Anne Griffith-Jones | |
Birth Name: | Anne Laugharne Phillips Griffith-Jones |
Birth Date: | 15 April 1891 |
Birth Place: | London, England |
Death Date: | 28 November 1973[1] |
Death Place: | Ipoh General Hospital, Perak, Malaysia |
Resting Place: | Tapah, Perak, Malaysia |
Nationality: | Welsh |
Occupation: | Educationist (founder of Tanglin Trust School, Singapore) |
Awards: | OBE Pingat Jasa Kebaktian |
Anne Laugharne Phillips Griffith-Jones OBE (15 April 1891 - 28 November 1973)[2] was a British educationalist who founded Singapore's Tanglin Preparatory School, which is now known as the Tanglin Trust School.
Born in London, England,[2] Griffith-Jones was the youngest of 11 children and daughter of a Welsh barrister Griffth Jones and Anne Laugharne Phillips, who were married in 1873. (Her brother, John, was father of Mervyn Griffith-Jones, the prosecuting barrister [later judge] involved in the 1960 prosecution of Penguin Books for the publication of D. H. Lawrence's Lady Chatterley's Lover and the 1963 trial of Stephen Ward relating to the Profumo affair.[2])
She, along with many women of her time, had no formal qualifications. During World War I, she served as a welfare officer at a munitions factory in Wales, for which she was awarded an MBE.
In 1923, Griffith-Jones came to Singapore[3] to spend a three-month holiday with her brother, Oswald Phillips Griffith-Jones. After her vacation, she chose to stay in Singapore to dedicate her life to the education of expatriate children, founding the Tanglin Day School which later became the Tanglin Preparatory School, where she became widely known as “Miss Griff”. When the school first opened in March 1925, it functioned from a disused supper shed[3] within the premises of the Tanglin Club. It began with five students[4] but soon began to grow rapidly. The school served the needs of children up to the age of eight. At the time, many British expatriates living in Singapore had to send their children to Britain to attend boarding school at an early age. This meant being separated from their children for a lengthy period of time.Griffith-Jones saw the need to provide a British-style education in Singapore so that parents could postpone boarding school until their children were of an older age.[5]
In 1934,[6] [4] she opened a second school, the Tanglin Boarding School, in Cameron Highlands, Malaysia. The school was intended to serve as a "near-by" alternative for expatriate families living in the region who would otherwise have to send their children to boarding schools in Britain. Many of the children who attended the school in Singapore then went on to the boarding school in the Cameron Highlands, which catered for students up to the age of 13.[7] At the end of 1938, the number of pupils at the school grew to 68.[8] At both schools, there was much emphasis on the British Empire. In preparing the boys for English Preparatory Schools, she would teach them football, taking the forward line across the playing field and showing them how to pass the ball. Similarly at cricket, she demonstrated the "straight bat" and footwork at the crease.
The two schools continued to grow until the outbreak of the Second World War (1942–1945).[4] The Japanese Occupation of the Malay Peninsula forced the closure of both schools, as British expatriates in the region (including Griffith-Jones) were interned by the Japanese at Singapore's Changi Prison and Sime Road Camp.[3] [4] Throughout her confinement, she displayed the same qualities of organisation and leadership that were a feature of her everyday life. In the course of her imprisonment, she rose to the challenge of internment and set about establishing a school for the internees.
After the war, the two schools reopened,[4] but the school at the Cameron Highlands failed to flourish. In 1948, it had to close due to an outbreak of poliomyelitis.[9]
A second closure occurred during the Malayan Emergency (1948–1960). The school had to be placed under full-time armed guard after the Malayan National Liberation Army surrounded the school. In 1950, it was forced to close by the Federal Government for security reasons. Thereafter, the property was sold to the British War Office.[10]
In 1958, Griffith-Jones retired to the Cameron Highlands and the British European Association, now the British Association of Singapore, took over the private company, 'Tanglin School Limited'.
While residing at the resort, Griffith-Jones became actively involved in sport and social work. For many years, she served as Secretary of the Cameron Highlands Church (which is presently known as All Souls' Church).[11]
In mid-1958, she offered to donate a site adjoining the former Slim School grounds for the erection of a school chapel. However, after consultation with the District Officer, it was established that the State Government would not alienate any further land to the British Forces based at the retreat. Subsequently, she transferred the land to the Anglican Diocese on the understanding that a small church would be built on it.[12] [13]
The construction of the church commenced in 1958. The Nissen hut[14] structure was completed in September that same year. The name 'All Souls' Church' was given at the church's consecration on Thursday, 30 April 1959.[13] The Right Rev H W Baines, Bishop of Singapore and Malaya, conducted the services.
Griffith-Jones received three awards during her lifetime. Her MBE, which she received in her twenties, was elevated to an OBE[15] [4] for her services to education. In 1962, the Sultan of Pahang bestowed on her the Pingat Jasa Kebaktian award for meritorious service.[15]
Griffith-Jones died in 1973 at the Ipoh General Hospital after suffering a severe stroke. She was buried in Tapah, Perak, in the foothills of the Cameron Highlands. In 2015, her grave was visited by a group of students from Singapore's Tanglin Trust School. They read out a prepared text and placed a floral tribute on her grave before leaving.[16] [17]