Maw, Hugh Waring
1920 - 2018 (97 years) Has 28 ancestors and 7 descendants in this family tree.Set As Default Person
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Relationship with Living Birth 2 Jun 1920 Childers Lodge, Landour, , Bengal, India [1] - First name(s) Hugh Waring
Last name Maw
Birth year 1920
Birth date 02 Jun 1920
Baptism year 1920
Baptism date -
Place Landour
Presidency Bengal
Father's first name(s) Geoffrey Waring
Father's last name Maw
Mother's first name(s) Mildred Amy
Mother's last name -
Archive reference N-1-474
Folio 302
Page -
Catalogue descriptions Parish register transcripts from the Presidency of Bengal
Record set British India Office Births & Baptisms
Category Birth, Marriage & Death (Parish Registers)
Subcategory Parish Baptisms
Collections from United Kingdom, Overseas / Unknown
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Gender Male Passenger list leaving UK 12 Oct 1925 (5 years) Bombay, , Maharashtra, India Liverpool - First name(s) HUGH W Last name MAW Gender Male Age 5 Birth year 1920 Occupation NONE Departure year 1925 Departure day 12 Departure month 10 Departure port LIVERPOOL Destination port BOMBAY Destination BOMBAY Country INDIA Destination country INDIA Ship name CALIFORNIA Ship official number 147871 Ship master's first name ALEX Ship master's last name COLLIE Shipping line ANCHOR City LIVERPOOL Ship destination port BOMBAY Ship destination country INDIA Ship square feet 9875 Ship registered tonnage 10135 Number of passengers 663 Record set Passenger Lists leaving UK 1890-1960 Category Travel & migration Subcategory Passenger lists Collections from Australasia, Great Britain, Ireland, United States
Census 29 Sep 1939 (19 years) 5 Fat Hill Close, Birmingham, , Warwickshire, England [2] - First name(s) Last name(s) DOB Sex Occupation Marital status Schedule Schedule Sub Number
Geoffrey W Maw 12 Aug 1885 Male Foreign Missionary Married 97 1
Mildred A Maw 11 Apr 1885 Female Foreign Missionary Married 97 2
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Death 11 Mar 2018 Obituary 19 Jan 2019 (98 years) Edgbaston, , Warwickshire, England [3] - Hugh Waring Maw
2 June 1920 - 11 March 2018
Hugh Maw was a birthright Friend, who was associated with our meeting at Stourbridge for over fifty years. He served the meeting in many different ways, as well as being very active at area meeting and yearly meeting levels. He was born in India to Quaker missionary parents and spent the first eight years of his life there. He recalled Mahatma Gandhi sometimes joining the family worship, sitting peacefully at the back spinning.
Another memory he would tell ruefully was the only time his father administered corporal punishment. A man-eating tiger had been seen in the area where they lived and, aged about seven, he crept out, determined to see it. This had been strictly forbidden by his parents. Luckily, he did not encounter the tiger!
He travelled back to England when he was eight to go to The Downs School and then Leighton Park, which is where his love of sports developed. He played hockey, rugby, loved gymnastics and became an outstanding cricketer. He readily admitted he had been very competitive.
He loved to recall the times when, during his undergraduate years at Bristol University, he danced in the chorus of Swan Lake with the International Ballet, with the professional dancers whispering instructions in his ear. Years later an elderly member of his meeting boasted that she had been in the audience and seen him!
For his postgraduate teaching practice, he went to Sidcot School, where his mother was Matron and where Daphne Southall, his future wife, was a pupil. She loved to tell how their friendship started following an incident when Hugh returned a piece of homework on which he had written [in red!] "7 out of 10. Not good enough. See me". They eventually married. Daphne had a cousin in the same class who recalled how all the girls had fancied this handsome young man and were very jealous of her!
