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George Lyward

George Aubrey Lyward OBE (13 January 1894 – 22 June 1973) was a British educationist and psychotherapist who founded and led Finchden Manor, a "community for delinquent, disturbed or disturbing boys"[1] in Tenterden, Kent, UK.

Early life and education edit

Lyward grew up in the Clapham Junction area of south London. His father was a clerk and an opera singer among other endeavours, but left home while Lyward was very young.[2] His mother worked as a primary school teacher. He had three sisters. He won a scholarship to Emanuel School in Battersea, and there became a prefect, Head of House, and a sergeant in the Officers' Training Corps, and played rugby in the first XV despite a history of childhood polio which had left him with a weak leg.[3] As a prefect, he was put in charge of the lower fifth, known as the 'toughs'. This experience made him aware of his ability to get on with 'difficult' boys.[4]

After leaving school he taught in two prep schools and at Kingston Grammar School and then returned to Emanuel as a master, before winning in 1917 a choral scholarship to study at St John's College, Cambridge where he took a history degree. In 1918 in order to supplement his modest choral scholarship funds he was a house-tutor at The Perse School in Cambridge. He took a history degree, and in 1920 he undertook training to become an Anglican priest at Bishop's College, Cheshunt. However, he abandoned this path two weeks before his planned ordination.[5][6]

He taught again at Emanuel, then in 1923 moved to Trinity College, Glenalmond in Scotland to work with the sixth form, developing his ideas about teaching this age group. In 1928 a broken engagement led to a breakdown and treatment by Hugh Crichton-Miller, who along with John Rawlings Reese later asked Lyward to help with some of their patients.[7][8]

Finchden Manor edit

Lyward originally founded his therapeutic community at Guildables farm, Edenbridge, Kent in 1930. By 1935 he moved the growing group to larger premises at Finchden Manor, Kent. During WW2, when Finchden Manor was requisitioned by the army, the community relocated to Pipe Aston near Ludlow, Shropshire, and then to Marrington Hall, Chirbury, Shropshire. After the war the community returned to Finchden Manor.[9][10] Lyward continued to work there until his death in 1973.

Finchden Manor is a Grade II* listed building on the outskirts of Tenterden, Kent. It is a large 16th century timber-framed house with modern additions. Sir Thomas More, when Lord Chancellor of England, was reported to have visited the house. It was used in the 19th century as a Benedictine priory.[11] After Lyward's community closed, Finchden Manor was converted to a set of private houses.[12] The stable block and two sets of gate piers along with a garden wall are Grade II listed.[13][14][15]

Therapeutic approach edit

When Michael Burn, who wrote a book about Finchden Manor, first met Lyward he said 'I had a feeling of relief. He looked like none of the types I had dreaded finding … not a Presence, or Grand Old Man … He was of middle height and looked frail. He had a slightly abstracted air, and held his right hand over his heart, as if taking an oath or apologising for a hiccup.'[16]

A former Finchden boy recalls his initial interview with Lyward:

'He had a playful manner which threw you from the serious to the teasing and back again faster than I could keep up with. I was still answering the serious question when he was apparently making a joke about it. Yet I noticed he never lost the sense of direction, even though I felt I was being pulled around all the points of the compass in random order. He was getting his answers while I was still lost, giddy, and not sure what we had been talking about.'[17]

Lyward's style was conversational, mercurial, improvisational, and at times contradictory. His usual medium was lively conversation, 1-1 or with a group. He could disarm, reassure, provoke, surprise, amuse and attack.[18][19][20][21][22] Despite the boldness of his therapeutic approach, Lyward was basically a shy man, with a lifelong insecurity that gave him a chameleon-like quality designed to gain the support and approval of whomever he was with[23][24] He would sometimes joke that Finchden was 'the sheltered community I have built for myself', where his position protected him from those outside pressures with which he was unable to cope, while at the same time being useful in helping those who lived there.[25]

Lyward said that his educational and therapeutic career began 'when I first stood in front of a group of children, and the thought came to me like a blow, these are people – we are all people together in a room - that is the most important thing about this situation … Nothing could separate us, we were members one of another.'[26]

Lyward's approach has been described as poetic rather than medical.[27][28] He said that only a poet could understand Finchden and make sense of it. And, a colleague later added, only a poet could have run it.[29]

Lyward never wrote a comprehensive account of his methods.[30] From his occasional writings and that of a number of colleagues some of the fundamental elements of his approach can be described.

