Miss Morrison
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- gillieg
- 2nd Former
- Posts: 23
- Joined: Mon Feb 12, 2007 8:33 pm
- Real Name: Gill (nee Green) Boulding
- Location: Rhossili, South Wales
Miss Morrison
I notice there is an official teachers section but I wanted to place this on Hertford memories !
I live in Rhossili on the Gower and one of my neighbours here also has an auctioneer's business in Hertford...(yes there is a link). Outside her farmhouse she has an old wooden bench. Chalked underneath are the words "Property of Miss Morrison"- sold when Miss Morrison died. CH follows you everywhere doesn't it...I just can't walk past that bench with my hands in my pockets.
I live in Rhossili on the Gower and one of my neighbours here also has an auctioneer's business in Hertford...(yes there is a link). Outside her farmhouse she has an old wooden bench. Chalked underneath are the words "Property of Miss Morrison"- sold when Miss Morrison died. CH follows you everywhere doesn't it...I just can't walk past that bench with my hands in my pockets.
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- Button Grecian
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- Real Name: Angela Marsh
- Location: Exiled Londoner, now in Staffordshire.
The Bench
That's so amazing!
Would you very kindly sit on the Property Of bench for a moment and say "thank you BJM" for me?
Oh no! (Gropes for a Kleenex).
Love, Munch
Would you very kindly sit on the Property Of bench for a moment and say "thank you BJM" for me?
Oh no! (Gropes for a Kleenex).
Love, Munch
- englishangel
- Forum Moderator
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- gillieg
- 2nd Former
- Posts: 23
- Joined: Mon Feb 12, 2007 8:33 pm
- Real Name: Gill (nee Green) Boulding
- Location: Rhossili, South Wales
FRU
I rarely get time like this - day off as daughter's 15th birthday. Am quickly getting addicted. There's a lot of catching up to do...
Re. Friends Reunited Have lost contact with almost all my peers - although I left in 5th form and did A'levels at a day school (never recovered from homesickness! although there were a few days when I didn't cry!!!) I think many preferred to leave it all behind. Although I hitchhiked around Scandanavia with Sara T a couple of years after leaving.
Re. Friends Reunited Have lost contact with almost all my peers - although I left in 5th form and did A'levels at a day school (never recovered from homesickness! although there were a few days when I didn't cry!!!) I think many preferred to leave it all behind. Although I hitchhiked around Scandanavia with Sara T a couple of years after leaving.
Re: Miss Morrison
Wanted to say something about Miss Morrison tho going off subject of previous post on this thread. I had her for English right through school and I found her not an especially encouraging teacher, but saw a kind side to her on several occasions. In the late 60s, a girl who jumped off the science block( sustained injuries, but could have been a lot worse) came back to school the next term.,very brave of her I thought. I can clearly remember the hostility of Miss Jukes and Wilson, but BJM was very sympathetic to this girl in class. Another time was when a minor folk or was it a rock band(?) played at the school-very unusual! BJM sat at the back of the hall smiling, seemingly enjoying it nearly as much as us! AND she guided us, a B form, to nearly all getting A in English Lit Olevel. She chose the set books most of us really enjoyed: Macbeth, Jane Eyre and poems of Thomas Hardye, Coleridge and Robert Burns. There was a girl from Glasgow in the class at the time; BJM got her to read Burns poems to us in an 'authentic' Scottish accent!
- gillieg
- 2nd Former
- Posts: 23
- Joined: Mon Feb 12, 2007 8:33 pm
- Real Name: Gill (nee Green) Boulding
- Location: Rhossili, South Wales
Re: Miss Morrison
Oh that kind side of Miss Morrison was the real side I'm sure. Its interesting reflecting on the behaviours of staff from an adult perspective- we only knew them as children - plus remembering the educational/social context of the 60's and 70's. Child centred policy was a long way ahead and child protection laws light years away. I wonder what happened to the girl who jumped - I hope she is ok now.
Re: Miss Morrison
Gillieg, the girl who jumped died several years after this incident, I read it in the old CHOGA mag- I don't know the circumstances; it's very sad.
