John Henderson
- blessed with a rural up-bringing in Scotland
Not long after his
appointment to the High School of Stirling as its Primary 5 teacher in
the early 1930s, my father, James Nicoll Kerr Henderson (JNK) met, and
then married in 1934, the Infants One Teacher there - one Nancy Telfer
of Falkirk. Nancy gave birth to my big sister in Causewayhead in 1936,
and then, despite strong medical advice not to risk her life again, she
- God bless her - bore me there too, without undue mishap, in 1939.
I was told in later years that Jim and Nancy set up home in 1934/35 in a
newly-built £300 Headridge bungalow at 17 Easter Cornton Road,
Causewayhead and that it was named 'Revoan' after a particularly
memorable week in JNK's life in 1932 trekking in the Cairngorms. Then,
on JNK's promotion to a First Assistantship at Carmuirs School, Falkirk
around 1942 during WW2, we flitted to Alma Street, Falkirk. My memories
of this period in my life are a bit hazy of course, but I do remember
that the Alma Street house was a 'two-down, three-up kind, with coomb-seil
walls in the bedrooms upstairs. I also recall being taken to Carmuirs
School by my father when I was a precocious four year old and not
lasting long because of my bad behaviour in the playground, and my
learning being well beyond what I was being asked to do by the already
over-stretched teacher of the First Intake Class.
My father was appointed
to his first Primary School Headship out at Banknock, Kilsyth in 1944,
and it was there that I joined Infants I on a more permanent basis. The
schoolhouse was a lovely villa surrounded by wonderful farmland for
playing in, plus, of course, convenient burns for guddlin' in. The
village schooling was great, and, as a mad-keen footballer, and the
school 'goalie' eventually in Primary 3, I had the delight of meeting my
hero, 'Geordie' Young of Rangers and Scotland, at a match on the village
blaes football pitch atop the local 'bing' in honour of Banknock
United's winning of the Scottish Juvenile Cup.
The year 1949 saw us
relocated in Cambusbarron Schoolhouse from where I experienced equally
happy rural days throughout the rest of my village and town schooling
years. My time free from schooling centred on being a ball-boy for
Stirling Albion when they were the 'yo-yo' team of Division A and B,
playing tennis at the Kings Park, eventually becoming Boy Champion, and
taking great pride in playing County cricket as a wicket-keeper/batsman
from 1954 onwards. As to more serious things, mention must be made of my
six demanding years of ultimately successful study at the School on the
Rock based on a lot of real hard slog, becoming a School Prefect,
learning to be a leader in school rugby, cricket, athletics and tennis,
helping with the business side of producing the school magazine, and
willingly participating in choir concerts and operas. Our removal to
Bannockburn Schoolhouse in 1956 took in my sixth year at the High
School, where, on Saturday mornings, I captained an un-beaten first
rugby XV, and then, on Saturday afternoons, played outside-left for
Bannockburn Amateurs F.C. This latter, exciting, but short-lived period
of trying to achieve a crazy ambition of becoming a professional soccer
player, not only brought about my acceptance of training experience with
Third Lanark FC at Cathkin, Glasgow, but also a very brief trial game
for Stirling Albion from which Tam Fergusson, the renowned manager,
dismissed me at half-time with a ten shilling note and advice to 'take
the first bus back to Bannockburn, son'. However, not only Tam Fergusson
rejected me. Bob Shankly at Third Lanark saw no future for me in soccer
at the professional level either.
Attending Glasgow University and Jordanhill College followed from
1957-62. At the College, I not only took distinctions in Physical
Education, Primary Education and Secondary School Mathematics, but I
also made a bit of a name for myself as a prodigious goal kicker with
the nationally successful College rugby team, averaging over 200 points
per season for six years, and eventually playing representative rugby
for Glasgow. However, much more importantly, I met my future wife Olive
early on in our teacher training at Jordanhill, and eventually, during
my final year at college, I persuaded her to marry me as soon as we had
built a 'nest-egg' from our respective starting years in teaching. The
'nest-egg' was small, but none the less we were married in 1963 in North
Kelvinside Church, Glasgow.