According to one of his senior staff, Lyward had a talent for 'creative personal relationships'.[31] On a first meeting he could put an anxious, self-protective or aggressive person at their ease, 'disarming' them and making them feel secure and accepted just as themselves .[32][33]One psychiatrist felt that Lyward's major contribution was to recognise that the task of the therapist and teacher is 'to engage the other … in such a way that the need for masks diminishes and he person can respond fully from his "center" .'[34] Part of the experience of being at Finchden was to have the individual's sense of trust and security widened from Lyward to include one or more of the staff, and eventually to the community as a whole.[35]

Finchden provided respite, with no pressures and as much time as was needed for recovery and regrowth.[36][37][38] Lyward's interviews with a boy would have no time limit. They could take hours if necessary.[39]

The Finchden experience for most involved being allowed to regress and then to grow again through a much more secure and creative boyhood in a process Lyward sometimes called 'reweaning'.[40][41] When appearing for a boy in court, and being asked by the Judge what sort of a place Finchden was, Lyward said 'I think I would call it a nursery, my Lord.'[42]

Lyward often spoke of the 'depth' of the group experience at Finchden, and of how living at that depth is what provided the primary therapeutic benefit.[43] The precise meaning of this word is elusive. No doubt, aspects of the Finchden experience which contributed to a deeper group experience were the lack of labels[44] and no rules with accompanying sanctions.[45] Lyward spoke of four kinds of group life, of increasing depth : guests at a hotel, a group governed by rules and sanctions, a group characterised by active involvement, and lastly, in St Paul’s phrase, a group which produced ‘membership one of another’.[46] This phrase, a favourite of Lyward's, suggests a meeting with each other simply as people, with a mutual regard and respect.[47]

One statement that Lyward made that perhaps comes closest to defining what he meant by this depth of group life was: 'The emerging discipline of non-contractual living together without labels, formalized sanctions, or superficial fairness makes for play and recognition and for awareness and the genuine 'please' and 'thank you' that reveal non-face-saving health.'[48]

No rules edit

Lyward would tell visitors that Finchden Manor operated without rules, because rules implied sanctions, which would impede the therapeutic flow of life in the community and would not be practical in any case.[49][50] If asked what was the structure of the day, he would sometimes reply 'Four meals a day plus cocoa.'[51]

At other times Lyward would say that the only rule at Finchden Manor was no pairing off, which could have the effect of insulating the pair from the rest of the community.[52][53][54]

Lyward tried to avoid labelling of all sorts, even admitting that he was not happy that the office at Finchden was so named.[55] In a lecture on this subject he said 'I know there must be limits to this unlabelling. I know that many people need to use labels. I know there are children and adolescents who are so used to them that they must keep them for a while. But my purpose tonight is to hint at the opportunities which lie open where the labelling is reduced to a minimum, where you move about as people with people, not merely masters and pupils, or doctors and patients, and so on.'[56]

Regular activities edit

If Finchden Manor did not have written rules it did have traditions and expectations.[57]

All the household chores, including cooking for the whole contingent of 50-70, were done by the boys. The skills were passed on from the older boys to the newer ones. Staff drew up a chores rota each week, and one of the staff had the task to keep a special eye on the kitchen. The cooking tended to be of a surprisingly high order. For special occasions the kitchen was busy until late the night before, to provide an array of cakes, petit fours, eclairs and brandy snaps, all made from scratch. It was common for visitors to be sceptical that this bunch of unprepossessing looking boys had produced such elegant baking and pastries.[58]

There were particular activities that happened every year. An Easter Treasure hunt took place using staff cars full of boys, chasing around the countryside, the clues usually devised by one or two of the older boys with staff assistance. The weekend of August Bank Holiday brought Old Boys' Day, when former Finchden residents returned. Those with families brought them along. A cricket match took place – Old Boys versus the current boys. A roast meal with all the trimmings was held in the hall. Many of the boys tended to stay on over Christmas, and a sumptuous meal was held in the hall, which was elaborately decorated for the occasion on a different theme each year – a Viking Hall, a fairground, a zoo, a Dickensian street scene.[59]

Each year a play was produced. Because the boys involved had time through the day to work on a play, the standard tended to be quite high.[60][61] The audience was composed of local people, professional associates, and others who had become attached to Finchden Manor over the years. Some of the plays put on were Men in Shadow (which was taken on a small tour), My Three Angels, The Tempest, The Thirteen Clocks, Sweeney Todd, Oh What a Lovely War, and a play written by Lyward some years before. After Lyward died in 1973, and Finchden Manor was in the process of winding down, a rock musical, The Holy Grail, was written and performed by boys and staff, which reflected some of their preoccupations and emotions at that time.[62]

If Lyward called for a 'Command Performance' the boys were challenged to put together a variety show with a few hours' or one day's notice, consisting of skits, recitals and musical numbers.[63][64]

Dances were held about once a year, with local girls being sent formal invitations. A transformative decoration of the hall was undertaken for this, on a different theme for each dance.[65] Scottish country dancing was an important feature, doubtless originally as a result of Lyward's previous experience of teaching at a Scottish school.[66][67] The dance events provided another occasion to produce an ambitious range of cakes and pastries.