Hugh registered as a conscientious objector in 1939 and, after a gruelling tribunal, received an unconditional exemption from military service, so he could continue his studies and train to be a teacher. His brother also wrestled with his conscience and felt he had to join the Army, Hugh said they had to listen to each other and learn to respect their different choices. After his time at Sidcot School, where it was said he was no soft touch on the discipline front, he moved in 1945 to work as assistant Physical Education (PE) instructor at Bournville Day Continuation School, combined with being a Youth Worker at the Cadbury's chocolate factory. While he loved the work, he became increasingly aware of the horrors of the war and felt he was being led to volunteer with the Friends Relief Service (FRS). He wrote, "I was under concern. My Meeting has listened and tested my concern". So he underwent six months' training, including learning to drive big trucks, before going to Berlin for a year followed by six months in Cologne. Towards the end of his life Hugh revisited the diaries he kept at the time and published them as a fascinating book in 2014, called The Training and Experience of a Quaker Relief Worker. He did wonder whether he had become desensitised to the horrors of war and the terrible conditions they found in post-war Germany. He wrote: "We had decided however that the present suffering is a bottomless pit… [and] we could not do it all". He did manage to go to many concerts, ballets and operas and the team held meeting for worship whenever they could. Both these kept them nourished and strengthened to cope with the horrors. He and his fellow workers had lots of, as he put it, riotous fun, but could make the transition into deep worship.
It is clear from his diary that his faith sustained him and was very profound. He was often asked to give a talk about his faith. In a Christmas broadcast he made, just before he returned to England, he said, "The profound need of our time is to realise the everlasting truth of the common Fatherhood of God, the Spirit of love and the oneness of the human race."
In 1949 he married Daphne at last. They had 3 children and eventually 4 grandchildren and 4 great grandchildren. Both Hugh and Daphne were from long established Quaker families. After teaching at several types of school, including one for juvenile delinquents, in 1956 Hugh was appointed Headmaster of Sibford School. He set about transforming the school in accordance with his own Quaker beliefs. Earlier in his career he had been made to beat a pupil and he vowed never to do this again. He believed strongly in educating the whole person, so art, music and sports were given as much importance as academic subjects. At his funeral a former pupil recalled their astonishment when Hugh, as Headmaster, visited their gym class one day and suddenly leapt in the air, did a full somersault and landed back on his feet. To the end of his life he and Daphne continued to support Sidcot and Sibford Schools. After six years at Sibford School, he felt it was time for a new challenge and for the last thirteen years of his career he moved into teacher training. His work included setting up a course in health education for mature students.
Alongside this he was involved in youth and marriage guidance counselling. Hugh and Daphne shared a love of birdwatching, gardening, walking and music, singing together in a choir for many years and both playing the violin. In 1978 Hugh took early retirement and was able to devote much of the rest of his life to serving the Religious Society of Friends at local, area and national levels in many roles. He had a special interest in the Middle East and he and Daphne joined David Gray, who led many Woodbrooke Study Tours to the Holy Land. These two-week tours were thoroughly prepared in study weekends at Woodbrooke. Those who came on them learnt so much, were wonderfully cared for and met amazing people in each community who, sometimes at risk to their lives, were working for peace between the Israelis and Palestinians.
Hugh had a great sense of humour. Once, on one of the Tours of the Holy land, he alerted David Gray, a fellow lover of birdwatching, to "the Greater Spotted Hoodwink" visible from the bus window! Another time, at the Christmas Party, though he seldom touched alcohol, he gave a very funny performance of a poem (supposedly by a drunkard) in which, in each verse he became more and more slurred, so that he really seemed quite drunk by the end.
He would sometimes be invited to talk to pupils in local schools. One class had been studying Vera Brittain's Testament Of Youth, and were very impressed to hear that Hugh had known her and that she had influenced his decision to become a conscientious objector, after he had been corresponding with her leading up to his tribunal. All his life he was a prolific letter-writer. Every Sunday he was in his seat, deeply centred, at least fifteen minutes before the scheduled time of the start of Worship, so that people came into a gathered stillness. His vocal ministry was moving and deeply spiritual and he was always 'open to new Light'.
