Over lunch, informally, we discussed role of the consort and growing City awareness of the value of a second pair of hands. We also discussed how to extend fellowship in the Company. Thanks go to the Past Masters for their kind invitation.
Thursday, 26 November 2015
43. Past Masters’ meeting 25 November
Water Conservators’ Past Masters meet regularly at the Guildhall to (try to) ensure the Company is not going to the dogs. The Master is invited to update them on recent events and future plans. The meeting concludes with a lunch which includes an invitation to the Master’s Lady.
Over lunch, informally, we discussed role of the consort and growing City awareness of the value of a second pair of hands. We also discussed how to extend fellowship in the Company. Thanks go to the Past Masters for their kind invitation.
Over lunch, informally, we discussed role of the consort and growing City awareness of the value of a second pair of hands. We also discussed how to extend fellowship in the Company. Thanks go to the Past Masters for their kind invitation.
42. The Lord Mayor’s Annual Address to the Livery Companies

In his Annual Address, Lord (Jeffrey) Mountevans set out his programme of visits and involvement in his Mayoral Year under the banner: Innovate here. Succeed anywhere.
He said that he had chosen two main beneficiaries for the 2016 Appeal: JDRF (curing type 1 diabetes) and the Sea Cadet movement.


Thursday, 19 November 2015
41. Baby Boomers and their Pensions


A census on arrival showed that over 90% of attendees were baby boomers and it looked like an interesting evening. However, there was a large measure of agreement and concern about what could and should be done to allow more fairness and justice for individuals in generations to come. Thanks go to the Master Actuary for looking after us in the Actuaries’ spiritual home, Staple Inn Hall.
Tuesday, 17 November 2015
40. The Lord Mayor’s Show – 800 years and still going strong

The Water Conservators’ Team, Wardens Keith and Mike, and I, together with the banner-bearer, Liveryman Simon, formed up in St Martin le Grand on 14 November. We waited longer than usual to start because the Show observed two minutes silence for those affected by the Paris atrocities. The fireworks at the end of the Show were replaced by tricolour illuminations.


Thanks go to Firefighters’ Master and Company for organising our participation, doing a better job then the Water Conservators did in organising the weather. But Keith, Mike, Simon and I did our best.
39. Lady Barbara Lowry QC – A Service of Thanksgiving

Our connections with the family are mainly through consulting engineers John Taylor & Sons. John Calvert, Barbara’s first husband, became Partner in 1944, and Water Conservators Gwilym Roberts (Partner in 1956) and Past Master Nick Paul (in 1974) maintained close ties. Other Partners included the late Past Master Peter Banks.
She also left a note for her Memorial Service: “Finally have a really good celebration in Middle Temple Hall. Sorry for my unavoidable absence. Enjoy yourselves and thank you for all your love, care and kindness.”
Monday, 16 November 2015
38. The Silent Ceremony, and a new Lord Mayor


Quite an eclectic group heard Murray explain the history of the Ceremony and Freedom and show items in his office relevant to each guest. In our case, of course, he looks after our Royal Charter.
37. Professor Carolyn Roberts – the Next Big UK Flood: Britain Underwater

College, held on 12 November. The evidence for major flooding: sea, surface and ground water was sobering, and made her previous lecture A Body in the River look light-hearted. Modern techniques provide the basis for a rational assessment of flood risk, but the results are highly dependent on uncertain future temperature rises. The more rapid the change, the higher the impact.
In recent reviews by the World Economic Forum, flooding remains one of the world’s largest problems, and appears near the top of global economic risks. Some strategies were outlined – from do nothing because in the medium term actions will be overtaken by weather events, or try to construct your way out of the problem. This is difficult because flood defences are only as strong as the weakest point. More details at:
http://www.gresham.ac.uk/frank-jackson-professor-of-the-environment
36. The Horners’ Company – Sir Martyn Poliakoff

equivalent, plastics. Today, the Company maintains strong links with the plastics industry, while seeking to support the horner's craft.

