Sunderland Echo

THE QUEEN HONOURS TEEN THEO

Inspired to help his gran, youth spends hours making 1,000 visors for frontline COVID staff

- Gavin Ledwith gavin.ledwith@jpmedia.co.uk @Gledwi

A schoolboy has been named in the Queen’ s Birthday Honours List after dedicating hundreds of hours to making more than 1,000 protective visors for frontline workers.

Sixteen-year-old Theo Wride, from Ashbrooke, Sunderland, is to receive a British Empire Medal (BEM) “for services to the community and key workers in Sunderland during COVID-19”.

After his GCSE exams were abandoned following the March outbreak, Theo decided to combine his unexpected spare time with his passion for engineerin­g and began producing personal protective equipment (PPE) on his 3D printer at home.

He was inspired to help his grandmothe­r, Elin Wride, who had just moved into a care home in the south of England, and because his parents are both frontline workers.

As well as sending completed visors to staff caring for his gran, he made them for St Bede’s Medical Centre, in Sunderland, where his mother, Monica Dimigen, is a GP, and Sunderland Eye Infirmary, where his father, Nicholas Wride, is a consultant.

With key workers struggling to obtain PPE at the start of the crisis, demand quickly snowballed and Theo raised £3,000 through an online crowdfundi­ng campaign so that he could buy additional printers and materials.

This allowed him to increase production from about six visors a day to a maximum of 70 across a 24-hour period.

Theo, who has two younger brothers, Alex 14, and Benjy, 12, recalled: “At one stage I had to wear earplugs at night to get to sleep because I could hear the noise the printers were making from outside my bedroom.”

Visors were then delivered to care homes across Sunderland and posted to GP practices nationwide.

While he knew he had been nominated for the medal, Theo, a sixth form student at Newcastle’s Royal Grammar School, admits: “I was surprised when I was told I was going to get one.

"But it is not just for me. I have received help from family, friends and the 3D printing community.”

The Queen’s Birthday Honours List, which is usually published in June, was delayed because of the pandemic and so that it could acknowledg­e the response of individual­s to the coronaviru­s crisis.

Theo, a Formula One motor racing fan who is considerin­g a career in engineerin­g, is one of around 450 additions to the original list and is expected to receive his medal at a local Lord Lieutenant’s ceremony once the ongoing situation improves.

He will also be invited to a future Royal garden party at Buckingham Palace.

Dr Dimigen said: “We were surprised and delighted although Theo very much sees it as an award for the 3D printing community.”

Other local people to earn an honour include school governor and magistrate Sandra Mason, 59, from South Hetton, who will also receive a BEM “for services to the community in South Hetton”.

The Government’s Cabinet Office said: “She has worked tirelessly for three years and overseen huge improvemen­ts in South H et ton Primary School.

"Moving from special measures to being in the top 10% for reading and 8% for writing and maths abilities.”

She has also served as a member of South Hetton Parish Council for two decades, including spells as chair and vice-chair, and as a magistrate­s’ court chairperso­n.

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 ??  ?? Theo Wride with his letter informing him of the award of the British Empire Medal. Picture by FRANK REID
Theo Wride with his letter informing him of the award of the British Empire Medal. Picture by FRANK REID

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