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Gurney Plaque Unveiled at
Strawberry Patch in High Wycombe
Chapman Family Home and Gurney Residence Honoured with Commemoration



On Saturday 19th May, 2001, Chairman Anthony Boden and several members of the Ivor Gurney Society attended the unveiling of a plaque to Ivor Gurney at the former Chapman family home in High Wycombe.  Gurney stayed at the house, now called Strawberry Patch (formerly St. Michael’s), on weekends while he was an organist at Christ Church.

Jo Tiddy, Wycombe District Council’s Heritage Officer, was responsible for the organisation of the ceremony.  After the unveiling, the new owners of the house hosted a reception, during which Alexander Duval (baritone) sang Down by the Salley Gardens, Epitaph, andSevern Meadows.  Alexander was accompanied by Stephen Armstrong, Director of the local choral society and prime mover of the idea to have Gurney publicly remembered.  The songs were followed by piano music played by Warren Mailley-Smith.
  

Unveiling Ceremony Recital Programme
McKeon Photo Commemoration Plaque
Calligraphy Poem Gurney’s Story & Photo

 

Click on image to zoom in
The songs I had are withered or vanished clean, yet there are bright tracks where I have been, and there grow flowers for others' delight.  Think well O singer, soon comes night. --IG
Anthony Boden, between the current owners of the house, Mr. and Mrs. Edward McKeon, to whom Anne and Anthony Boden presented a photograph of Ivor taken at St. Michael’s, standing between Anne’s grandmother, Matilda Chapman, and Marjorie ‘Micky’ Chapman.  The conductor Stephen Armstrong, who initiated the idea of the plaque, had also presented a framed calligraphy of Gurney’s poem, The Songs I Had

Unveiling Ceremony | McKeon Photo | Calligraphy Poem | Recital Programme | Commemoration Plaque | IG’s Story & Photo


On the occasion of the unveiling ceremony of the
Ivor Gurney Commemorative Plaque
at
Strawberry Patch, The Greenway,
High Wycombe
on
Saturday 19th May 2001 at 11.30 a.m.
a short recital of three songs by Ivor Gurney

Down by the Salley Gardens
(W.B. Yeates)
An Epitaph
(Walter de la Mare)
Severn Meadows
(Poem by Ivor Gurney)

Alexander Duval, baritone
Stephen Armstrong, piano
followed by
piano music played by
Warren Mailley-Smith

Click on image to zoom in
Click on image to zoom in

Unveiling Ceremony | McKeon Photo | Calligraphy Poem | Recital Programme | Commemoration Plaque | IG’s Story & Photo
 


Gurney at High Wycombe in 1919
Gurney at High Wycombe in 1919
Happy Days in High Wycombe

Ivor Gurney was 24 years old when he arrived in High Wycombe to take the post of organist at Christ Church, Credon Street.  After military service, he returned to that post from 1919 to 1920.  His years at High Wycombe were some of his most fertile.  He worked on a violin sonata, a symphony, a War Elegy, a string quartet, and some of his best songs: The Singer, Desire in Spring, Down by the Salley Gardens, and several settings of John Masefield. 

It was at St. Michael’s, a house on Castle Hill (now The Greenway), and home of the Chapmans and their four children (Kitty, Winnie, Marjorie ‘Micky’, and Arthur), where Gurney lived on weekends in 1914-1915, joining them for meals, laughter, music, pipe-smoking and fireside chat, plus wild games of cricket or ‘ping-pong’ (table tennis).  The riotous times they shared are recounted in Anthony Boden’s Stars in a Dark Night (Alan Sutton, publisher).  In a letter to Winnie, Gurney exclaims:

What must High Wycombe hills look like now!  Great clouds of miraculous green, green that looks alive and gifted with a voice.”   
. . . . and . . . .

It is a delectable land all this, with changing soils in the valley and a happy air of peace over all.”
 

— Excerpted from the Free Press article by Roderic Dunnett, June 1, 2001.
Full article may also be found in the Ivor Gurney Society Newsletter No. 26, July 2001.
Thanks to Anne and Tony Boden, for text and photos.

Unveiling Ceremony | McKeon Photo | Calligraphy Poem | Recital Programme | Commemoration Plaque | IG’s Story & Photo
 


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