The PTA Centenary Ball was
a triumph for Julie Slatter and her team of organisers. The evening ran well
from the R n B band accompanying the Champagne Reception to the 15 piece Dance
Band at the end. The marquee looked particularly classy with its table
decorations based around black feathers, and the meal was excellently prepared
and presented by The Vine. The PTA should be congratulated on a fine evening
and will have raised considerable funds through the Raffle and the Silent
Auction.
It all looked rather grim
at 9am with the rain still coming down and the chances of any athletics taking
place seeming rather remote. However, the sun shines on the righteous and by
9.45am we were able to start some races as well as roll the cameras. By the
time we reached the end of the usual competitions and introduced events from
the 1912 Sports Day (Businessman’s Race and the Go-as-you-please Race), we were
more concerned about sunstroke than the rain! Perhaps Mr Mervyn Russell should
have had more concerns about his ability to take part in the latter race aged
77+: he returned later in the afternoon from the hospital with his leg in
plaster owed to the ruptured Achilles tendon! Back on the track Mrs Headmaster
enjoyed the Go-as-you-please Race with dog Murphy acting as her pace-maker!
Meanwhile Mrs Russell had handed out the Sports Day prizes, including the paint
box, a kite and stylograph pen. She then went on to cut the ribbon to open the
College Meadow Pavilion where a board had been placed giving an account of her
father’s life at Eltham at the Olympics and in China. She was delighted to meet
another OE whose grandfather had been in Tiensin along with EHL. The Olympic
football pitch looked like a billiard table lush with fresh grass.
Speech Day was an extra special event with two Guests of Honour; in reality we had never been sure that Griff Rhys Jones would actually make it on the night due to his TV filming schedule – and he kept us waiting until 6.32pm before arriving for the normal 6.30pm start! Fortunately Barnaby Lenon OE, recently retired Headmaster of Harrow and now Chairman of the Independent Schools Council, had agreed to come knowing that Griff might or might not make it: all Barnaby insisted on was speaking first if there were going to be two speakers. His memories of his time at Eltham combined with Winston Churchill’s time at Harrow encouraged all those who might not have received a prize to have confidence that having the right motivation would see them succeed at some stage in their lives. Griff entertained the assembled audience with his nostalgic memories of his time at Brentwood, which included the smell of the polish and seat as well as a humorous version of the school song. I asked the school what EHL would have thought about the school 100 years on and Mrs Russell seemed pleased that we were all trying to avoid making him into an idol, something she had mentioned earlier that day in Chapel – he would have been very upset if he had thought that this would have been his legacy. We all returned home to watch ITV’s “The Real Chariots of Fire” programme with Nigel Havers – rather a lot of Nigel Havers, in truth, but he did carry the show, including 3 minutes at Eltham, with his natural charm!
Every sport had been
challenged to organise an event to mark the centenary; in January the hockey
team had won the pre-season tournament with considerable confidence, and now it
was the turn of the cricketers, hosting the first ever Leslie Gracie 20/20
tournament – I am not sure what Leslie Gracie would have thought about this,
but eight Under 16 sides from different schools played enthusiastically in a
slightly reduced competition (15 overs a side due to the wet weather) which
concluded with Eltham beating Dulwich in the Final. It is now up to the rugby
boys to have a straight run of three victories in centenary sports!
P J Henderson