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Jocelin Slingsby Winthrop Young
Born(1919-10-25)25 October 1919
Died9 February 2012(2012-02-09) (aged 92)
NationalityBritish
Education
OccupationHeadmaster
Employers
Known forFounder and first headmaster of Anavryta, founder of the Round Square, headmaster of Salem School, governor of Box Hill School
Spouse(s)
Countess Ghislaine de la Gardie
(m. 1951; div. 1974)

Countess Sibylle von der Schulenburg
(m. 1974; died 1998)
Children3
Parents
RelativesSir George Young, 3rd Baronet (paternal grandfather)
William Cecil Slingsby (maternal grandfather)
AwardsOfficer of the Order of the British Empire
Commander of the Order of Saints George and Constantine
Military career
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service / branch Royal Navy
Years of service1939–1946
Rank Lieutenant Commander
Battles / wars

Jocelin Slingsby Winthrop Young (25 October 1919 — 9 February 2012) was a British educator, headmaster and Royal Navy officer who founded the independent boarding school Anavryta and the Round Square association of schools. He was also the private tutor of King Constantine II of Greece between 1948 and 1958.

Early life

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Kurt Hahn

Winthrop Young was born on 25 October 1919 at Heversham, Westmorland (now Cumbria) to renowned mountaineers Geoffrey Winthrop Young and Eleanor Winthrop Young. Winthrop Young's parents were friends with German educator Kurt Hahn and consequently he was sent to study at Hahn's first school Schule Schloss Salem from the early 1930s.[1] Following the rise to power of the Nazis in Germany in 1933 Hahn who was Jewish sought to leave the country, Winthrop Young's parents were amongst those who facilitated his escape to Britain.Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). This experience triggered a lifelong love for sailing and the sea within Winthrop Young and following the outbreak of war in 1939 he volunteered to serve in the Royal Navy.[2]

Tutor to Crown Prince Constantine and establishment of Anavryta Experimental Lyceum

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After his period of service as an officer with the Royal Navy during the Second World War[3] (where he reached the rank of Lieutenant Commander and took part in the Normandy landings), Winthrop Young decided against continuing his education at university and instead began working at Imperial Chemical Industries in Birmingham.[4] During this time King Paul of Greece and Queen Frederike (whose brother Prince George of Hanover had become the headmaster of Salem) contacted Kurt Hahn and expressed their desire that he set up a school in Greece so that their son the Crown Prince Constantine could be educated there.[5]

Winthrop Young contacted Kurt Hahn in hopes of obtaining a new position, Hahn suggests he moves to Greece, becomes private tutor to Crown Prince Constantine and establish a new school in Greece.[6] JWY took Hahn up on his offer and along with the King and Queen set up the Anavryta Experimental Lyceum in 1949. Winthrop Young became the school's first headmaster and personal tutor to the future King Constantine II who was amongst the school's first pupils.[7]

Winthrop Young returned to visit Gordonstoun and here he became acquainted with Roy McComish, the two men began a long lasting friendship and working relationship.[8][9] In 1953 an earthquake struck Greece, a disaster which caused the death of thousands of people and the destruction of many buildings. Shortly after the earthquake King Paul of Greece visited the site of the earthquake with his wife Frederica of Hanover and her brother Prince George of Hanover who was at this point the headmaster of Schule Schloss Salem. Prince George decided to initiate a building project to help repair the damage done to the island of Cephalonia his project would involve students from schools in various different countries.[10] One of these schools was Gordonstoun and these students were under the supervision of Roy McComish. A group of 120 students from 8 countries (including those from Gordonstoun) headed to Greece in July 1954 a group from Anavryta organised by Winthrop Young joined them there and the combined group then headed to Argostoli on the island of Cephalonia. Once there they set to work building a home for a number of elderly people who had been left homeless.[11][12] The success of this co-operation between several like-minded schools acted as the inspiration for the Round Square. In 1958 the Crown Prince finished his education, and in 1959 Winthrop Young stood down as headmaster of Anavryta and returned to England. In 1960 Winthrop Young was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for his work at Anavryta.[13]

