Memories of Stanmore - Mandy Dodd (nee Holder)
Pupil | 1968 - 1974
My memories are having outside toilets, going over to the dining room and having our lunches. When it was cold and the pipes had frozen we had a day off.
Feeding the cows in the fields around the school. Stanmore was a very lovely school to be at. Teachers I remember - Mr Hammond, Headteacher; Miss Clarke; Mrs Percival; Miss Brown and Mrs Swift who wore sandals with socks - she was scary.
Memories of Stanmore - Debbie Blunn (nee Bright)
Pupil | 1962 - 1968
I started in Mrs Allen’s class in Year R. I remember lots of nice teachers, Mrs Fulford, Miss Brown, Miss Cooper, Miss Glover, Mr Willoughby, Miss Percival, Mrs Carvill, Mrs Peters.
I enjoyed the school meals, especially chocolate sponge pudding and mint green gorgeous custard. I remember Mr King and Mr Hammond giving me the cane for laughing because other boys had just had the cane. Also tracing paper loo roll in the outside toilets and the smell of carbolic soap.
Memories of Stanmore - Pauline Vigus
Pupil | 1965 - 1972
I remember the metal climbing frame, the concrete maze which I fell off and grazed the back of my legs and was taken to sick bay.
Mr Hammond, Headteacher; Miss Swift; Mrs Brown; Miss Percival; Miss Cooper.
Played netball and kiss chase with the boys!
Memories of Stanmore - Lee Lampard
Pupil | 1976 - 1982
Mrs Bates, Mrs Clark - inspirational teachers!
Great life-lasting friendships.
A wonderful school
Memories of Stanmore - Tracey Mariner
Pupil | 1975 - 1983
I remember school trips to York by train and Stubbington Study Centre.
Milk in bottles and crisps sold by Miss Swift.
Sports days on the front grass and standing on the path when we were in trouble.
Memories of Stanmore - Pamela Carr (nee Dyke)
Pupil | 1972 - 1978
I loved being at Stanmore School. The teachers and other pupils were all very special.
Miss Swift was very scary! Miss Brown used to teach us French. Miss Lloyd married the gardening TV presenter Roy Lancaster.
In the summer we used to be allowed in the padding pools. Top infants always went to visit The Victory for their outing.
Memories of Stanmore - Lisa Bennett (nee Colgrave)
Pupil | 1975 - 1982
Meeting my oldest friend Heather Kempson here walking to and from school and still the best offends 44 years later. Also being scared of Miss Swift, you never messed with her.
Memories of Stanmore - Michael Bright
Pupil | 1948 - 1951
I was born in No 1 Nuns Walk Winchester, after the war we moved to Addison Close, Stanmore Estate.
I came to the school in 1948, in Miss Glover’s class. I think I was in one play as an owl. Mr King was the Headmaster. I remember the boys toilets were outside and had to dash there in the bad weather, also the tracing paper toilet rolls. My father Ron Bright came here when the school opened in 1928. This has been a lovely day, bringing back lots of memories.
Memories of Stanmore - Dawn Przybycin
Parent | 1988 - 1999
My two daughters came here - Mrs Horkan taught them. My youngest one sang a solo in a school production Bethlehem Rock - I was so proud.
I also remember my youngest being worried at the thought of going into Mr Young’s class - she soon found out that he was a lovely man and not to be feared.
Memories of Stanmore - Georgette Miller
Staff | 1980s
Supply cover for a year.
Super to work under John Gunner - a very fine head of a very good school.
After a morning with several challenging lads, I asked them to join me in the hall after lunchtime. After requesting several step ups and press ups of them, they asked me if we could form a gym club - great days.
Memories of Stanmore - Brett Green
Pupil | 1982
Stanmore Primary School football team going undefeated.
6 - 0 South Wanston
6 - 0 Sutton Scotney
3 - 1 Harestcok - Claire Gould Captain (Gregory’s Girl)
2 - 1 Weeke
I scored two hayracks and was Captain against Weeke.
Memories of Stanmore - Gillian Harris
Pupil | 1976 - 1983
Just a great place. A sense of real community. A lovely place to grow up.
