29 November 2007
20 November 2007
John Ashurst at opening of Ashurst Building
And Steve White was there too ...
Hampshire Chronicle News
19 November 2007
http://www.thisishampshire.net/news/hampshirechroniclenews/display.var.1843396.0.ashurst_centre_opened.php
Ashurst Centre opened
Report by Kit Neilson
THE still-abundant hair is white and the figure a little stooped, but the eyes are as sharp as ever and the voice, honed by robust northern vowels, remains crisp and authoritative.
John Ashurst, rising 85, was making a rare return to Winchester for the commissioning of the new Ashurst Learning Resource Centre at Peter Symonds College, where he made such an indelible mark a generation ago during its twilight years as a grammar school. He was only at the helm for eight years, but his contribution was every bit as significant as those of his longer-serving predecessors, Telford Varley and "Doc" Freeman.
He blew in, like a force of nature, at the start of the 1963 summer term, galvanising a school that had perhaps grown a little too comfortable under the urbane stewardship of John Shields. Dissident elements were identified and neutralised. Uniform was prescribed, long hair proscribed.
And it was not just the boys, your correspondent included, who sat up: the new man also concentrated the minds of the staff and those he considered not up to the task did not last long.
The "Swinging Sixties" notwithstanding, he turned Peter Symonds into an academic hothouse. Exam grades soared and university entrance went off the graph, reigniting the process of educational excellence that has continued to the present day.
But he was a dinosaur - and proud of it. Co-education and sixth-form colleges were not for him and in 1971, job done, he moved to the less egalitarian environs of East Riding to head the independent Hymer's College, Hull, where he saw out his career before retiring to nearby Beverley.
The college's current principal, Neil Hopkins, paying his own tribute, said John Ashurst represented "a whole section" of the proud history of Peter Symonds and so it was especially fitting that the new wing should bear his name.
"In fact, there is a wonderful tradition here, which I warmly commend, of naming buildings after heads, There've only been six since the school proper opened in 1897, so it's been possible to keep up fairly well. And the governors seem to realise they have to keep us a long time. They can't afford enough buildings to be able to sack us too often!"
*This latest building combines the concept of independent learning with a range of resources that support and reflect the curriculum. As well as being a library with 16,000 books (including Harry Potter - in Spanish), 900 DVDs, journals and newspapers, it offers internet and online resources.
Students have access to 200 computers linked to the college network in three IT classrooms and two suites. There are also two seminar rooms and a silent study room, as well as individual study areas, staffroom, staff work areas and an audio-visual room. A team of 10 qualified and specialist staff provide a university-style service and students are encouraged to utilise the resources to their maximum capabilities. The ground floor houses seven teaching rooms, a staffroom and a careers library, with professional advisers and library assistants.
Mr Hopkins revealed that the new centre had cost 짙4.2m and been funded from various sources, including a 10 per cent grant from the Learning and Skills Council and 짙300,000 from the Mercers' Guild. "Peter Symonds was a member of this company in the 16th century, so we are especially grateful. Without the Mercers' help, our campus would be far less attractive than it is."
Another funding factor, he added, had been prepayment of boarding fees by the Falklands Islands Government. "In fact, we must be the only college in the land whose building project was to some extent dependent on the squid harvest in the South Atlantic."
He said the scheme had been delivered on time and within budget. "And even more importantly, we actually like it."
Guests, among them former maths master, Steve White, 90 next birthday, were given guided tours before the building was officially opened by the Master Mercer, Frederick Hohler, who said the success of Peter Symonds down the years had been due to key individuals, among them John Ashurst, whose leadership and drive had been crucial. "Now Neil has built on those foundations to produce this outstanding college. To send 47 students to Oxbridge last year was a remarkable achievement, both for Winchester and nationally."
Fittingly, the last word went to Mr Ashurst, who said he was "spellbound" by the building and the great honour of lending his name to it. He added: "When I left, there wasn't a computer to be seen. And I was particularly struck by the recreation area, where students can chat, read magazines and relax. They didn't relax in my day."
12:59pm Monday 19th November 2007
Hampshire Chronicle News
19 November 2007
http://www.thisishampshire.net/news/hampshirechroniclenews/display.var.1843396.0.ashurst_centre_opened.php
Ashurst Centre opened
Report by Kit Neilson
THE still-abundant hair is white and the figure a little stooped, but the eyes are as sharp as ever and the voice, honed by robust northern vowels, remains crisp and authoritative.
John Ashurst, rising 85, was making a rare return to Winchester for the commissioning of the new Ashurst Learning Resource Centre at Peter Symonds College, where he made such an indelible mark a generation ago during its twilight years as a grammar school. He was only at the helm for eight years, but his contribution was every bit as significant as those of his longer-serving predecessors, Telford Varley and "Doc" Freeman.
