Haden
Dispatches |
An
Insite interview from December 1986 Forever Young with Haden From the
row of photographic portraits which still appear to
exercise managerial authority over Bristol Office, the
eyes of E M K Mead 1949 � 1965 seems to sparkle. And Pam
Simms said to Insite
during their branch visit. They still do. Mr Mead still
keeps up his connection with Haden � he usually chairs
one of the tables at our client Christmas lunch. �Now a
quick calculation suggested to the editor that Mr Mead
was over 80, and that calculation led to a suggestion
for an interview, an invitation to Sunday lunch, and the
renewal of acquaintance with a truly remarkable man. We were greeted by Michael and Lesley Mead on the steps of �The Mount� their home near Bristol, and learned before we went inside that the original farmhouse dated back to 1630, though a Regency front was grafted on in the 1830�s. Soon we were deep in a four-sided conversation in front of a log fire, surviving the interruptions and occasional assaults of Chippy the Siamese cat. And what an interesting story emerged. Though he was born in London, Michaels ancestry stems from America, Sixteen generations ago one John Mead sailed in the 'Elizabeth� in the wake of the Mayflower to New England with William Penn; they had been acquitted by a jury in a trial before the Lord Chief Justice, on the charge that being Non-conformists did they preach �.. In the streets of the City of London� That acquittal� remarked Michael, Was against all the evidence, and co enrages the Lord Chief Justice that he threw the jury into prison, an action which eventually resulted in the passing of the Jury Act. On the death of Michael�s grandfather, the family consisting of the widow, a son of 16 and a daughter, returned to England. |
Michael
was born in the early years of the century, and like his
father went to Oxford, where he took a BA in
engineering. He just missed serving in the Great War but
�When the Turks started making bellicose noises in 1922,
I determined not to miss the next one, so I joined the
Inns of Court Regiment, a mounted unit, as a Trooper�.
Part-time soldering did not prevent him advancing his
engineering career in the Western electric Company,
where he became involved with graduate recruitment:
�Rather difficult interviewing Danes and Swedes, when I
had only a smattering of German to eke out my English�.
And with assessment of American patents. �The America Parent AT&T of Western Electric began to look a bit shaky as the USA entered the recession� Michael recalled, �so I began looking at the Appointments Vacant columns in the newspapers. At that time there were vacancies for engineers in the Middle East, and one of the qualifications called for was the ability to pilot light aircraft - so I decided to learn to fly. After taking some lessons I began clocking up the solo hours necessary for a pilots licence, doing �circuits and bumps� in a Tiger Moth. I remember vividly one incident: I realised on one of my approaches that I was going to undershoot, so I opened up the throttle and pulled back the stick. However the engine died on me, so I was in the classic stall and spin sequence with only 200ft on the altimeter. Well I controlled the spin but landed in the branches of a large tree beside the village pub � and was helped down from the cockpit by the butcher�s boy who was cowering in fright in the shelter of the tree.
Evidently Michael is one of life�s survivors when it comes to machines, when he earlier acquired his first car (for �42), the vendor took him out twice; the second occasion took them from Michael�s home in Woolwich to Hyde Park corner, where the �Teacher� climbed out saying �Now you�re all right� leaving Michael to carry on alone down to his parental home in Berkshire. And he�s never taken a driving test. |
Well, he
didn�t get to the Middle East, but joined G N Haden
& Sons instead. In Kingsway office, Harry Bruce (A
remarkable engineer�) taught him what he needed to know
about H&V. Soon after he joined Haden, he was at a
weekend house party in Berkshire where each guest was
expected to perform; a girl from South Africa, who was
training as a masseuse at Guy�s Hospital, elected to
tell fortunes by palmistry, and foretold Michael would
be married within a year. Perhaps that was giving
fortune a nudge � anyway, little further was learned in
the next 12 months; Lesley and Michael were indeed
married at the end of 1933. Just a month later, Michael was asked to go out to Hong Kong, to manage Haden�s contract for the Hong Kong & Shanghai Bank. �There are not many couples who can manage a two-year honeymoon in the Far East�, laughed Lesley. �We had a wonderful time, Although Michael�s salary was only �300, the rate of exchange was favourable and we � like many expatriates had three servants.� And because of my regimental connection I could afford to keep a couple of ponies, so I played polo in the summer and went out with the draghounds over in the New Territories in the winter� added Michael.
The bank was just a hole in the ground when the Meads arrived; but during their two years they saw it grow to completion, and felt a sense almost of ownership so that come the grand opening complete with the Governor of the colony and all the local bigwigs exploring their building, pride quarrelled with resentment at the intrusion. Michael recalled an amusing story about that occasion: �The night before this great occasion I woke up at 3am with a premonition that something was not right. I went down to the bank and found that indeed something was �not right�; one of the 250hp ammonia compressors hadn�t �got away� when it was started up, and it had leaked ammonia all over the place. There had been a bit of a panic and all the doors had been opened to try and clear the fumes, but this had the reverse effect and they were drawn into the air-conditioning system. I sorted things out and we ran the system full out. It was touch and go whether we could get rid of the fumes before zero hour of 11 am � in fact I could still smell traces of ammonia when the official parties were wandering about. I was rather amused when one of my friends who attended the opening said to me �You know, one of the things that impresses me is the lovely fresh smell�.� |
On the
Meads� return to England in 1934, Michaels first
important contract was the 15 storey University Library
in Cambridge. �All bookstacks � hardly any floorspace �
distribution was a bit difficult,� noted Michael.
