Wokingham Today

‘He was a nurturer as much as an educator’

Former student writes open letter to rename humanities building after James Furlong

- EXCLUSIVE By JESSWARREN jwarren@wokinghamp­aper.co.uk

A FORMER Holt School pupil is calling for a memorial to her teacher, after his death in the weekend attack at Forbury Gardens.

Meg Webb, who left the school in 2016, has written an open letter to co-headteache­rs Katie Pearce, Anne Kennedy, and the board of governors, asking for the humanities block to be renamed in James Furlong’s memory.

Mr Furlong, who joined the school in 2012, was its head of history and government and politics.

In her letter, MsWebb wrote: “We ask that James’ memory be preserved within the school for the years to come. Therefore, we wish to present to you the idea of renaming the current Humanities block to the ‘James Furlong Building’, or some iteration thereof.

“The building was erected and first opened during his time in the department, and though future cohorts of students will never have the privilege of being taught by James, we firmly believe that he should be remembered and honoured by all that pass through its doors.”

MsWebb, who was taught by Mr Furlong for the four years of her GCSE and A-Level classes, described him as a “nurturer as much as an educator”.

She told Wokingham.Today:

“The humanities block was built when he was in the department as head of history, and that’s where his classroomh­as resided for the majority of his teaching.

“He massively developed the history department during his time there. I think he made a really positive impact on the way that history was taught in the school.

“Future students that come through won’t know him, but I’d hope that if they walk through the doors and see the James Furlong Building, given the nature of Holt students and their natural inquisitiv­eness, that would mean they would ask who James Furlong was — and it would prompt conversati­on.

“It continues his legacy in some way, because he was so important to so many people.”

And Ms Webb hopes the memorial will be inspired by input from the Holt School community.

“I think it would be nice if it was a collaborat­ive effort between staff, faculty members, students and his family to decide the intricacie­s of what happens,” she said.

“Whether it’s a name on the front of the building, orwhether they have some additional informatio­n inside as well.

“I’d also hope that going forward, it can be a place of healing and remembranc­e for the people that did know him.

“Lots of students return to the school, and teachers that knew him still work there. It might also be of some comfort that way.

“And also for his family and friends to know that he still has a place. Not just with them, and in people’s hearts, and back in his home in Liverpool, but across the country there are places of remembranc­e for him thatwill remain for a significan­t amount of time to come.”

Reflecting on her time as his student, she said: “We were the first year group that he saw all the way through GCSEs and ALevels, which is quite nice.

“Mr Furlong was a real character, he definitely had his quirks. He was incredibly witty, and quite snarky but in a good way — in a way that meant you were comfortabl­e with him and you could be open with him.

“I just felt like the personwho was teaching youwas genuinely authentic. And what you saw was what you got. And I think that’s something that all of his students felt — that he was incredibly approachab­le. It allowed students to connect with him in a way that they wouldn’t with some of their other teachers.”

And MsWebb explained that Mr Furlong taught much more than his subject.

“In Year 10 you don’t really know what your place is in the world, and as a person you’re changing so much,” she said. “The dynamics around you are also constantly evolving, I think it can be a very confusing and overwhelmi­ng time.

“But somehowhem­anaged to

break through that and allow you to feel comfortabl­e, and allow you to develop. To have conviction in your options and to feel like you had a sense of place and a value, and that what you did and who you were genuinelym­attered. And I think that’s something that he taught me, and something that he gave me.”

She added: “In terms of a history teacher he was absolutely exceptiona­l. I think so many people that had history with him finished with a genuine love for the subject.

“His teaching methods were pretty innovative. He’d walk around school holding a flintlock rifle — unloaded obviously — and he’d dress up as monarchs andwear jousting equipment and things.

“It’s cliché but he managed to bring the subject to live. But he also had a really deep knowledge of rather niche informatio­n that was outside of the syllabus.

“Even in normal conversati­on, he would slip in something interestin­g and insightful — that’s just the sort of person that he was. I think he just had a natural curiosity about things, and it's something that he then nurtured in his own students. And it's something that I’ve personally carried with me.”

And pupils from across the school will be left with fond memories of fancy dress.

MsWebb said: “I was one of the co-history prefects in Year 13 and we created the first and only house jousting competitio­n.

“We asked Mr Furlong to preside over the tournament, which was Year 7 and Year 8 pupils bouncing on space hoppers holding broomstick­s tabbed in paint, with targets for shields.

“AndMr Furlong came down to the field in full regalia. He had a floor-length monarch’s cape on, a crown and a sword, and he announced ‘Let the tournament begin’, and he really hammed it up which was massively appreciate­d. Sports day had nothing on it.

“But he’d always do stuff like that — particular­ly dressing up — he just had a whole collection of costumes in his classroom cupboard.”

Beyond the embroidere­d capes, Mr Furlong had a way of making history feel tangible, explained MsWebb.

“I’ve always been interested in history since I was little,” she said. “Whether or not it would have become a career decision — that is something that I am really indebted to him for.

“I am now going into heritage and collection­s care which is obviously a historical field. And I think I wouldn’t be doing that without him.

“That love of the physical and history being tangible as well as something you read about in books — I think that was also something he was keen on. That’s sort of a legacy he has left behind in me particular­ly.”

And she has been left with a physical reminder of her teacher too.

“I borrowed a book from him on Eleanor of Aquitaine — he gave it to me in the last term of A-Levels.

“She was a medieval French queen, and mother to Richard the Lionheart. He lent me that book because he thought I’d be interested in it, and I forgot to give it back. So I saw it in my bookshelf on Sunday and it made me cry — but hopefully he’d want me to hold onto it.”

And with something tangible of her own, MsWebb hopes that renaming the humanities block will create a physical place for the wider Holt School community to remember James Furlong, the educator and nurturer.

 ??  ?? James Furlong, painted in oil by Tiggy Chadwick
James Furlong, painted in oil by Tiggy Chadwick

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