Hugh will be remembered in Stourbridge Meeting for his faithful attendance at business meetings, his commitment to the right holding of them and for his conscientiousness about any task he undertook. He always took time to welcome and talk to visitors to the meeting especially those coming for the first time. One person said, "his sparkling eyes, and flow of stories enthralled me to the Quaker way of 'living adventurously'. His welcome was gentle, encouraging and reflective. What a gift to have known him."
Signed on behalf of Central England Area
Meeting
Held at Edgbaston on 19 January 2019
Alison Ironside, Clerk
Source: https://quaker-prod.s3.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/store/0f6f93312b40ccc2363527d567f648cc5b499b43945f447f9c5ce375651b
_UID 31755DDC5A8C412DA2B9BC687D22545C0175 Patriarch & Matriarch Maw, Symon
b. Est 1638-1645, Crowle,, Lincolnshire, England
d. Abt 1702 (Age 57 years) (6 x Great Grandfather)
Scarnell, Elizabeth
b. 3 Oct 1848, Earlham,, Norfolk, England
d. 1 Feb 1926, Redland, Bristol,, Gloucestershire, England (Age 77 years) (Grandmother)Headstones Submit Headstone Photo Person ID I15560 The Family Maw Last Modified 23 Dec 2022
Father Maw, Geoffrey Waring
b. 12 Aug 1885, Ingrams Well, Sudbury, , Suffolk, England
d. 11 May 1959, 10 Lower Moor Oaktree Lane, Bournville, , Warwickshire, England (Age 73 years)Mother Brison, Mildred Amy
b. 11 Apr 1885, Bristol, , Gloucestershire, England
d. 23 Oct 1987, Sellywood House, Sellywood Road, Selly Oak, Birmingham, , Warwickshire, England (Age 102 years)Marriage 9 Dec 1911 Hoshangabad, , Madhya Pradesh, India [4] - First name(s) Geoffrey Waring
Last name Maw
Marriage year 1911
Marriage date 6 Dec 1911
Spouse's first name Mildred Amy
Spouse's last name Brison
Place Hoshangabad
Presidency Bengal
Groom's age 26
Bride's age 26
Groom's father's first name Samuel Alexander
Groom's father's last name Maw
Bride's father's first name Alfred
Bride's father's last name Brison
Catalogue description Parish register transcripts from the Presidency of Bengal, : 1713-1948
Archive reference N-1-377
Folio number 381
Entry number 1
Record set British India Office Marriages
Category Birth, Marriage & Death (Parish Registers)
Subcategory Parish Marriages
Collections from United Kingdom, Overseas / Unknown
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Age at Marriage He : 26 years and 4 months - She : 26 years and 8 months. Family ID F2333 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family Living Children 3 children Family ID F4657 Group Sheet | Family Chart Last Modified 22 Apr 2019
- First name(s) Hugh Waring
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Event Map Click to display Passenger list leaving UK - Liverpool - 12 Oct 1925 - Bombay, , Maharashtra, India Census - 29 Sep 1939 - 5 Fat Hill Close, Birmingham, , Warwickshire, England Obituary - 19 Jan 2019 - Edgbaston, , Warwickshire, England = Link to Google Earth Pin Legend
Sources - [S386] http;//www.findmypast.co.uk, British India Office Ecclesiastical Returns- Births & Baptisms Transcription, First Name Hugh Waring Last Name Maw Date Of Baptism - Date Of Birth 1920 Father's First Name - Mother's First Name - Place Landour Presidency Bengal Father's Last Name Maw Mother's Last Name - Archive Reference N-1-474 Folio 302 (Reliability: 3).
- [S471] www.findmypast.co.uk, 1939 UK Register Transcription (29 September 1939), (1939 UK Register Transcription), Ref: RG101/5615G/006/4 Letter Code: QCBJ (Reliability: 3).
- [S39] Websites, https://quaker-prod.s3.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/store/0f6f93312b40ccc2363527d567f648cc5b499b43945f447f9c5ce375651b (Reliability: 3).
- [S726] British India Office Marriages, BL_BIND_005141965_00414 (Reliability: 3).