The boys stayed in a variety of small and large rooms in the main building and adjacent buildings in the grounds. Every few months a room change would take place with everyone reallocated by staff to a new room and new roommates.[68]

Although Lyward was keen to emphasise that Finchden Manor was not a school, some studying for external exams did happen, when Lyward and the staff thought it was at the right time for an individual boy. The teaching was provided by appropriate staff members.[69][70]

From time to time the whole community was 'gated' and was not expected to leave the premises for a period of time. This might be in reaction to some trouble caused by Finchden boys when off the premises, but more commonly by Lyward's sense that the community was losing cohesion because of too much coming and going and external involvements.[71]

Sessions edit

When Lyward felt that a particular issue had arisen that required the attention of the whole community he would call a 'session' which all boys and staff attended. This was not a discussion but more like a performance where boys (and staff) were the orchestra and Lyward the conductor. The start would normally be very low-key: Lyward talking about a philosophical idea (e.g. The One and the Many), a popular saying (e.g. 'You can’t have it both ways'), something a boy had recently said to him (e.g. 'What’s wrong with being self-indulgent?'), or a quote from a poem. Lyward would expand on the theme and develop it, tossing it around to various members of the group to have their reactions and thoughts. Most sessions contained at least one moment of high drama, often with an individual or a group being singled out for falling below what was expected of them. Angry confrontations could happen, or tears. Following on from a session there was usually some sort of event that involved everyone, such as a thorough sprucing up of the rooms and buildings, or a command performance.[72][73]

Unfairness edit

Lyward explicitly followed a policy of unfairness in his dealings with the boys.[74]

A friend and colleague said, 'There has been much misunderstanding about George Lyward's emphasis on the value of unfairness in fostering creative educational situations … The interesting thing is that though this creates a degree of uncertainty or even shock, it has not resulted in envy or resentment because there has always been a sense of security at a deeper level. Fairness is sometimes associated with certain kinds of routine, and routine for G.A.L. was a means rather than an end in itself.'[75]

Related to deliberate 'unfairness' was the unpredictability of life at Finchden Manor.[76][77] In the words of one of his staff '[Lyward] saw that the loosening up of compulsive patterns and reactions could be helped by paradoxical treatment which surprised, even shocked, and forced the boy to ask himself questions. Whereas on arrival a boy knew what reaction to expect to his own rebellious and anti-social behaviour, he would be startled and bewildered by what some have called 'paradoxical' reactions, so unexpected as to disturb quite deeply the fixed patterns formerly ingrained.'[78]

Stern love edit

Lyward was known to the boys as The Chief.[79][80][81][82] He could be gentle and encouraging with a frightened patient, but his anger could nevertheless on occasion be quite terrifying.[83][84] Lyward called his approach Stern Love.[85][86][87][88][89] A colleague once teased him that this was like talking about 'black snow'.[90] It did not take long for a new boy or staff member, or sometimes even a visitor, to encounter the stern aspect of Lyward's approach. The fact that he was expert at switching his anger on and off as the occasion demanded did not detract from its effect. Of this he said 'I take a breath as it were and decide to let fly.'[91]

A former Finchden boy wrote: 'We had suspected for some while that much of the Chief's anger was put on for the occasion and was therefore, in a sense, synthetic. Eventually, when one of us dared to tackle him on the subject, we received a very useful answer. "Yes", he agreed, "A lot of my anger is not as real as it seems, but then a lot of it is real. Make no mistake about that. However, it makes no difference to you which it is. If you think you can ever laugh it off, or ignore my anger, because you imagine it is not real, then you will discover it will become real for you."'[92] He told a psychiatrist who was a regular visitor 'It is the fear of my anger that keeps Finchden going', and argued that anger could be important for 'demonstrating commitment and caring to boys who could recognize no other expression of involvement and concern.'[93] Lyward believed that 'these difficult boys had to know that there was a kind of ruthlessness itself part of the passionate caring.'[94]

Legacy edit

Finchden Manor closed in 1974, eighteen months after Lyward's death.[95]

Lyward featured in the BBC Radio 4 series Great Lives in May 2012, nominated by singer/songwriter Tom Robinson. Robinson had attended Finchden Manor after a suicide attempt at the age of 16, and said that Lyward had saved his life.[96][97]

Other former residents of Finchden Manor include Alexis Korner, Francis Lickerish, Robert John Godfrey, Matthew Collings and Danny Kustow.[98] Sydney Hopkins, author, as 'Fynn', of Mister God, This Is Anna and its two sequels, was referred to Finchden Manor as a young man[99] and was for many years afterwards a member of staff there.[100]

Mr Lyward’s Answer[101] was published in 1956, written by the writer, poet and former commando Michael Burn, who lived for some time as a member of the community at Finchden Manor in order to research the book. Burn said of Lyward that he was '… stern, forbearing, courteous, light of touch; one of life's beloved teachers; one of the life-givers.'[102] He also said that his own book was just '… an introduction to Mr Lyward's work, about which no one can write thoroughly except himself.'[103] The publication of the book raised awareness of Lyward's work in the UK and also the United States.