He blew in, like a force of nature, at the start of the 1963 summer term, galvanising a school that had perhaps grown a little too comfortable under the urbane stewardship of John Shields. Dissident elements were identified and neutralised. Uniform was prescribed, long hair proscribed.
And it was not just the boys, your correspondent included, who sat up: the new man also concentrated the minds of the staff and those he considered not up to the task did not last long.
The "Swinging Sixties" notwithstanding, he turned Peter Symonds into an academic hothouse. Exam grades soared and university entrance went off the graph, reigniting the process of educational excellence that has continued to the present day.
But he was a dinosaur - and proud of it. Co-education and sixth-form colleges were not for him and in 1971, job done, he moved to the less egalitarian environs of East Riding to head the independent Hymer's College, Hull, where he saw out his career before retiring to nearby Beverley.
The college's current principal, Neil Hopkins, paying his own tribute, said John Ashurst represented "a whole section" of the proud history of Peter Symonds and so it was especially fitting that the new wing should bear his name.
"In fact, there is a wonderful tradition here, which I warmly commend, of naming buildings after heads, There've only been six since the school proper opened in 1897, so it's been possible to keep up fairly well. And the governors seem to realise they have to keep us a long time. They can't afford enough buildings to be able to sack us too often!"
*This latest building combines the concept of independent learning with a range of resources that support and reflect the curriculum. As well as being a library with 16,000 books (including Harry Potter - in Spanish), 900 DVDs, journals and newspapers, it offers internet and online resources.
Students have access to 200 computers linked to the college network in three IT classrooms and two suites. There are also two seminar rooms and a silent study room, as well as individual study areas, staffroom, staff work areas and an audio-visual room. A team of 10 qualified and specialist staff provide a university-style service and students are encouraged to utilise the resources to their maximum capabilities. The ground floor houses seven teaching rooms, a staffroom and a careers library, with professional advisers and library assistants.
Mr Hopkins revealed that the new centre had cost 짙4.2m and been funded from various sources, including a 10 per cent grant from the Learning and Skills Council and 짙300,000 from the Mercers' Guild. "Peter Symonds was a member of this company in the 16th century, so we are especially grateful. Without the Mercers' help, our campus would be far less attractive than it is."
Another funding factor, he added, had been prepayment of boarding fees by the Falklands Islands Government. "In fact, we must be the only college in the land whose building project was to some extent dependent on the squid harvest in the South Atlantic."
He said the scheme had been delivered on time and within budget. "And even more importantly, we actually like it."
Guests, among them former maths master, Steve White, 90 next birthday, were given guided tours before the building was officially opened by the Master Mercer, Frederick Hohler, who said the success of Peter Symonds down the years had been due to key individuals, among them John Ashurst, whose leadership and drive had been crucial. "Now Neil has built on those foundations to produce this outstanding college. To send 47 students to Oxbridge last year was a remarkable achievement, both for Winchester and nationally."
Fittingly, the last word went to Mr Ashurst, who said he was "spellbound" by the building and the great honour of lending his name to it. He added: "When I left, there wasn't a computer to be seen. And I was particularly struck by the recreation area, where students can chat, read magazines and relax. They didn't relax in my day."
12:59pm Monday 19th November 2007
John Ashurst at opening of Ashurst Building
And Steve White was there too ...
Hampshire Chronicle News
19 November 2007
http://www.thisishampshire.net/news/hampshirechroniclenews/display.var.1843396.0.ashurst_centre_opened.php
Ashurst Centre opened
Report by Kit Neilson
THE still-abundant hair is white and the figure a little stooped, but the eyes are as sharp as ever and the voice, honed by robust northern vowels, remains crisp and authoritative.
John Ashurst, rising 85, was making a rare return to Winchester for the commissioning of the new Ashurst Learning Resource Centre at Peter Symonds College, where he made such an indelible mark a generation ago during its twilight years as a grammar school. He was only at the helm for eight years, but his contribution was every bit as significant as those of his longer-serving predecessors, Telford Varley and "Doc" Freeman.
He blew in, like a force of nature, at the start of the 1963 summer term, galvanising a school that had perhaps grown a little too comfortable under the urbane stewardship of John Shields. Dissident elements were identified and neutralised. Uniform was prescribed, long hair proscribed.
And it was not just the boys, your correspondent included, who sat up: the new man also concentrated the minds of the staff and those he considered not up to the task did not last long.