Foundation of the Round Square and later career

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Between 1962 and 1963 Roy McComish (who had at this point founded Box Hill School the first Hahnian school in England, where Winthrop Young had become one of its governors) and Winthrop Young listed all the schools which they considered to have adopted Hahn’s ideas or had included them at their foundation, these were: in Scotland, Rannoch School and Dunrobin School, in England, Abbotsholme School, Battisborough and Milton Abbey, in Germany Louisenlund, in Switzerland Aiglon College, in Africa Achimota School, in India The Doon School and the soon to open Athenian School in California. Gordonstoun, Salem, Anavryta and Box Hill were 'taken for granted' as the already established and pre-eminent Hahnian schools.[14]

In 1964 Winthrop Young became the headmaster of Schule Schloss Salem the school where he had received his early education.[15] On the 5th June 1966, Kurt Hahn’s 80th birthday was celebrated at Schule Schloss Salem, and as the headmaster of the school Winthrop Young invited the headmasters of Box Hill School, Gordonstoun, Louisenlund, Anavryta, Battisborough, the Athenian School and the Atlantic college to discuss the establishment of a Hahn schools conference.[16] This meeting was chaired by King Constantine and during its course an agreement was reached on naming the conference 'The Hahn Schools', it was then decided that the first conference would be held at Gordonstoun in 1967.[17] At this first conference at Hahn's insistence the name 'The Hahn Schools' was dropped in favour of a new name 'The Round Square' after an iconic building at Gordounstoun. The six schools that attended this first conference and were the founding members of the Round Square were Box Hill School, Gordonstoun, Anavryta Experimental Lyceum, Schule Schloss Salem, Aiglon College and Abbotsholme School. At the 2nd Round Square conference held at Box Hill the principles of the association were established and co-education was the first of the sequence of conference themes that was discussed.[18] At a later conference held at Box Hill in 1980 the R.S.I.S. (Round Square International Service) was created to promote and organise overseas voluntary service projects in much the same way as the project in Cephalonia.[19] Winthrop Young retired as headmaster of Salem in 1974 but continued to run the Round Square association as Honorary Secretary and later as Director until he retired from that position in 1992.[20]

Winthrop Young died in Heiligenberg, near Salem in Germany in 2012 at the age of 92.[21]

References

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  1. ^ https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/life
  2. ^ https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/life
  3. ^ Veevers, Nick & Allison Pete (2011) Springer Science & Business Media. Kurt Hahn. p. 91
  4. ^ https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/life
  5. ^ https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/life
  6. ^ https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/life
  7. ^ https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/life
  8. ^ Toast to Winthrop Young - Speech by Roy McComish in 1992 at Bishop's College, Lennoxville Quebec - Accessible https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/work/round-square/
  9. ^ The muscles of friendship - Speech by Jocelin Winthrop Young on the occasion of his retirement in October 1992 - Accessible https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/work/round-square/
  10. ^ The muscles of friendship - Speech by Jocelin Winthrop Young on the occasion of his retirement in October 1992 - Accessible https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/work/round-square/
  11. ^ Toast to Winthrop Young - Speech by Roy McComish in 1992 at Bishop's College, Lennoxville Quebec - Accessible https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/work/round-square/
  12. ^ The muscles of friendship - Speech by Jocelin Winthrop Young on the occasion of his retirement in October 1992 - Accessible https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/work/round-square/
  13. ^ https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/life
  14. ^ Jocelin Winthrop-Young 28/3/1999 - accessible https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/work/round-square/
  15. ^ Veevers, Nick & Allison Pete (2011) Springer Science & Business Media. Kurt Hahn. p. 91
  16. ^ The muscles of friendship - Speech by Jocelin Winthrop Young on the occasion of his retirement in October 1992 - Accessible https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/work/round-square/
  17. ^ The muscles of friendship - Speech by Jocelin Winthrop Young on the occasion of his retirement in October 1992 - Accessible https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/work/round-square/
  18. ^ The muscles of friendship - Speech by Jocelin Winthrop Young on the occasion of his retirement in October 1992 - Accessible https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/work/round-square/
  19. ^ The muscles of friendship - Speech by Jocelin Winthrop Young on the occasion of his retirement in October 1992 - Accessible https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/work/round-square/
  20. ^ https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/life
  21. ^ https://www.jocelinwinthropyoung.com/life