However, unlike his contemporary A. S. Neill, Lyward left behind no books of his own setting out his philosophy and methods. Towards the end of his life, he worked with a research assistant who came to Finchden Manor to help him complete an autobiography and a book about his approach to therapy, but neither of these was completed.[104][105] The last draft of his autobiography was published in 2009.[106] An educationalist has written Valuing and Educating Young People – Stern Love the Lyward Way about his own methods, which were inspired by Lyward.[107] One of Lyward's staff who had previously been a boy at Finchden Manor published an extensive account of his experiences there, in both of these roles, in A Finchden Experience.[108]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Dunhill 1973
  2. ^ Lyward 2009, pp. 25-29
  3. ^ Prickett 1974
  4. ^ Prickett 1974
  5. ^ Prickett 1974
  6. ^ Lyward 2009, pp. 92-93
  7. ^ Prickett 1974
  8. ^ Lyward 2009, pp. 135-136
  9. ^ Lyward 2009, pp. 180-181
  10. ^ Toplis 1974
  11. ^ National Heritage List for England 1363181
  12. ^ Shaw 2020
  13. ^ National Heritage List for England 1276915
  14. ^ National Heritage List for England 1232761
  15. ^ National Heritage List for England 1232762
  16. ^ Burn 1956, p. 5
  17. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 2
  18. ^ Prickett 1974
  19. ^ Harvey 2006, pp. 34, 86-87
  20. ^ Toplis 1974
  21. ^ Auster 1974
  22. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 8
  23. ^ Prickett 1974
  24. ^ Lyward 2009, pp. 89-90
  25. ^ Auster 1974
  26. ^ Lyward 2009, pp. 36, 38
  27. ^ Prickett 1974
  28. ^ Toplis 1974
  29. ^ Harvey 2006, p. 121
  30. ^ Harvey 2006, p. 147
  31. ^ Prickett 1974
  32. ^ Burn 1956, pp. 57ff
  33. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 2
  34. ^ Auster 1974
  35. ^ Burn 1956, p. 58
  36. ^ Prickett 1974
  37. ^ Toplis 1974
  38. ^ Harvey 2006, pp. 37, 64, 88, 141
  39. ^ Harvey 2006, p. 114
  40. ^ Harvey 2006, p. 114
  41. ^ Burn 1956, pp. 54ff
  42. ^ Lyward 2009, pp.80-81
  43. ^ Lyward 1970
  44. ^ Lyward 1958
  45. ^ Lyward 1970
  46. ^ Lyward 1970
  47. ^ Toplis 1974
  48. ^ Lyward 1970
  49. ^ Lyward 1970
  50. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 3
  51. ^ Roberts 1974
  52. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 8
  53. ^ Lyward 2009, p. 88
  54. ^ Burn 1956, pp. 61-62
  55. ^ Lyward 1958
  56. ^ Lyward 1958
  57. ^ Roberts 1974
  58. ^ Roberts 1974
  59. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapters 19, 25
  60. ^ Toplis 1974
  61. ^ Roberts 1974
  62. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapters 15, 27
  63. ^ Roberts 1974
  64. ^ Harvey 2006, p. 130
  65. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 11
  66. ^ Prickett 1974
  67. ^ Toplis 1974
  68. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 25
  69. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 10
  70. ^ Harvey 2006, pp.28-29
  71. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 3
  72. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapters 5, 10
  73. ^ Burn 1956, pp. 248-254, 257-261
  74. ^ Harvey 2006, pp. 32-33
  75. ^ Toplis 1974
  76. ^ Robinson 2003
  77. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 1
  78. ^ Prickett 1974
  79. ^ Toplis 1974
  80. ^ Roberts 1974
  81. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 1
  82. ^ Harvey 2006, p. 121
  83. ^ Toplis 1974
  84. ^ Auster 1974
  85. ^ Toplis 1974
  86. ^ Roberts 1974
  87. ^ Burn 1956, pp. 59, 276
  88. ^ Lyward 1970
  89. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 10
  90. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 3
  91. ^ Lyward 2009, p. 187
  92. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 5
  93. ^ Auster 1974
  94. ^ Lyward 2009, p. 141
  95. ^ Wendelken 2019, Chapter 27
  96. ^ Great Lives: George Lyward
  97. ^ Robinson 2003
  98. ^ Robinson 2003
  99. ^ Lyward 2009, p. 173
  100. ^ Burn 1956, pp. 29ff, 64
  101. ^ Burn 1956
  102. ^ Burn 1956, p. 288
  103. ^ Burn 1956, Preface
  104. ^ Roberts 1974
  105. ^ Harvey 2006, p. 147
  106. ^ Lyward 2009
  107. ^ Harvey 2006
  108. ^ Wendelken 2019

References edit

  • Auster, Simon (1974). "Anger of a Therapist". The New Era. 55 (3): 68–69.
  • Burn, Michael (1956) Mr Lyward’s Answer: A Successful Experiment in Education. London: Hamish Hamilton. ISBN 9781014054043.
  • Dunhill, David (28 June 1973). "Mr George Lyward: Help for the maladjusted (obituary)". The Times. Retrieved 7 May 2024. (available online to subscribers)
  • "Great Lives: George Lyward". BBC Radio 4. 2012. Retrieved 7 May 2024..
  • Harvey, Jeremy (2006). Valuing and Educating Young People: Stern Love the Lyward Way. Jessica Kingsley. ISBN 9781843100560.
  • Historic England. "Finchden Manor (1363181)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  • Historic England. "Stables to Finchden Manor (1276915)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  • Historic England. "Gatepiers to Finchden Manor to the southeast of the house (1232762)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  • Historic England. "Gatepiers and garden wall in the grounds of Finchden Manor to the south west of the house (1232761)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  • Lyward, George (1958). "Unlabelled living". The Residential Care of Disturbed Children.
  • Lyward, George (1970). "The school as a therapeutic community". Theoria to Theory. 4 (January 1970): 17–32.
  • Lyward, George (2009). George Lyward: His Autobiography. Lulu Enterprises. ISBN 9781447551751.
  • Prickett, John. "Mr Lyward Remembered: a Memorial Address". Retrieved 16 May 2024.
  • Roberts, Sallie (1974). "Glimpses into the community". The New Era. 55 (3): 72–74.
  • Robinson, Tom (6 September 2003). "Recollections of George Lyward and Finchden Manor". The Times. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  • Robinson, Tom (1 September 2005). "Saving lives with a second chance". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 May 2024.
  • Shaw, Philip (2020). "Finchden Manor: A mansion in the Appledore Road with medieval origins and a colourful history". Tenterden with St Michaels and Smallhythe Parish News. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
  • Toplis, Gordon (1974). "A Royal Course". The New Era. 55 (3):63-67
  • Wendelken, Alan (2019). A Finchden Experience. Lulu Enterprises. ISBN 9780244837242.

