Donald Wright (schoolmaster)

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Arthur Robert Donald Wright

Headmasters' Conference. After retiring from teaching, he worked at Lambeth Palace for the Archbishop of Canterbury
.

As a young man he saw active service with the British Army during the closing stages of the Second World War.

Early life

Born in

Leighton Park, both Quaker schools. His teachers included W. H. Auden.[2]

Career

From school, Wright joined the

D-Day landings in Normandy, saw fighting across northern France and into Germany, and was later stationed near the Russian lines.[2]

After the war, Wright joined Queens' College, Cambridge, graduating with a degree in History in 1948 and later proceeding to Master of Arts. On 26 June 1948 he married Helen Muryell Buxton, a daughter of Patrick Buxton FRS,[3] and they had five children.

Going into schoolteaching, Wright's posts were at University College School, 1948–1950; The Hill School, Pennsylvania, 1950–1951, Leighton Park School, 1951–1953, Marlborough College, 1953–1963, where he was a housemaster, and finally at Shrewsbury School as headmaster 1963–1975. In 1971 he was Chairman of the Headmasters' Conference.[2]

One of Wright's former schoolboys, Christopher Martin-Jenkins, recalled him in his years at Marlborough as "an imposing figure, very tall, with a slight stoop, he had a loud voice and was never dull or predictable. On one occasion he threw a book at a boy called Horsey who had offended him in some way. On another... he threw a whole desk at someone as well."[4]

On his time at Shrewsbury, The Times has called Wright a "great reforming headmaster".[5] While there, working with the Anglican Diocese of Liverpool, Wright took a leading role in the building of a new Shrewsbury House, the school's mission in Liverpool, which was opened in 1974 by Princess Anne.[2] While he was head of Shrewsbury, he secured many leading churchmen to come to preach in the school chapel, including Henry Chadwick, David Jenkins, Dennis Nineham, Stuart Blanch, and Donald Coggan, Archbishop of Canterbury.[2]

After retiring as a headmaster in 1975, Wright became the Archbishop of Canterbury's Patronage Secretary, based at Lambeth Palace, also chairing the William Temple Foundation and serving as Secretary to the Crown Appointments Commission which has the task of recommending the appointment of Church of England bishops. He was still in post when Archbishop Coggan retired in 1980 and was asked to consult on his successor.[2]

Later life

With his wife, Helen, Wright had some twenty years of retirement at

Officer of the Order of the British Empire.[3] He died in July 2012, aged 89, and his funeral service was at Edington Priory.[6]

Notes

  1. ^ "Wright Arthur R D, Walker" in Register of Births for Wolverhampton Registration District, vol. 6b (1923), p. 900
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Roger Sainsbury, Obituary: Arthur Robert Donald Wright in The Church Times dated 9 November 2012, accessed 31 March 2019
  3. ^ a b Wright, (Arthur Robert) Donald in Who's Who online, accessed 31 March 2019, (subscription required)
  4. ^ Christopher Martin-Jenkins, CMJ: A Cricketing Life (Simon and Schuster, 2012), p. 42
  5. ^ "Michael Charlesworth" in The Times dated 5 June 2008 (subscription required)
  6. ^ Donald Wright - Headmaster from 1963 - 1975 has died, aged 89 dated 13 July 2012 at shrewsbury.org.uk