MY
TOON SCHOOLS & TEACHERS.
By
Thomas
Griffin |
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I
would like to write about St. Charles School, which I remember
as if it were only yesterday that I went there, although it was
from 1941 48. In 1948, then aged 12, I was transferred
to St. Mirins Academy.
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I remember
St. Charles vividly because of the cruelty of the teachers it will
always remain in my memory. We all seemed to be constantly whacked and
I imagined that schools were basically meant to be about legalised corporal
punishment, and that lessons and learning were of a secondary importance.
I remember
the teachers, and the various straps wide, which were less sore;
others with thronged split ends; then the most dreaded narrow ones.
The teacher
most feared was Clara, an Irish woman who looked like a fat
man in drag! Next came Miss. White, but her wide strap was less effective
and she didnt seem to have the strength to use it like others. However,
to little children, it still was painful.We had Bulldog Drummond
who James Tervit mentioned at South School. I am sure that he left our
school to go to South School.Lastly THE HEAD MASTER. We were sent to him
if anything was real wrong, and he was most feared. It was very unusual
for anyone to come back into the class without crying after they had been
with him.
It was no
use complaining to our parents. They would only say we must have deserved
it,
All of this
wouldnt be allowed now in schools, and quite rightly so, but it
is a thing you never forget. I remember once when I really expected the
worst because I got into a fight after school, and the teachers knew about
it. I was certain that meant being punished by the Head Master the following
day, and I dreaded it.
It all happened
because a mischievous boy set two of us up by telling lies about us, saying
we could beat each other in a fight. It didnt bother me, but the
other lad, a fiery red head called Murphy, it did. He wanted a fight to
settle it after school.
When I came
out of the gate, there was a large group waiting to see the punch up,
or square jig between Murphy and Griffy, but I told him there
was no point in beating each other up because he had never done anything
to annoy me at anytime. He wasnt interested in what I was saying,
and all of a sudden attacked me, with everyone egging him on. In he came,
fists flying, then BASH. It was all finished. I had threw one punch and
it was all over it caught him square on the nose and he wasnt
fit to fight on, it was bleeding that much.
The next
day, I dreaded going to school, because the teachers had probably watched
it from the classroom windows, and what punishment would they delve out
now?
Murphy was
sitting at the opposite side of the classroom, no doubt expecting retribution
on a higher scale, like myself. This would give them a real excuse. When
Bulldog Drummond came in, he stared at both of us and shouted MURPHY STAND
UP. Followed by GRIFFIN STAND UP. It was the only time I heard
all the class really laugh. When he said, looking at Murphy Who
do you think you are, Jack the Giant Killer? and that was all. But
I did aquire a certain amount of respect from the other children, especially
the school bullies who never bothered me.
It was almost
the same story when I went to St. Mirins Academy. The PT instructor was
picking some of us to box, and he selected certain boys at various weights,
and sizes, for future bouts, and unluckily I was fixed up to fight the
school bully, the biggest toughest boy that everyone was frightened to
cross, never mind punch. If they ever got the chance. the instructor seemed
to favour him, praising him on his bone structure, which he said he could
tell by his thick wrists, but it was true, he really was huge, and it
was said that he fought two men and beat them up, and that he was part
gypsy. I could well believe that.
So the fight
was on, and again it seemed that everyone was shouting for him to win,
not me, but I suppose that they were scared to do otherwise.
First round.
He came in all style, ducking and weaving, then his punches were coming
in from every direction, so I hit out. BANG. The fight finished. He was
under no condition to continue. The instructor looked disappointed, his
blue eyed boy had been truly beaten after all the boasting he had done
about him. I did wonder if this boy or his gang would seek revenge from
me for breaking his nose, but they didnt, and now I had a reputation
at St. Mirins, too. I think it gave me the confidence to work at the Alex
at nights after school, and all day Saturdays, helping the other two men
as chuckeroot. I had the opportunity to be the projectionist, but I found
it rather boring having to remain in the room running the films. It wasnt
the job for me.
When I left
St. Mirins, I got a job at a shipyard just across the road from the school,
working in the gate house, clocking men coming in and out. In between
times, I would mess about on the ships. What I didnt like was all
the noise made by hammering and welding.
I tried to
get a job as a pattern maker, but there were no vacancies, so after a
short time I left. I got a job as a brass finisher at works at Espedaire
Street, where as a child, I used to try jump over the burn. The burn was
built with hard glazed brick, and it made it exceedingly slippy, and if
any of us had fallen in, we would have been in a terrible mess, because
the water was filthy, and always different colours from the dye works
at Jennys Well laundry , but still we tried and we took the consequences,
knowing when we got home, our mums would be mad! Have you been jumping
the burn again?
I think that
those sort of things you never forget, whether it be good or bad, it gets
imprinted on your mind. As you might say you can take a man from
Scotland, but you cant take the Scotland from the man. Its always part
of us, no matter where we go to settle down, its our roots and our heritage.
BIG TAM.
"Sadly
Tom "Big Tam" Griffin died of a heart attack at the end of May
2005, at the age of 77 years."
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