External links edit

  • Mr Lyward's Webpage. A site dedicated to George Lyward and Finchden Manor. Includes photographs, articles, and a recording of a 1970 BBC radio documentary on the work of Finchden Manor. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
  • George Lyward and Finchden Manor. Part of a site about therapeutic communities run by John Whitwell, ex-Principal of the Cotswold Community. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
  • Fynn (Syd Hopkins) and his writings Retrieved 7 May 2024.

george, lyward, george, aubrey, lyward, january, 1894, june, 1973, british, educationist, psychotherapist, founded, finchden, manor, community, delinquent, disturbed, disturbing, boys, tenterden, kent, contents, early, life, education, finchden, manor, therape. George Aubrey Lyward OBE 13 January 1894 22 June 1973 was a British educationist and psychotherapist who founded and led Finchden Manor a community for delinquent disturbed or disturbing boys 1 in Tenterden Kent UK Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Finchden Manor 3 Therapeutic approach 3 1 No rules 3 2 Regular activities 3 3 Sessions 3 4 Unfairness 4 Stern love 4 1 Legacy 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and education editLyward grew up in the Clapham Junction area of south London His father was a clerk and an opera singer among other endeavours but left home while Lyward was very young 2 His mother worked as a primary school teacher He had three sisters He won a scholarship to Emanuel School in Battersea and there became a prefect Head of House and a sergeant in the Officers Training Corps and played rugby in the first XV despite a history of childhood polio which had left him with a weak leg 3 As a prefect he was put in charge of the lower fifth known as the toughs This experience made him aware of his ability to get on with difficult boys 4 After leaving school he taught in two prep schools and at Kingston Grammar School and then returned to Emanuel as a master before winning in 1917 a choral scholarship to study at St John s College Cambridge where he took a history degree In 1918 in order to supplement his modest choral scholarship funds he was a house tutor at The Perse School in Cambridge He took a history degree and in 1920 he undertook training to become an Anglican priest at Bishop s College Cheshunt However he abandoned this path two weeks before his planned ordination 5 6 He taught again at Emanuel then in 1923 moved to Trinity College Glenalmond in Scotland to work with the sixth form developing his ideas about teaching this age group In 1928 a broken engagement led to a breakdown and treatment by Hugh Crichton Miller who along with John Rawlings Reese later asked Lyward to help with some of their patients 7 8 Finchden Manor editLyward originally founded his therapeutic community at Guildables farm Edenbridge Kent in 1930 By 1935 he moved the growing group to larger premises at Finchden Manor Kent During WW2 when Finchden Manor was requisitioned by the army the community relocated to Pipe Aston near Ludlow Shropshire and then to Marrington Hall Chirbury Shropshire After the war the community returned to Finchden Manor 9 10 Lyward continued to work there until his death in 1973 Finchden Manor is a Grade II listed building on the outskirts of Tenterden Kent It is a large 16th century timber framed house with modern additions Sir Thomas More when Lord Chancellor of England was reported to have visited the house It was used in the 19th century as a Benedictine priory 11 After Lyward s community closed Finchden Manor was converted to a set of private houses 12 The stable block and two sets of gate piers along with a garden wall are Grade II listed 13 14 15 Therapeutic approach editWhen Michael Burn who wrote a book about Finchden Manor first met Lyward he said I had a feeling of relief He looked like none of the types I had dreaded finding not a Presence or Grand Old Man He was of middle height and looked frail He had a slightly abstracted air and held his right hand over his heart as if taking an oath or apologising for a hiccup 16 A former Finchden boy recalls his initial interview with Lyward He had a playful manner which threw you from the serious to the teasing and back again faster than I could keep up with I was still answering the serious question when he was apparently making a joke about it Yet I noticed he never lost the sense of direction even though I felt I was being pulled around all the points of the compass in random order He was getting his answers while I was still lost giddy and not sure what we had been talking about 17 Lyward s style was conversational mercurial improvisational and at times contradictory His usual medium was lively conversation 1 1 or with a group He could disarm reassure provoke surprise amuse and attack 18 19 20 21 22 Despite the boldness of his therapeutic approach Lyward was basically a shy man with a lifelong insecurity that gave him a chameleon like quality designed to gain the support and approval of whomever he was with 23 24 He would sometimes joke that Finchden was the sheltered community I have built for myself where his position protected him from those outside pressures with which he was unable to cope while at the same time being useful in helping those who lived there 25 Lyward said that his educational and therapeutic career began when I first stood in front of a group of children and the thought came to me like a blow these are people we are all people together in a room that is the most important thing about this situation Nothing could separate us we were members one of another 26 Lyward s approach has been described as poetic rather than medical 27 28 He said that only a poet could understand Finchden and make sense of it And a colleague later added only a poet could have run it 29 Lyward never wrote a comprehensive account of his methods 30 From his occasional writings and that of a number