A newly built semi-detached 'chalet' in Torbrex, Stirling was our
starter house in 1963 - 'capitalists' with a mortgage of £26 a month on
a salary of £770 per annum! It was tight, particularly with Evan's
arrival in June 1964, but we managed somehow. The nearness of our house
to my job over the fence as Maths/PE teacher in the new High School of
Stirling was very handy, not only for the extra night classes I did to
supplement my pittance salary, but also for my commitment to voluntary
after-school work with the rugby teams, the Boys' Brigade at St. Ninians,
playing cricket for Stirling County and travelling to continue my rugby
playing career with Jordanhill College.
In August 1965 I was
promoted to the post of Assistant in P.E. at Glasgow University and then
two years later to a Special Assistantship in Mathematics and Games at a
private school, Belmont House, in Newton Mearns. We moved again in 1968
to allow me to take up an appointment as village dominie at St. Cyrus
Primary School, Montrose, and it was here that both Kerr and Lindsay
were born in 1968 and 1970 respectively. The children's upbringing
continued thereafter in Schoolhouse, Gargunnock, Stirling from 1971,
after I had been appointed head of the village primary school there. In
1974 I gained a post as Lecturer in Primary Education at Moray House
College of Education, Edinburgh, but, rather than go to the city, we
bought and renovated a big flat in the Riverside, Stirling before
cashing in just over two years later to purchase a modern bungalow back
in Gargunnock.
Most of my leisure
time away from students, wife, and children, apart from taking an
Upper Second Class Honours Degree in Education and English
Literature with the Open University (1971-74), was devoted to being,
..... a Gargunnock Church Elder - a Community Councillor - an Hon.
Secretary of Gargunnock Village and District Interests' Association
- a Gala Day Sports' Convener - an actor in, and Stage-Manager of,
Gargunnock Drama Group - Stirling County RFC's Match Secretary, then
Secretary, then Vice-President during its rise to the top from 1970
to 1984, .... and then, from 1984, creating and developing the
'nomadic' Gargunnock Village Cricket Club, and also learning how to
survive the linking of cricket playing with unpaid ground duties at
Meiklewood Cricket Ground (The MCG) ..... a ground sown, and
pavilion built, by our members in 1989/90 ........ funded by my
father JNK Henderson, and the estate owner William Scott.
After retiring from
Moray House College in 1994, I combined voluntary service as
Stirling County CC Vice-Chairman (Playing) [VCP] with ground
responsibilities [in both locations] and 1st XI County team
management. The one nick-name that has stuck during my lifetime came
from the County players in 1995 - 'VCP' - and I even bought a
personalised number plate for our Toyota Corolla to celebrate - J 15
VCP !! Subsequently, my lengthy years of service to various sports
in the Stirling area were formally honoured in 1996 by Stirling
District Sports Council and the Scottish Sports Council in the form
of an inscribed crystal bowl. Thereafter, in 1997, despite my
ongoing onerous 'horticultural' commitments at Meiklewood and
Williamfield [and my age - 58!], I was selected to play cricket for
Scotland Over 40 year-olds, and thus gained my first, and only,
international 'cap' playing against a corresponding North-West
England team in Liverpool.
Then, building on our
experiences of an around-the-world trip to New Zealand and Australia
in order to visit relatives, and see the sights, Olive and I decided
in 1998, 'to escape' and make a maisonette in our most popular
holiday destination [from 1984 onwards] - Paphos, Cyprus - our
second home. Eventually, after we had traded-in our maisonette for a
large villa [with swimming pool!] in Emba in the year 2000, this
became our only owned residence! From then on, we have gradually
increased the time we spend there to 49 weeks each year!"
"Our excuse? .....
Och! Scotland seems such a cold, wet place to live in as age catches
up with folk!"
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