The Trusty Servant Nov 2015 No.120 | Page 6

NO.120 T H E T R U S T Y S E RVA N T Graffiti in Chapel Roof… Suzanne Foster, College Archivist, assisted by Dr Geoffrey Day, former Fellows’ Librarian, becomes a steeplejack: names which have provoked the most interest. Clearly written twice was the name ‘Harmar’ alongside others dating from the 1570s, plus a host of other names from the late 1560s and 1570s. Was this Warden Harmar? Memories are sparked by all sorts of things and can lead both to surprising discoveries and to an unusual working day for the College Archivist. In April this year, Sir Roger du Boulay (Coll, 35-40) contacted me after seeing my photograph in the Wykeham Journal, taken on Muniment Tower stairs: clearly shown are names scratched into the stonework. It was this graffiti which reminded Sir Roger of war-time wanderings as Prefect of Chapel. He wrote: ‘In September 1940 I was Cap Prae, charged with the responsibility to devise and execute all the measures necessary to preserve the life of the Chapel and its users. This involved not only rapid but orderly evacuation plans (and rehearsals – I enjoyed pushing the dons around), but also regular and meticulous inspection of every nook and cranny. I was given the keys to ensure access. The bombs on Portsmouth and Southampton were all too frequently audible. ‘Thus it came about that I found myself one day in the roof spaces of the Muniment Tower and the east end of Chapel. There I came upon a window overlooking Chamber Court. On the sill were carved the initials of a person – presumably a scholar – and the date, 1395. I think the initials were WJ. To these I added my own, DuB, 1940. I wonder if they are still there?’ So, a challenge had been presented and the prospect of finding graffiti as early as 1395 was a particular draw. I spent a day in early April checking every window in Muniment Tower and Chapel Tower – and found nothing. If it was a window over-looking Chamber Court, how could One of these examples is adjacent to the names of Thomas Wygmore, who became a scholar in 1565, and of John Favor, who entered College in 1571. They neatly bracket John Harmar, who was second on Roll in 1569. This conjunction suggests very strongly that the two ‘Harmar’ graffiti are indeed by the future Warden. Wygmore and Favor are unlikely to have been in the School at the same time, so it would appear that they and Harmar each made individual expeditions. the window be in Chapel roof? Then a flash of inspiration: I remembered the two tiny windows situated above the east window of Chapel which overlooked the Warden’s garden. Might this be what Sir Roger remembered? A call to the Works Department led, about a month later, to a visit into Chapel roof wearing a safety harness and clutching a torch and a camera. Straightaway I could view the names of workmen from 1822 painted onto the roof beams and, as soon as we crawled along the walk way towards the east end, I could clearly see a great many names scratched into the stonework around the two little windows. It was only once I worked through my photographs that I spotted Sir Roger’s initials – but it was actually the other 6 Their first problem would have been getting onto Chapel roof. There were two routes: up a 99-step spiral staircase in the Muniment Tower, which was lit by five unglazed slit-windows, varying from three-and-a-half to four inches wide and 34 to 48 inches high, fitted with oak shutters with leather edgings to keep out the weather – and, of course, any light – and which would have necessitated first going through Chapel to get to the foot of the stairs in the vestry. The other route was via the equally dark Chapel Tower spiral stairs, which were accessed via an external door on the south side of the building. Once up on the roof, it would have been necessary to climb across the lead ͱ