He is a champion of the new green chemistry and talked about how to engage young people and develop education tools. He can be seen at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zvcaXM2hMgA His youtube series explaining the periodic table elements are extremely popular. My thanks go to the Horners’ Company for a splendid evening.
35. Meetings, meetings…

34. Remembrance Day – Merchant Navy Memorial, Tower Hill

Wreath laying was led by Captain Flavian D’Souza, Senior Warden, Master Mariners, Captain Ian McNaught, Deputy Master, Trinity House, and Cdre Martin Atherton, representing the Royal Navy.

Monday, 9 November 2015
33. Water Conservators’ Banquet

on 5 November.
The principal guest was Professor Richard Penty, Master of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, founded in 1596. He had agreed to talk about being a Master of a Cambridge College; its most famous alumnus, Oliver Cromwell (well, next to Carol Vorderman), and current challenges facing universities.

Historically, Sidney Sussex Masters had law and order duties, inter alia, to maintain the moral fibre, but today the tasks are more prosaic. Richard is the 27th Master (like me) and claims he got the job because of a failed election strategy!

The particular style of education at Sidney Sussex is expensive and many students receive additional financial support. Our Water Conservation Trust offers bursaries to Masters students studying Engineering for Sustainable Development and Richard was very grateful for these.

Notwithstanding the erudition of the speeches, the partying went on. The Loving Cup ceremony again perplexed, but we coped. There was a sing-along. We all departed into the London night at 10.45 – as planned. Thanks go to the Master Grocer and his staff, the musicians from the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, and to Richard Penty for an enjoyable evening. And, of course to the 100+ guests who struggled in the face of civil unrest to make it a very special evening.
Wednesday, 4 November 2015
32. Opening of the Garden of Remembrance, St Paul’s Cathedral


The short Order of Service included Prayers, the Last Post, an Exhortation, Reveille, and a two-minute silence. Sara Jones, President of the Poppy Factory recited the Kohima Prayer.

The Service followed the Royal British Legion’s annual London Poppy Day on 29 October when personnel from the Royal Navy, the Army and the Royal Air Force greeted commuters as part of a bid to raise more than £1 million for The Royal British Legion in 24 hours.
Monday, 2 November 2015
31. 800 year awards

The ceremony was attended by Trustees, beneficiaries and their monitors, family, Sheriff Christine Rigden, Baroness Scotland, Livery Companies but, between us – no cameras! A lot of us had been at the Agincourt 600 service at Westminster Abbey where they had been forbidden. It’s a good scheme and draws entries from around the UK – including one family with close connections to Gogarth School in Llandudno.
30. Agincourt 600

It was impressive: the Queen was represented by the Duke of Kent, the Prologue to Shakespeare’s Henry V was read by Robert Hardy, the Saint Crispin’s Day Speech was performed by Sam Marks (in costume) and a reminder from the Dean of Westminster that, had we prevailed in the war, the capital of the joint kingdom would have been Paris. It also reminded me of how much we rely on Shakespeare in present day idiom, for example ‘…band of brothers….’
A poignant letter from a French soldier in the trenches in 1915 (the 500th anniversary) was read by Pascal Deray, President of a group of communes in Northern France, regretting that the French did not properly honour their fallen.
Henry V was buried in Westminster Abbey alongside his wife Catherine of Valois.
29. The Mithras Lecture – The Art Crime Investigator, 28 October

But the most prolific in recent years was probably the Greenhalgh family. Worth a book of their own. One example was that of the 3,000 year old Egyptian alabaster Amarna Princess, sold to Bolton Museum in 2003 for £400,000 and later discovered to be a fake. Provenance is key, and the extent to which fraudsters will go to provide it is amazing – including a fake sepia photograph with the fake pictures on the wall to demonstrate their age. Many thanks to Claire and the Arts Scholars’ Company.
28. WAMITAB 27 October
WAMITAB is an awarding organisation and charity that develops qualifications and certificates for those working in: waste management and recycling, cleaning and street cleansing, facilities management and parking.
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