and pupils from the two schools playing Cox and Box with each other and using the school buildings in shifts.

The district desperately needed a billeting officer to arrange the reception and housing of the evacuees, Bideford and Northam received 500. For two years Lang took on that role, meeting the trains, arranging medicals and refreshments on arrive and negotiating accommodation with families in the district for each child, not always an easy task. One has the vision of a furiously busy time, but I bet Lang revelled in the activity of it for he also found time to become a local JP, helped to found the Musical Society and commanded the unit of the Air Training Corps.

When the time came to leave Bideford, the Town Clerk wrote to say ‘Bideford will be much poorer for your leaving it’. True, but perhaps the most enduring effect on the town of his association with it was that upon the lives of the boys in his care – from the example that he set before them, the trust they learned to have placed in them, the ambitions that he identified for them, always more demanding that those which they would have set for themselves. What began as a dependency would grow into independence, mutual respect would grow into lifelong friendships.

And this would be true also of his next school, Battersea Grammar School in south London, to which he moved in 1945. A visitor to that school wrote ‘Lang has an immediate infectious enthusiasm to put life into a community, the boys show an anxiety to please and to progress which is the outcome of respect and admiration for their head’.

Being in London rather than the West Country placed Lang close to the educational decision making bodies of the country. As the years passed by in London he became an almost indispensable part of the debate upon educational change, both of the implementation of the 1944 Act and its introduction of Secondary Education for all, which of course found favour in his eyes, or later, in the fifties growth of the Comprehensive movement, on which, I think, he reserved judgement. He spent much time at the LCC Headquarters, he was fully involved with the Mathematical Association and the The Secondary Heads Association, becoming President of both in 1959 and 1960. He listened to people and he spoke for them, with both ease and authority. I am sure that if there had been a Today programme in the 1950s the BBC van would have been parked regularly outside his Streatham home at 7am.

The other branch of his activity at that time was his work with the Juvenile Courts, one newspaper article questioning him on solving juvenile delinquency. His response being the need to persuade parents of their responsibilities. Plus ca change.

A hectic life as one public responsibility led to another, and so many of them out of school that I believe his staff came to call him the ‘Visitor’, glad to catch a sight of him. Some of my earliest memories date from this time. Certainly whenever I tried to telephone Andrea, who was living at home at the time, I gained the impression that all the establishment telephone calls in southern England were focussed on her number. The line was either engaged or else the call would always be answered by an expectant Lang with his ‘Streatham 7050 Langford speaking’. How lucky the young are today with Orange and the mobile, though come to think of it local calls were only three old pence and timeless.

At the unusually young age of 55, and whilst still in his prime as a Headmaster Lang’s service to education and the young of the country was recognised with the award of his CBE. The investiture on November 8th 1960 at Buckingham Palace was a proud moment for him and for all his family and friends.

Lang retired from Battersea in 1965 and he and Doreen moved to their new home in Winchester. Knowing him you would expect it to be retirement in name only. His experience and wisdom were too good to be wasted. He was already working for the Schools Council, the first government body to be set up to oversea the development of the secondary school curriculum. He served that body for 11 years and finished up as Chairman on the Steering Committee C, which sanctioned all curriculum projects. Dame Diana Reader-Harris, the former Headmistress of Sherborne School for Girls sat on the same Committee and told me that she had never served under a more gracious, understanding yet commanding chairman. A great delight and satisfaction to him also was to be invited by Lord Hailsham to serve as the only schoolmaster on the University Grants Committee – this at a seminal time in the creation of the new universities.

Gradually, however, as the committee work fell away there was more time to share with Doreen, to develop a new circle of friends, to work under her expert instruction as under gardener or to take her off in the summer each year to New England or Florida, where Lang lectured in the mathematical summer schools. How Doreen enjoyed the warmth and friendship of Florida.

Then they retired again to Sherborne, where their warmth and affection brought them many new and dear friends, in the close community of Sheeplands and in the congregation at Trent. They entertained, they gardened, they became expert vintners – with the airing cupboard bubbling with demi johns of elderflower wine. Lang took to helping Claude Rutter with some of his administration, especially as Deanery Synod Secretary. In his work with the church at Trent he found both satisfaction and strength. Throughout his life his Christian faith had been exemplified in his attendance at service, in Bideford, at St Leonard’s in Streatham, at St Cross in Winchester and then at Trent. For nearly thirty years he prepared with care the services for his schools, I inherited his prayer books and used them for years after him. Entwined with his devotion was his love of church music and he lost no opportunity to contribute in this way. I quote from a letter of thanks from the Secretary of the Headmasters Conference for whom Lang arranged the service in St John’s College chapel in Cambridge in 1964.

A friend and former Bishop of Coventry wrote of Lang ‘ I know him to be a profoundly Christian person, a man who believes and transfers that faith to others’.

One of our lasting memories will be of the intense pleasure that he took from helping to serve Communion at Trent. Not so stable now on his feet he would be directed to the altar rail, wearing his old Headmaster’s academic gown, green with age, and not a little tattered – nothing we tried would make him give up that gown. Once there he was certain of his place and perfect in his role.

We are grateful that in these last few years he and Doreen have been able to worship in this church and also to receive their Communion at South Cary House. In that house they received care and kindness beyond that which you could expect to find except within the bosom of the family. They took Lang to their hearts and found him as we have always found him, kindly, courteous and considerate. Always the first to offer his seat to a lady, to offer to carry her shopping, to open the door, to pass the cup of tea. As so many of you have said he was a real gentleman, a Christian gentleman. May he rest in peace.

Walter James Langford

1 March 1905 – born Clewer, Berkshire
1917-1923 – Windsor County Boys’ School,
Captain of School 1921-23,
Berkshire County Major Scholarship 1923
1923-26 - University of Reading
West Exhibition in Science 1925
Haynes Prize for best OTC cadet 1925 and 1926
Postgraduate scholarship in science 1926
President Union of Students and National Union of Students 1925-26
Ist Class Honours degree in Mathematics 1925
University rugby club 1923-26, Captain 1924-25, University cricket club 1926
September 1926-March 1937 - Assistant master Bec School; progressively senior maths master, housemaster, sixth form master and games master
1927-1930 - Queen Mary College, London evening student, M.Sc London awarded 1930
April 1937-July 1945 - Headmaster Bideford Grammar School
July 1945 - Commanding Officer 1022 Flight Air Training Corps 1942-45
Chief Billeting Officer 1939-1942
Justice of the Peace appointed 1944
September 1945-July 1965 - Headmaster Battersea Grammar School
1946 - Justice of the Peace for County of London
September 1957-June 1958 - President Mathematical Association
September 1958-June 1959 - President Secondary Heads Association
November 8th 1960 - CBE Investiture at Buckingham Palace
July 1961 - Elected to personal membership of the Headmaster Conference
1964-1975 - Membership of Schools Council, Chairman of main Steering Committee C
1964-1967 - Member of the University Grants Committee
May 1971 - Elected to Honorary Life membership of the Mathematical Association

By Roger Ketley, Son-in-law, All Saint’s, Castle Cary, Friday 27th December 1996

Kindly provided by Mr Langford's son, Malcolm

Old Windsorians

Ernest Bevin College (ex Bec)

National Archives - Bideford Grammar School

Old Grammarians, Battersea Grammar School

Mathematical Association

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