The Trusty Servant Nov 2016 No.122 | Page 5

NO.122 T H E T R U S T Y S E RVA N T …as does James Webster Mike Wallis demonstrates… that French and English authorities were preparing in May 2016 for an expected invasion of visitors during the centenary of the battle – and we had the benefit of most of those preparations without the crowds, thanks to our organisers’ forethought. We met at St Pancras station to take the Eurostar to Lille (memories of the first day of term – ‘Oh look, there’s old So and So…what is his name?’). Then a coach to Arras and our hotel (the l’Univers) in the centre of a peaceful market town, with several large cobbled squares, plenty of restaurants (we had to find our own dinners on two nights). The hotel had a cobbled courtyard too, on which every wheeled suitcase played its own wakeful tune. But Arras is the centre of the gently rolling countryside, criss-crossed with small rivers, making up the Somme valley. It was just like being back in Hampshire. Who were we? The organising team were Michael Wallis and James Webster, whose background research and preparation ensured we had good advance instructions, homework reading list, and ample information about the area, the battle, how it fitted into the overall war and what we were going to see. In particular, they had researched and included in our tour brochure details eight of the eighty-eight OWs who lost their lives on the Somme, so that we could follow the School connections during our tour. The eight included sons of famous families, such as Raymond Asquith and Edward (‘Bim’) Tennant. Evening briefings about the following day’s plans and a cheerful willingness to answer questions about any aspect of the battle completed their perfe