�Although Haden did the design, Oscar Faber�s had a
watching brief and I spent six weeks in their offices in
Marchmont Street getting things agreed.� In 1937 Michael
was asked to manage the Canterbury branch, which had
been opened a couple of years before, and before the
Meads moved house Michael commuted from Hampstead every
day in his old Sunbeam (�No motorways then, but of
course far less traffic on the roads�). He was at
Canterbury for a period covering 12 years though for
half that he was soldiering; towards the end of that
spell coal supplies were getting very difficult, and
Hadens were very busy with oil conversions. �We had some
fairly peculiar fuels to handle, including a nasty one
called CTF, but Max Priess seemed to come up with all
the answers�. Then in
1949 Nelson Haden asked Michael to succeed Alan
Pullinger, who was moving from Bristol to Manchester. So
Lesley and he once again had the wearisome job of
house-hunting. �We looked at 33 houses before finding
The Mount � and that was so immediately �right� for us
that we bought it in one week�, said Lesley. (Only
someone with immense �pull� at the Inns of Court could
persuade the legal profession to complete a conveyance
transaction in that brief time. Ed.) Under Alan Pullinger, Bristol branch had developed a flourishing social life, and this expanded even more with the Meads. �Every year since 1951 we had a summer party at The Mount for all the employees and their families. Some of the ladies from the office helped me with the catering�, said Lesley, �and we used to have children�s races, and always a Tug-of-War�. As the strength of Bristol branch reached about 200, there must have been well over 500 at some of those parties, but the four acres surrounding the Mount could accommodate them with ease. �It never once rained on a Haden party day,� said Lesley thankfully. |
Michael retired from
Hadens in 1965, but his activities in retirement had
been taking shape long before that. Both he and Lesley
were elected to the Parish Council in 1954, and since
then his involvement in local government has grown
enormously. From membership of the Rural District
Council, the 1974 reorganisation took him to the
amalgamated District Council, which he chaired, in its
all-important first year. He has also chaired for the
past eleven years an association of six councils in Avon
to thrash out common policies (�Succession politics is
reaching a consensus � sometimes the consensus you reach
is a fairly shadowy version of what you first hoped you
might achieve�). Michael�s hard work and success have
been recognised by the award of the OBE �for services to
Local Government�.
You
might think that these activities were enough to tax any
man, but in addition he and Lesley are very active
members of the local Conservative Association and of the
British Legion � in fact on the day of Insite�s visit there
were still a few of the 125 trays of Remembrance Day
poppies waiting to be taken away by their team of
collectors. Both sit on the Parochial Church Council,
and Michael is also a member of the Deanery Synod. And he still finds time for foreign holidays (to such interesting places as Crete & Turkey) and family life; their two sons and a daughter have presented the Meads with grandchildren ranging from 21 to 7, and the whole family tends to gather at The Mount at Christmastime. In truth, a very remarkable man. And if you follow his recipe �Work harder in retirement than you ever did before� you too might be as active as he is at 83. |
Haden
employees both ex and current will be saddened to know
of the death of Tony (Dick) Barton (who worked at
Bristol Office 1959 - 1967) who died suddenly on
Thursday 10th August 2006. Many ex-employees will
remember him from the days when they attended the City
of Bath Technical College. Sadly Ray Stanley died in February 2008 after a long illness. His funeral was held at Canford Crematorium. Another ex-employee from long ago John (Doug) Pembury died on Saturday 6th September 2008. His funeral was held at Bristol South Crematorium. Tim Lewis a long time friend and business colleague of Doug gave a moving eulogy, commemorating his life. Read eulogy The sudden death of Steve Lane in January 2010 came as a great shock to all his friends and ex-Haden employees. Steve had suffered with diabetes for most of his life. His funeral was held at Canford Crematorium. Margaret Gee, that we all knew as Maggie Pope died after a long illness. Her funeral was held at the Parish Church of Aust. There many tributes spoken about Maggie by her friends. The church and additional marquee were filled to overflowing with mourners, for someone who was loved and respected in this small rural community. Len Eades who served all his working life with Haden sadly died in April 2013 after a short illness. His funeral was held at Haycombe Cemetery, Twerton, Bath, and was attended by many of his ex-Haden work colleagues. Margaret Skeplorn was a typist who married Tony Barton. She died in 2013. Dick Thier died after a short illness in December 2013. His funeral was held at Westerleigh Crematorium and attended by many of his Haden colleagues. Laurence Johnson who now lived in Plymouth died in March 2015. Derek Nethercott known to all his Haden Colleagues as DAN died on May 31st 2015 after a short illness. All his working life was spent with Hadens and he became one of the 'Haden Vets'. His funeral was held at Westerleigh Crematorium attended by many of his ex-Haden colleagues. It was sad to read in a local newspaper of the death of Dudley Goodfield on 12th April 2015. Dudley who started as a student apprentice left to join the MInistry as was ordained as a Reverend in the Church of England. His parish was local to Taunton in Somerset. Cyril Ham who worked for Hadens most of his life died recently in 2017, The funeral was held at the South Bristol Crematorium. Geoff Cooper joined G N Haden as a student apprentice in 1963. Later in 1969 moved to South Africa with Haden UK. Returned to the the UK in 1986 working again for Haden Young and then for Matthew Hall. Geoff had suffered with heart problems in recent years which led to another heart operation at Southmead Hospital. Sadly Geoff died two days later 28th February 2018. The funeral was held at the South Bristol Crematorium attended by many of his Haden colleagues. |