of colleagues some of the fundamental elements of his approach can be described According to one of his senior staff Lyward had a talent for creative personal relationships 31 On a first meeting he could put an anxious self protective or aggressive person at their ease disarming them and making them feel secure and accepted just as themselves 32 33 One psychiatrist felt that Lyward s major contribution was to recognise that the task of the therapist and teacher is to engage the other in such a way that the need for masks diminishes and he person can respond fully from his center 34 Part of the experience of being at Finchden was to have the individual s sense of trust and security widened from Lyward to include one or more of the staff and eventually to the community as a whole 35 Finchden provided respite with no pressures and as much time as was needed for recovery and regrowth 36 37 38 Lyward s interviews with a boy would have no time limit They could take hours if necessary 39 The Finchden experience for most involved being allowed to regress and then to grow again through a much more secure and creative boyhood in a process Lyward sometimes called reweaning 40 41 When appearing for a boy in court and being asked by the Judge what sort of a place Finchden was Lyward said I think I would call it a nursery my Lord 42 Lyward often spoke of the depth of the group experience at Finchden and of how living at that depth is what provided the primary therapeutic benefit 43 The precise meaning of this word is elusive No doubt aspects of the Finchden experience which contributed to a deeper group experience were the lack of labels 44 and no rules with accompanying sanctions 45 Lyward spoke of four kinds of group life of increasing depth guests at a hotel a group governed by rules and sanctions a group characterised by active involvement and lastly in St Paul s phrase a group which produced membership one of another 46 This phrase a favourite of Lyward s suggests a meeting with each other simply as people with a mutual regard and respect 47 One statement that Lyward made that perhaps comes closest to defining what he meant by this depth of group life was The emerging discipline of non contractual living together without labels formalized sanctions or superficial fairness makes for play and recognition and for awareness and the genuine please and thank you that reveal non face saving health 48 No rules edit Lyward would tell visitors that Finchden Manor operated without rules because rules implied sanctions which would impede the therapeutic flow of life in the community and would not be practical in any case 49 50 If asked what was the structure of the day he would sometimes reply Four meals a day plus cocoa 51 At other times Lyward would say that the only rule at Finchden Manor was no pairing off which could have the effect of insulating the pair from the rest of the community 52 53 54 Lyward tried to avoid labelling of all sorts even admitting that he was not happy that the office at Finchden was so named 55 In a lecture on this subject he said I know there must be limits to this unlabelling I know that many people need to use labels I know there are children and adolescents who are so used to them that they must keep them for a while But my purpose tonight is to hint at the opportunities which lie open where the labelling is reduced to a minimum where you move about as people with people not merely masters and pupils or doctors and patients and so on 56 Regular activities edit If Finchden Manor did not have written rules it did have traditions and expectations 57 All the household chores including cooking for the whole contingent of 50 70 were done by the boys The skills were passed on from the older boys to the newer ones Staff drew up a chores rota each week and one of the staff had the task to keep a special eye on the kitchen The cooking tended to be of a surprisingly high order For special occasions the kitchen was busy until late the night before to provide an array of cakes petit fours eclairs and brandy snaps all made from scratch It was common for visitors to be sceptical that this bunch of unprepossessing looking boys had produced such elegant baking and pastries 58 There were particular activities that happened every year An Easter Treasure hunt took place using staff cars full of boys chasing around the countryside the clues usually devised by one or two of the older boys with staff assistance The weekend of August Bank Holiday brought Old Boys Day when former Finchden residents returned Those with families brought them along A cricket match took place Old Boys versus the current boys A roast meal with all the trimmings was held in the hall Many of the boys tended to stay on over Christmas and a sumptuous meal was held in the hall which was elaborately decorated for the occasion on a different theme each year a Viking Hall a fairground a zoo a Dickensian street scene 59 Each year a play was produced Because the boys involved had time through the day to work on a play the standard tended to be quite high 60 61 The audience was composed of local people professional associates and others who had become attached to Finchden Manor over the years Some of the plays put on were Men in Shadow which was taken on a small tour My Three Angels The Tempest The Thirteen Clocks Sweeney Todd Oh What a Lovely War and a play written by Lyward some years before After Lyward died in 1973 and Finchden Manor was in the process of winding down a rock musical The Holy Grail was written and performed by boys and staff which reflected some of their preoccupations and emotions at that time 62 If Lyward called for a Command Performance the boys were challenged to put together a variety show with a few hours or one day s notice consisting of skits recitals and musical numbers 63 64 Dances were held about once a year with local girls being sent formal invitations A transformative