Interview with Lloyd Wilkins – 1980 Lloyd joined St David’s in January 1979, having just arrived in South Africa from Rhodesia, as it was then. He had been a pupil at St George’s in Salisbury and arrived knowing nobody at the school. However the boys were ... »
Interview with Lloyd Wilkins – 1980 Lloyd joined St David’s in January 1979, having just arrived in South Africa from Rhodesia, as it was then. He had been a pupil at St George’s in Salisbury and arrived knowing nobody at the school. However the boys were very welcoming and it didn’t take long before he felt at home. Lloyd remembers with clarity that in his first few days at the school, he lost R100 which he had been given by his parents to buy books. He was quite panicked as it was a lot of money, especially in the context of having just emigrated. He made it known that he had lost the money and within a short time it was handed to him, much to his relief. The temptation to keep the money must have been high but the integrity of his peers was evident. Lloyd really enjoyed the camaraderie and made lifelong friends, most of whom he is still in touch with on a regular basis. A group of them in Australia meet at least once a quarter to spend a long weekend together with their wives. One aspect of St David’s he didn’t enjoy was the caning. In matric a group of the boys had found a small piece of wood which had broken off a desk lid and, during lunch break, they were playing soccer with it in the corridor outside the first floor classrooms. Their ”ball” was kicked down the stairs and Lloyd chase after it only to collide near the bottom of the stairs with their headmaster Br Timothy who was coming up the stairs to investigate the noise. Lloyd’s momentum was such that he bowled him over and landed on top of him at the bottom of the stairs. Fortunately the only injury was to his pride and Lloyd was ordered to his office to receive a caning. He thinks he was the only matric boy to be caned that year. A teacher he remembers was Mr McFadden who ensured that all his pupils developed a love of history and obtained good marks in matric, in part by teaching the boys under a tree on the side of the rugby field. Lloyd played 3rd rugby XV, 2nd cricket XI, was in the athletics team and captain of the riding club, participated in senior best speakers competition, was marketing director of the business game. Lloyd played 2nd team rugby in standard 9 but broke his leg playing St John’s and broke it again at the start of matric so he missed most of the season once again. In 1979 Lloyd captained the St David’s riding team and with his younger brother Graham and Simon Bird, went to England to compete in the All England Schools Show jumping competition at Hickstead. On borrowed horses they competed against the best English schools and came third! Lloyd was awarded a scroll for studies. The matric dance had the theme space and they had as much fun decorating the hall with pictures of spacecraft as they had at the actual event. On their last day a large group of boys returned to the school after midnight, dressed in black and pushing their cars so as not to raise the alarm. They proceeded to decorate the trees in the quad with large amounts of toilet paper. They became more enthusiastic as they progressed and their stealth was soon replaced by increasing hilarity, culminating in an epic water fight involving two groups of them, each manning a fire hose in the corridors outside the first floor classrooms. As lights went on in the brothers’ sleeping quarters they made a hasty retreat. He went on to study a BA(Law) at Wits University and is now chief operating officer of Barclays Bank in Australia. He is also chairman of Street Work a charity that helps homeless youths in Sydney. Lloyd is married and has two daughters studying at a university in Sydney. Lloyd last visited St David’s in 2006 but attended an informal reunion organised by Sven Arp in August 2013. JLE November 2013