The "Swinging Sixties" notwithstanding, he turned Peter Symonds into an academic hothouse. Exam grades soared and university entrance went off the graph, reigniting the process of educational excellence that has continued to the present day.
But he was a dinosaur - and proud of it. Co-education and sixth-form colleges were not for him and in 1971, job done, he moved to the less egalitarian environs of East Riding to head the independent Hymer's College, Hull, where he saw out his career before retiring to nearby Beverley.
The college's current principal, Neil Hopkins, paying his own tribute, said John Ashurst represented "a whole section" of the proud history of Peter Symonds and so it was especially fitting that the new wing should bear his name.
"In fact, there is a wonderful tradition here, which I warmly commend, of naming buildings after heads, There've only been six since the school proper opened in 1897, so it's been possible to keep up fairly well. And the governors seem to realise they have to keep us a long time. They can't afford enough buildings to be able to sack us too often!"
*This latest building combines the concept of independent learning with a range of resources that support and reflect the curriculum. As well as being a library with 16,000 books (including Harry Potter - in Spanish), 900 DVDs, journals and newspapers, it offers internet and online resources.
Students have access to 200 computers linked to the college network in three IT classrooms and two suites. There are also two seminar rooms and a silent study room, as well as individual study areas, staffroom, staff work areas and an audio-visual room. A team of 10 qualified and specialist staff provide a university-style service and students are encouraged to utilise the resources to their maximum capabilities. The ground floor houses seven teaching rooms, a staffroom and a careers library, with professional advisers and library assistants.
Mr Hopkins revealed that the new centre had cost 짙4.2m and been funded from various sources, including a 10 per cent grant from the Learning and Skills Council and 짙300,000 from the Mercers' Guild. "Peter Symonds was a member of this company in the 16th century, so we are especially grateful. Without the Mercers' help, our campus would be far less attractive than it is."
Another funding factor, he added, had been prepayment of boarding fees by the Falklands Islands Government. "In fact, we must be the only college in the land whose building project was to some extent dependent on the squid harvest in the South Atlantic."
He said the scheme had been delivered on time and within budget. "And even more importantly, we actually like it."
Guests, among them former maths master, Steve White, 90 next birthday, were given guided tours before the building was officially opened by the Master Mercer, Frederick Hohler, who said the success of Peter Symonds down the years had been due to key individuals, among them John Ashurst, whose leadership and drive had been crucial. "Now Neil has built on those foundations to produce this outstanding college. To send 47 students to Oxbridge last year was a remarkable achievement, both for Winchester and nationally."
Fittingly, the last word went to Mr Ashurst, who said he was "spellbound" by the building and the great honour of lending his name to it. He added: "When I left, there wasn't a computer to be seen. And I was particularly struck by the recreation area, where students can chat, read magazines and relax. They didn't relax in my day."
12:59pm Monday 19th November 2007
Hampshire Chronicle News
19 November 2007
http://www.thisishampshire.net/news/hampshirechroniclenews/display.var.1843396.0.ashurst_centre_opened.php
Ashurst Centre opened
Report by Kit Neilson
THE still-abundant hair is white and the figure a little stooped, but the eyes are as sharp as ever and the voice, honed by robust northern vowels, remains crisp and authoritative.
John Ashurst, rising 85, was making a rare return to Winchester for the commissioning of the new Ashurst Learning Resource Centre at Peter Symonds College, where he made such an indelible mark a generation ago during its twilight years as a grammar school. He was only at the helm for eight years, but his contribution was every bit as significant as those of his longer-serving predecessors, Telford Varley and "Doc" Freeman.
He blew in, like a force of nature, at the start of the 1963 summer term, galvanising a school that had perhaps grown a little too comfortable under the urbane stewardship of John Shields. Dissident elements were identified and neutralised. Uniform was prescribed, long hair proscribed.
And it was not just the boys, your correspondent included, who sat up: the new man also concentrated the minds of the staff and those he considered not up to the task did not last long.
The "Swinging Sixties" notwithstanding, he turned Peter Symonds into an academic hothouse. Exam grades soared and university entrance went off the graph, reigniting the process of educational excellence that has continued to the present day.
But he was a dinosaur - and proud of it. Co-education and sixth-form colleges were not for him and in 1971, job done, he moved to the less egalitarian environs of East Riding to head the independent Hymer's College, Hull, where he saw out his career before retiring to nearby Beverley.
The college's current principal, Neil Hopkins, paying his own tribute, said John Ashurst represented "a whole section" of the proud history of Peter Symonds and so it was especially fitting that the new wing should bear his name.
"In fact, there is a wonderful tradition here, which I warmly commend, of naming buildings after heads, There've only been six since the school proper opened in 1897, so it's been possible to keep up fairly well. And the governors seem to realise they have to keep us a long time. They can't afford enough buildings to be able to sack us too often!"