decoration of the hall was undertaken for this on a different theme for each dance 65 Scottish country dancing was an important feature doubtless originally as a result of Lyward s previous experience of teaching at a Scottish school 66 67 The dance events provided another occasion to produce an ambitious range of cakes and pastries The boys stayed in a variety of small and large rooms in the main building and adjacent buildings in the grounds Every few months a room change would take place with everyone reallocated by staff to a new room and new roommates 68 Although Lyward was keen to emphasise that Finchden Manor was not a school some studying for external exams did happen when Lyward and the staff thought it was at the right time for an individual boy The teaching was provided by appropriate staff members 69 70 From time to time the whole community was gated and was not expected to leave the premises for a period of time This might be in reaction to some trouble caused by Finchden boys when off the premises but more commonly by Lyward s sense that the community was losing cohesion because of too much coming and going and external involvements 71 Sessions edit When Lyward felt that a particular issue had arisen that required the attention of the whole community he would call a session which all boys and staff attended This was not a discussion but more like a performance where boys and staff were the orchestra and Lyward the conductor The start would normally be very low key Lyward talking about a philosophical idea e g The One and the Many a popular saying e g You can t have it both ways something a boy had recently said to him e g What s wrong with being self indulgent or a quote from a poem Lyward would expand on the theme and develop it tossing it around to various members of the group to have their reactions and thoughts Most sessions contained at least one moment of high drama often with an individual or a group being singled out for falling below what was expected of them Angry confrontations could happen or tears Following on from a session there was usually some sort of event that involved everyone such as a thorough sprucing up of the rooms and buildings or a command performance 72 73 Unfairness edit Lyward explicitly followed a policy of unfairness in his dealings with the boys 74 A friend and colleague said There has been much misunderstanding about George Lyward s emphasis on the value of unfairness in fostering creative educational situations The interesting thing is that though this creates a degree of uncertainty or even shock it has not resulted in envy or resentment because there has always been a sense of security at a deeper level Fairness is sometimes associated with certain kinds of routine and routine for G A L was a means rather than an end in itself 75 Related to deliberate unfairness was the unpredictability of life at Finchden Manor 76 77 In the words of one of his staff Lyward saw that the loosening up of compulsive patterns and reactions could be helped by paradoxical treatment which surprised even shocked and forced the boy to ask himself questions Whereas on arrival a boy knew what reaction to expect to his own rebellious and anti social behaviour he would be startled and bewildered by what some have called paradoxical reactions so unexpected as to disturb quite deeply the fixed patterns formerly ingrained 78 Stern love editLyward was known to the boys as The Chief 79 80 81 82 He could be gentle and encouraging with a frightened patient but his anger could nevertheless on occasion be quite terrifying 83 84 Lyward called his approach Stern Love 85 86 87 88 89 A colleague once teased him that this was like talking about black snow 90 It did not take long for a new boy or staff member or sometimes even a visitor to encounter the stern aspect of Lyward s approach The fact that he was expert at switching his anger on and off as the occasion demanded did not detract from its effect Of this he said I take a breath as it were and decide to let fly 91 A former Finchden boy wrote We had suspected for some while that much of the Chief s anger was put on for the occasion and was therefore in a sense synthetic Eventually when one of us dared to tackle him on the subject we received a very useful answer Yes he agreed A lot of my anger is not as real as it seems but then a lot of it is real Make no mistake about that However it makes no difference to you which it is If you think you can ever laugh it off or ignore my anger because you imagine it is not real then you will discover it will become real for you 92 He told a psychiatrist who was a regular visitor It is the fear of my anger that keeps Finchden going and argued that anger could be important for demonstrating commitment and caring to boys who could recognize no other expression of involvement and concern 93 Lyward believed that these difficult boys had to know that there was a kind of ruthlessness itself part of the passionate caring 94 Legacy edit Finchden Manor closed in 1974 eighteen months after Lyward s death 95 Lyward featured in the BBC Radio 4 series Great Lives in May 2012 nominated by singer songwriter Tom Robinson Robinson had attended Finchden Manor after a suicide attempt at the age of 16 and said that Lyward had saved his life 96 97 Other former residents of Finchden Manor include Alexis Korner Francis Lickerish Robert John Godfrey Matthew Collings and Danny Kustow 98 Sydney Hopkins author as Fynn of Mister God This Is Anna and its two sequels was referred to Finchden Manor as a young man 99 and was for many years afterwards a member of staff there 100 Mr Lyward s Answer 101 was published in 1956 written by the writer poet and former commando Michael Burn who lived for some time as a member of the community at Finchden Manor in order to research the book Burn said of Lyward that he was stern forbearing courteous light of touch one of life s beloved teachers one of the life