We used to make things in class to sell at the Christmas and Summer Fair. My whole family came to the school and some returned as lunchtime staff.
Happy, happy days!
Memories of Stanmore - Rachel Wells
Pupil | 1996
The Christmas play, dressing up as an angel and having pink circles painted on my cheeks. Setting off down the middle of all the parents in the hall to the stage.
Memories of Stanmore - Anna McKenzie
Pupil | 2013 - 2018
I found doing the year six production really fun. I was Cindy Lou Who and my teacher was Mr Quincey.
Memories of Stanmore - Kerry Cannings
Pupil | 1996
In year six we put on a production of Bugsy Malone. I was Tallulah!!
Now my children attend Stanmore School.
My mum Julie Foster worked here for years too and was a pupil here herself.
Memories of Stanmore - Mike Burke
Pupil | 1950 - 1956
The teachers: Mr King, Headteacher; Mrs Allen; Miss Read; Miss Blake; Miss Morgan; Mr Marshall; Mr Davis; Miss Glover; Miss Cowan; Mr Ireland; Mr Morrison
Winning the cup in 1954 Stanmore 3 - Western 0
Team: Jubb; Matthews; Tarrant; Harsher; Starr; Tibble; Judd; Baird; Burke; Taylor; Jervis
Manager: Mr Harrison
Memories of Stanmore - Genny Byrne
Member of staff | 2007 - 2016
Going to Beaulieu on a residential and milking the goats, mucking out and watching all the children’s faces.
Having the most wonderful times at Sports Day and all the pupils joining in and being part of a wonderful community.
Memories of Stanmore - The Sacree Family - 1935 to 1959
By Nigel Sacree - 06 December 2019
The Sacree family lived at 25 Stuart Crescent, Stanmore, from about 1936, and that was ‘home’ until Mum and Dad (Cecil and Joyce) passed away in 1982.
Naturally, all the children attended Stanmore Infant/Junior School, until they went on to secondary education (Peter Symonds – then a grammar school for boys, the County High School – the grammar school for girls, and Danemark/Winchester County Secondary Modern School).
Sacree siblings; Brian, Barbara, Trevor, Tony and Nigel, owe a great deal to their formative time at Stanmore School, spanning a period of about 24 years! (c1935 to 1959). Their teachers had a lot to contend with! The Junior School Headmaster in the early days was Mr F P Freeman. In my time, Mr King was responsible for the Juniors and Miss Edmonds for the Infants.
This social and educational foundation inevitably contributed to our later pursuits and careers: aircraft nuclear defence and aircraft antenna technology (Brian Sacree), games teacher and athletics coach (Barbara Sacree (Payne)), the Hampshire Constabulary (Trevor Sacree), electrician (Tony Sacree), local government administration and PR (Nigel Sacree).
I was drawn to the School website when I happened on a photo of the School Choir in 1957 – I am in the back row. It is amazing that whoever contributed the photo should have remembered so many names – a test I would have failed miserably. A big thankyou for this reminder.
Music is important to me (it is also a family thing). David Waldin (not Waldren as printed) was an encouraging music teacher – he taught us tonic sol-fa (a technique for teaching sight-singing). I remember he was involved in music at St Cross Chapel. John Wright also taught us music and music appreciation at Stanmore. He features in another teacher group photo on the school website. John was also the man behind Winchester male voice choir, ‘Caer Gwent’ (he was Welsh). I am sure the Stanmore Choir was recorded for a BBC broadcast, but have failed to trace any further information.
Mr King, my Head Teacher, comes to mind principally for two things, apart from the fact that he was a good and kind man: he had Elgar’s orchestral music playing at the start of school assembly (we should be exposing today’s children at school to the beauty of ‘proper’ music – it almost certainly won’t happen at home); when I failed the 11+ exam he attempted to reassure me that it would be better for me to be in the top set at the Winchester County Secondary Modern Boys School than an ‘also ran’ at Peter Symonds Grammar School. Some argue that the 11+ was socially and educationally divisive; for my part, it did little to bolster my self-confidence. Schools on the other side of town were known to be coaching their pupils to pass the exam – but that wasn’t on offer at Stanmore.
