Wednesday 24 July 2013

Master’s blog, stardate 2013.205


Visit to the Mansion House

On Friday 19th July I attended on the Lord Mayor along with Thames Warden, Alderman Andrew Parmley and the clerk to present a jug of Thames water to the Lord Mayor.  This annual event celebrates the sale of the Thames Conservancy to the Corporation of London by King Richard 1 on 14 July 1197.  We had a very pleasant half an hour with the Lord Mayor, all the more so because he is a Gifford and I am a half-Gifford.  The Lord Mayor was truly delighted with the water jug and we did agree that it would look well if filled with a foaming type liquid too.

Friday 12 July 2013

Master's blog, stardate 2013.194, review of the week

Back to Ruthin after 3 days in London; at the Company of Engineers’ Dinner on Tuesday night in Merchant Taylors’ Hall.  The Engineers have a great many contacts with the armed forces and some 24 awards were made during the dinner. Most impressed by what ‘goes on’ that the general public hear very little about.  We finished at well past 11 0’clock.  

Wednesday was spent on a most interesting visit to RAF Northolt along with representatives from 3 other Livery companies.  Northolt is a very important centre for the operation of some many varied services carried out by the RAF.  After lunch we visited the Battle of Britain Bunker at Uxbridge which is set up as it was on a September day in 1940.  As a company we will be made very welcome to Northolt and Uxbridge on another occasion.  

Thursday night saw me attending the Paviours Court Dinner at Charterhouse.  Charterhouse itself is an amazing building being one of only 3 in the city which would have been recognizable in Elizabethan times.  Faces and names are becoming familiar at a fast rate. 

Master's blog, stardate 2013.184, Evening Event

Immediately after the Installation lunch we all headed off for the offices of Pinsent Mason, courtesy of Mark Lane, where about 90 people assembled to listen to 5 of our bursary recipients describe their work and how the bursary had benefitted them.  The audience contained a wide mix of liverymen, members of academic departments for around the UK as well as many students.  I did the introductions, Lord Macdonald chaired the meeting and Colin Bland provided a short summary of the aims of the Trust as a conclusion.  The whole evening was a great success.

Master's blog, stardate 2013.184, Installation Lunch


Peter handed over to me at about 11.30  on 3rd July.  First of all let me say that it was a day of mixed emotions.  Losing Marj last year was a hard blow to take and she was so excited at the prospect of me being Master and her playing her part.  So Marj was in my thoughts on Wednesday.  Nevertheless the last year has been one of building excitement and anticipation.  The support that I had from members on Wednesday was palpable and for that I thank them all most sincerely.

The whole event of Installation and greeting guests for lunch was spectacular.  Almost my first action as Master was to install my son David as a liveryman by way of Patrimonial Redemption; if you want to learn more about this process then contact the Clerk.  I then welcomed two new Court Assistants, Robert Casey and David Lloyd Owen along with a new Journeyman Rose Norman and then our new chaplain the rev. Canon Flora Winfield.  So the Court got me off to a flying start.

Reception and lunch aboard the HQS Wellington was just fine with the reception and drinks on the quarter deck on what turned out to be a kind morning weather-wise.

There were about 115 at the lunch including four Masters and an immediate Past Master.  My principal guest was Lord Dafydd Elis Thomas, an old friend, who is Chairman of the Welsh Assembly’s committee on the Environment and Sustainability and is therefore in frequent contact with our new Deputy Master Peter Mathews.  Dafydd was up to his usual tricks in bating the English very gently about ‘Welsh Lions’ and talking about the new approach to our management of the environment in Wales.  It all went down extremely well and as expected he occupied more than his allotted time, not that anyone was bothered in the slightest.

For my part I felt that I had to provide a short portrait of what makes me ‘tick’ and where this leads me in plotting my year ahead.  I have a most supportive team of wardens, Roger North, Peter Hall and Keith Tozzi, and an excellent pair in my ‘backroom support’ in our Learned Clerk and Mr Beadle; I am looking forward to an enjoyable and productive year.

There will be a ‘Message from the Master’ issued in hard copy very shortly and there will be more ‘words’ from me in the Conservator later in the year.  You will find a few points of commonality between all of these items; they have all been written in the last couple of months.
Arrangements for the ‘Master’s Weekend’ in Ruthin are virtually complete and a programme and instructions notice will be issued very soon.


My address at the installation Lunch has been placed on the web site.