givers 102 He also said that his own book was just an introduction to Mr Lyward s work about which no one can write thoroughly except himself 103 The publication of the book raised awareness of Lyward s work in the UK and also the United States However unlike his contemporary A S Neill Lyward left behind no books of his own setting out his philosophy and methods Towards the end of his life he worked with a research assistant who came to Finchden Manor to help him complete an autobiography and a book about his approach to therapy but neither of these was completed 104 105 The last draft of his autobiography was published in 2009 106 An educationalist has written Valuing and Educating Young People Stern Love the Lyward Way about his own methods which were inspired by Lyward 107 One of Lyward s staff who had previously been a boy at Finchden Manor published an extensive account of his experiences there in both of these roles in A Finchden Experience 108 Notes edit Dunhill 1973 Lyward 2009 pp 25 29 Prickett 1974 Prickett 1974 Prickett 1974 Lyward 2009 pp 92 93 Prickett 1974 Lyward 2009 pp 135 136 Lyward 2009 pp 180 181 Toplis 1974 National Heritage List for England 1363181 Shaw 2020 National Heritage List for England 1276915 National Heritage List for England 1232761 National Heritage List for England 1232762 Burn 1956 p 5 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 2 Prickett 1974 Harvey 2006 pp 34 86 87 Toplis 1974 Auster 1974 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 8 Prickett 1974 Lyward 2009 pp 89 90 Auster 1974 Lyward 2009 pp 36 38 Prickett 1974 Toplis 1974 Harvey 2006 p 121 Harvey 2006 p 147 Prickett 1974 Burn 1956 pp 57ff Wendelken 2019 Chapter 2 Auster 1974 Burn 1956 p 58 Prickett 1974 Toplis 1974 Harvey 2006 pp 37 64 88 141 Harvey 2006 p 114 Harvey 2006 p 114 Burn 1956 pp 54ff Lyward 2009 pp 80 81 Lyward 1970 Lyward 1958 Lyward 1970 Lyward 1970 Toplis 1974 Lyward 1970 Lyward 1970 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 3 Roberts 1974 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 8 Lyward 2009 p 88 Burn 1956 pp 61 62 Lyward 1958 Lyward 1958 Roberts 1974 Roberts 1974 Wendelken 2019 Chapters 19 25 Toplis 1974 Roberts 1974 Wendelken 2019 Chapters 15 27 Roberts 1974 Harvey 2006 p 130 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 11 Prickett 1974 Toplis 1974 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 25 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 10 Harvey 2006 pp 28 29 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 3 Wendelken 2019 Chapters 5 10 Burn 1956 pp 248 254 257 261 Harvey 2006 pp 32 33 Toplis 1974 Robinson 2003 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 1 Prickett 1974 Toplis 1974 Roberts 1974 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 1 Harvey 2006 p 121 Toplis 1974 Auster 1974 Toplis 1974 Roberts 1974 Burn 1956 pp 59 276 Lyward 1970 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 10 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 3 Lyward 2009 p 187 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 5 Auster 1974 Lyward 2009 p 141 Wendelken 2019 Chapter 27 Great Lives George Lyward Robinson 2003 Robinson 2003 Lyward 2009 p 173 Burn 1956 pp 29ff 64 Burn 1956 Burn 1956 p 288 Burn 1956 Preface Roberts 1974 Harvey 2006 p 147 Lyward 2009 Harvey 2006 Wendelken 2019References editAuster Simon 1974 Anger of a Therapist The New Era 55 3 68 69 Burn Michael 1956 Mr Lyward s Answer A Successful Experiment in Education London Hamish Hamilton ISBN 9781014054043 Dunhill David 28 June 1973 Mr George Lyward Help for the maladjusted obituary The Times Retrieved 7 May 2024 available online to subscribers Great Lives George Lyward BBC Radio 4 2012 Retrieved 7 May 2024 Harvey Jeremy 2006 Valuing and Educating Young People Stern Love the Lyward Way Jessica Kingsley ISBN 9781843100560 Historic England Finchden Manor 1363181 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 17 May 2024 Historic England Stables to Finchden Manor 1276915 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 17 May 2024 Historic England Gatepiers to Finchden Manor to the southeast of the house 1232762 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 17 May 2024 Historic England Gatepiers and garden wall in the grounds of Finchden Manor to the south west of the house 1232761 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 17 May 2024 Lyward George 1958 Unlabelled living The Residential Care of Disturbed Children Lyward George 1970 The school as a therapeutic community Theoria to Theory 4 January 1970 17 32 Lyward George 2009 George Lyward His Autobiography Lulu Enterprises ISBN 9781447551751 Prickett John Mr Lyward Remembered a Memorial Address Retrieved 16 May 2024 Roberts Sallie 1974 Glimpses into the community The New Era 55 3 72 74 Robinson Tom 6 September 2003 Recollections of George Lyward and Finchden Manor The Times Retrieved 17 May 2024 Robinson Tom 1 September 2005 Saving lives with a second chance The Guardian Retrieved 16 May 2024 Shaw Philip 2020 Finchden Manor A mansion in the Appledore Road with medieval origins and a colourful history Tenterden with St Michaels and Smallhythe Parish News Retrieved 7 May 2024 Toplis Gordon 1974 A Royal Course The New Era 55 3 63 67 Wendelken Alan 2019 A Finchden Experience Lulu Enterprises ISBN 9780244837242 External links editMr Lyward s Webpage A site dedicated to George Lyward and Finchden Manor Includes photographs articles and a recording of a 1970 BBC radio documentary on the work of Finchden Manor Retrieved 7 May 2024 George Lyward and Finchden Manor Part of a site about therapeutic communities run by John Whitwell ex Principal of the Cotswold Community Retrieved 7 May 2024 Fynn Syd Hopkins and his writings Retrieved 7 May 2024 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Lyward amp oldid 1224815477, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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