I remember a number of Stanmore’s teachers, including Mrs Cooper, and Miss Glover, who feature on the website. Mrs Cooper was known as ‘scooper’ – children eager to answer a question shot a hand up and shouted ‘scooper’ (at least that’s the way ‘Mrs Cooper’ came out). Miss Glover read beautifully and with expression – even 60+ years on I can still remember the thrill of listening to ‘Moonfleet’ (for the uninitiated – a tale of smuggling, treasure and shipwreck set in 18th century England, written by J Meade Falkner). One less fond memory was Miss Glover’s habit, at the end of the school day, of having us stand on our chairs answering maths questions – if you answered correctly you sat down – I was usually one of the last standing!
This may have been Frances’ come back for us making an ice slide in the depths of winter, across the tarmac play-ground, starting at the bottom of the steps to her timber clad classroom. Miss Glover unwittingly gave this obstacle a test run, sliding along it on her bottom (not too many marks for style, but high marks for speed and fairly loud exclamations of shock!).
Her classroom was one of two in a block, the other occupied by Mr Harrison (an un-named teacher in the group photo including John Wright). This block was separated from the main school brick building by a narrow passageway. In these pre-Health and Safety days the boys played ‘King’ which was essentially flinging a tennis ball at each other – or aimlessly into the passageway, the ricochet making a ‘hit’ almost certain, whether another pupil or a teacher!
Both Molly and Frances were deacons at Winchester Baptist Church, which we attended as a family. Rev Joe Tweedley, also on the Stanmore website, was a Liverpudlian, an Everton supporter and not only Chair Of School Governors, but the Minister of Winchester Baptist Church – he conducted a number of our family dedications, baptisms, weddings and funerals in his 30+ years there.
I also remember from my time at Stanmore School: Mr Kent (he once ‘measured’ the palm of my hand with a ruler – and I deserved it!) – he is also un-named in the teacher group photo; Miss Brown; Miss Percival; Mrs Blake (she had us learning times tables by rote – that should be a requirement today); my sister-in-law to be, Dorothy Whone, taught at Stanmore for a spell, and (I think) she is also an un-named in the teacher group photo. Other teaching names spring to mind: Valerie Barton and Miss Cavell, but I’m not sure whether my memory is playing tricks.
Some more of my disjointed memories of Stanmore School:
nature trips to St Cross meadows, when we did pond dipping and brought all kinds of swimming or crawling creatures back to school in jam jars;
swimming trips to Bull Drove (off Garnier Road, St Cross) when we endured bathing in cold river water (off the Itchen) and the equally basic and exposed changing facilities;
sports days (I was the fastest at 100 yds in my year until Keith Harfield arrived – and he later got to Peter Symonds as well!!) – the three-legged and sack races were always good for a laugh, at others and ourselves;
rounders matches out the front of School were an opportunity to get the hard ball rocketing into Stanmore Lane!;
home inter-school football matches at Stanmore Recreation Ground (I was usually right back). Handily this large open space was at the bottom of our garden in Stuart Crescent;
the School outside toilets freezing in the winter - a new block was built later for the girls, as I remember;
also in the winter, the pupils’ daily bottles of milk would freeze, the cream pushing out of the top with the silver lid as a hat – the cream survived so long as the blue tits didn’t get there first – and oh, the honour of being chosen as class milk monitor!;
school concerts (brilliant, particularly the Christmas ones, with ‘proper carols’), I once got to sing Schubert’s ‘The Trout’ to the gathered audience including parents and relations – don’t know how that would go down in the X Factor generation;
at one concert the Clark brothers (twins I think) played a piano duet, which left an indelible memory;
a very late apology to Susan Ames, who presented me with a toy car, which ended up in the boys’ toilet cistern! – how, I don’t remember, and it may be disingenuous to suggest my school mates had a hand in this, out of jealousy. The contractors who pulled down the toilet block years later would have made an unusual discovery.
in the infants, we boys would run round the play-ground shouting (something like) “Illy ally oos playing cowboys and indians – no girals”;
the wartime bomb shelters were quite a significant feature in the school landscape, and while they were supposed to be out of bounds, I am sure that did not deter some of us! – our play was still heavily influenced by what had been experienced just a handful of years before we were born;
this was the Cold War, and I guess this was a reason not to remove the shelters - we occasionally heard the haunting wail of the air raid sirens on the Stanmore estate being tested.