*This latest building combines the concept of independent learning with a range of resources that support and reflect the curriculum. As well as being a library with 16,000 books (including Harry Potter - in Spanish), 900 DVDs, journals and newspapers, it offers internet and online resources.
Students have access to 200 computers linked to the college network in three IT classrooms and two suites. There are also two seminar rooms and a silent study room, as well as individual study areas, staffroom, staff work areas and an audio-visual room. A team of 10 qualified and specialist staff provide a university-style service and students are encouraged to utilise the resources to their maximum capabilities. The ground floor houses seven teaching rooms, a staffroom and a careers library, with professional advisers and library assistants.
Mr Hopkins revealed that the new centre had cost 짙4.2m and been funded from various sources, including a 10 per cent grant from the Learning and Skills Council and 짙300,000 from the Mercers' Guild. "Peter Symonds was a member of this company in the 16th century, so we are especially grateful. Without the Mercers' help, our campus would be far less attractive than it is."
Another funding factor, he added, had been prepayment of boarding fees by the Falklands Islands Government. "In fact, we must be the only college in the land whose building project was to some extent dependent on the squid harvest in the South Atlantic."
He said the scheme had been delivered on time and within budget. "And even more importantly, we actually like it."
Guests, among them former maths master, Steve White, 90 next birthday, were given guided tours before the building was officially opened by the Master Mercer, Frederick Hohler, who said the success of Peter Symonds down the years had been due to key individuals, among them John Ashurst, whose leadership and drive had been crucial. "Now Neil has built on those foundations to produce this outstanding college. To send 47 students to Oxbridge last year was a remarkable achievement, both for Winchester and nationally."
Fittingly, the last word went to Mr Ashurst, who said he was "spellbound" by the building and the great honour of lending his name to it. He added: "When I left, there wasn't a computer to be seen. And I was particularly struck by the recreation area, where students can chat, read magazines and relax. They didn't relax in my day."
12:59pm Monday 19th November 2007
19 November 2007
WELCOME
A Welcome to 'Silhillian' who has just joined us ...
It is hoped that you are able to 'catch up' with some memories as well as ex School chums from your time at Peter Symond's ...
If you have any interesting memories or photos, and are happy to share them we would be delighted to receive them on the site ...
Look forward to hearing more from you ...
Take care ...
Doug Clews (Joint Manager)
WELCOME
A Welcome to 'Silhillian' who has just joined us ...
It is hoped that you are able to 'catch up' with some memories as well as ex School chums from your time at Peter Symond's ...
If you have any interesting memories or photos, and are happy to share them we would be delighted to receive them on the site ...
Look forward to hearing more from you ...
Take care ...
Doug Clews (Joint Manager)
13 November 2007
Publications by ex-staff
I have a copy of "Walking in Hampshire" 2nd series, from 1950's by G.G. (Tom) Pierce illustrated by Jack Northeast and also a copy of "With an Artist in Winchester" dated 1961 by Jack Northeast.
Although neither has pictures of the school, there are plenty of local views drawn by Jack, if anyone is interested I would be happy to post some of them on the site - presume no copyright problems with doing this??
Rog.
Although neither has pictures of the school, there are plenty of local views drawn by Jack, if anyone is interested I would be happy to post some of them on the site - presume no copyright problems with doing this??
Rog.
Publications by ex-staff
I have a copy of "Walking in Hampshire" 2nd series, from 1950's by G.G. (Tom) Pierce illustrated by Jack Northeast and also a copy of "With an Artist in Winchester" dated 1961 by Jack Northeast.
Although neither has pictures of the school, there are plenty of local views drawn by Jack, if anyone is interested I would be happy to post some of them on the site - presume no copyright problems with doing this??
Rog.
Although neither has pictures of the school, there are plenty of local views drawn by Jack, if anyone is interested I would be happy to post some of them on the site - presume no copyright problems with doing this??
Rog.
07 November 2007
Pictures of the school
I found the following site which has some recent shots of the school, including the new Ashurst building. The college web site still states that the building will open in September 2007!
It looks like the Ashurst building is where the woodwork shop used to be, also no sign of Boarder's Bogs! The annexe classrooms that I was always told, circa 1966, were temporary are still present though!
Tim
Pictures of the school
I found the following site which has some recent shots of the school, including the new Ashurst building. The college web site still states that the building will open in September 2007!
It looks like the Ashurst building is where the woodwork shop used to be, also no sign of Boarder's Bogs! The annexe classrooms that I was always told, circa 1966, were temporary are still present though!
Tim
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