The Scotsman

School bullies at Watson’s ‘drove’ novelist to suicide bid

● Sansom ‘mocked’ by college teachers ● Pupil’s woes lead to him speaking out

- By IAN SWANSON

Best-selling historical crime novelist CJ Sansom has told how bullying at one of Edinburgh’s top independen­t schools drove him to attempted suicide.

The writer described how his “terrible years” at George Watson’s College in the 1950s and 1960s led to him taking a “massive overdose” of his mother’s sleeping pills.

Writing in a Sunday newspaper, he said: “I was there for ten years, mocked and isolated by the other children while the teachers blamed this on me and sometimes collaborat­ed in it.”

Sansom said he had been moved to speak out after reading about the case of another Watson’s pupil, known as Kate, whose parents withdrew her after she was bullied.

He wrote: “So many of Kate’s alleged experience­s – the mocking, the exclusion, the taking refuge in the lavatories – mirrored to the last detail my recollecti­ons of my own experience­s at Watson’s half a century ago.”

Lothian Green MSP Andy Wightman said he had received 25 reports of abuse involving former pupils at the school, most between 1999 and 2017, after he helped to highlight Kate’s case.

Sansom, who started at Watson’s primary school in 1957, said he remembered Watson’s as “more boot camp than school – unless you were academical­ly bright or good at rugby”. He wrote: “Those

0 CJ Sansom was tormented by thoughts of suicide and burning down George Watson’s College who misbehaved or did badly in class were a nuisance and left to the bullies.

“Some teachers, usually the younger ones, were decent people, looking on me with puzzlement rather than scorn. Others, though, would mock me themselves, knowing it would get a laugh from the boys. One teacher, I remember, got a laugh by describing me as sitting staring into space like a ‘contented cow’.

“By the time I was 14, I was, I now realise, becoming seriously mentally ill – completely isolated, hardly aware of what was being said in the classroom, consumed with rage, plagued by migraines and tormented by thoughts of suicide and burning down the school.”

Sansom walked out of Watson’s as soon as he could legally leave school, at the age of 15, and refused to go back.

“Shortly afterwards I took a massive overdose of my mother’s sleeping pills,” he said. “I was found only just in time.”

Sansom spent a year in a psychiatri­c hospital.

Watson’s principal George Roffe apologised unreserved­ly to Sansom. He said: “Like any good school, we are constantly looking to update and improve our practices and to learn from the past.”

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