In the days of the school ‘cook-house’ being over towards the railway line, the teachers’ lunch was transported in tins on a wheeled trolley, through the school to the staff room on the other side of school. Selected children were responsible for the delivery – nothing happened to the food on the way (honestly!), but after lunch the leftovers were further ‘reduced’ by we hungry kids in transit – recycling at its best! The waste food was consigned to pig bins, collected daily by the local pig farmer.
This last memory brought back a rhyme from the Stanmore playground “Say what you will, school dinners make you ill, and Davy Crockett died of shepherds pie: our school din dins come from pig bins, out of town.” I can still sing the tune, which I think was based on a popular song of the time (Max Bygraves – ask your grandparents).
Barbara Payne (neé Sacree) has provided the following names – anyone with corrections/ideas, please feel free to shout (apologies if the spelling is wrong – but, this is from her memory and reaches back over 70 years!). Barbara is missing from the photo as she was unwell on the day.
?
Brian Sacree
Hazel West
Jean Bayley
Josephine Kotch
Valerie Barton
Ann Carter
Jean Mills
Valerie Cooper
?
Tony Carter
Elizabeth ?
?
Tony Putnam
David Ellis
Jimmy Waldin
Roger Haddock
David Jordan
Blanche Evans
Dorothy ? Perry
Gwen Rees
John Lay
Peter Alcock
Brenda Curl
?
Wendy Stone
Rosemary Thomas
Brenda Rolfe
Mary Bayley
? Putnam
Wendy Putnam
?
Gwyneth Ellis
Sylvia Perry
Joan Ellerby
?
Anne Carter
Shirley Cooper
John Rice
Ron Duffin
Allen Carter
Originally thought to be David Waldin, but likely to be Howard Waldin
?
Trevor Sacree
Tony Sacree
Isabel Haddock
Joy ? Verley
Alan Backhouse
?
John Bayley
Jenny Rolfe
Rosemary Rolfe
Ms Florence Barfoot papers
Ms Barfoot taught in the school in the 1920s, below are some of her papers which were sent to the school by Mary Boxall (Barfoot), Ms Barfoot’s niece. It includes a Teacher’s Copy of Service Book, a school timetable from the 1920 and a note written to Ms Barfoot praising her teaching of PE or dance.
Stanmore Headteacher Retires
Mr. Ronald Hammond, Headmaster of Stanmore County Primary School, Winchester, retired after 33 years of teaching service. He is a Hampshire man, born and educated in Portsmouth, where his father taught from 1901, retiring as Head of St. Mary’s School, Portsmouth in 1941.
Mr. Hammond trained at King Alfred’s College shortly before the outbreak of war, and during the war he served with The Royal Hampshire Regiment and The Royal Fusiliers in Italy and Jugoslavia.
He has taught in Hampshire since 1947, first at Hardley Secondary School, then Abbotswood Junior School, and at Colbury Primary School as Deputy Head. He was appointed to the Headship of Overton Primary School in 1960 and to that of Stanmore Junior School in 1967. In 1974 Mr. Hammond was appointed Head of Stanmore Primary School which was formed when the Junior and Infant Schools combined. This is at present the largest Primary School in the Mid_Hampshire area.
Mr. Hammond was a former President of the Central Hampshire Branch of the National Association of Head Teachers. He has had a life-long interest in sport, especially cricket and soccer, both as player and a teacher, and has also been a former Chairman of the Winchester and District Primary Schools Association.
Mr. Hammond’s commitment and devotion to Stanmore Primary School has been very great and under his guidance the school has played an important part in the life of the local community.
On Friday evening he was presented with parting gifts at the school.