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- Button Grecian
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Re: Miss Morrison
Yes, I can imagine Miss Morrison being kind to somebody in despair, and, I'm afraid to say I can also imagine the typical reactions of the Misses Jukes and Wilson. Hmm.
An awful thing is - I don't remember this incident! If it were at the end of the 60's that was in my time - I left in '71 - I do hope it wasn't anyone with whom I was in contact and might have said something tactless at the wrong moment - oh, I do hope not. I'm worried now.
An awful thing is - I don't remember this incident! If it were at the end of the 60's that was in my time - I left in '71 - I do hope it wasn't anyone with whom I was in contact and might have said something tactless at the wrong moment - oh, I do hope not. I'm worried now.
"Baldrick, you wouldn't recognise a cunning plan if it painted itself purple, and danced naked on top of a harpsichord singing "Cunning plans are here again.""
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- GE (Great Erasmus)
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- Real Name: Mary Bowden (Gaskell)
Re: Miss Morrison
I suspect it would have been hushed up - was it in 1s or 2s...? I don't really remember either.
Mary Bowden (Gaskell)
5.10, 3.6: 64-71
5.10, 3.6: 64-71
Re: Miss Morrison
The girl was in 2's ; it was about 1969 when I was 13, and the incident must have been hushed up, but we wondered why she suddenly wasn't in class and I suppose word got around then. It really scared me, I would wake in the early hours of the morning, bright summer mornings, and be terrified the same thing would happen again. It really affected me like that for the rest of that summer term, and I never told anyone, even close friends, that I felt like this.
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- GE (Great Erasmus)
- Posts: 161
- Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 12:35 am
- Real Name: Mary Bowden (Gaskell)
Re: Miss Morrison
It was a determining characteristic of the Hertford training that we weren't supposed to feel things, or to express them if we did. And it sticks. My much loved cat died last week and I am still fighting the tendency to apologise to everyone I talk to about it for being so emotional...
Mary Bowden (Gaskell)
5.10, 3.6: 64-71
5.10, 3.6: 64-71
Re: Miss Morrison
. Sorry to hear about your cat, one of our 2 cats is 18years old, came to us when our daughter was 3years old, we will all be devastated when he goes, so much part of the family. I really agree with your comments and I too feel guilty if I get upset over things like this; and find it hard to show any emotional feelings . I can't imagine it's like this now at Horsham-all seems so much more open.MaryB wrote:It was a determining characteristic of the Hertford training that we weren't supposed to feel things, or to express them if we did. And it sticks. My much loved cat died last week and I am still fighting the tendency to apologise to everyone I talk to about it for being so emotional...
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- Button Grecian
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Re: Miss Morrison
The Hertford unemotional conditioning had absolutely no effect on me whatever!
I always did and still do express my feelings - probably too much - too demonstrative?
But Hertford left me left with a depressive tendency and the lack of self esteem that evolved with all those punishments and my failure to thrive in that System.
Miss Morrison was the only mistress who enabled me to feel that I wasn't a total failure...
I always did and still do express my feelings - probably too much - too demonstrative?
But Hertford left me left with a depressive tendency and the lack of self esteem that evolved with all those punishments and my failure to thrive in that System.
Miss Morrison was the only mistress who enabled me to feel that I wasn't a total failure...
"Baldrick, you wouldn't recognise a cunning plan if it painted itself purple, and danced naked on top of a harpsichord singing "Cunning plans are here again.""
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- Button Grecian
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- Real Name: Frances Grogan (nee Haley)
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Re: Miss Morrison
Angela, it all sounds horribly familiar - depression, lack of self-esteem, inability to express emotions - it is only in the last few years that I have started to overcome some of them, and then only on a 'good' day! For most of it I blame my housemistress, Miss Jenkins, who has been written about elsewhere in this forum.
Frances Grogan (Haley) 6's 1956 - 62
'A clean house is a sign of a broken computer.'
'A clean house is a sign of a broken computer.'