Page 33 - BR April 2024 - converted
P. 33

April 2024                            April 2024

       application and completed an exam. I was delighted but slightly surprised to be
       called for interview and went off rather nervously for the two-day process with an
       overnight  stay  at  the  Regular  Commissions  Board  at  Westbury  in  Wiltshire.  There
       was a selection of physical tests and tasks, and a very daunting interview with a
       panel of army officers and headmasters. I was thrilled, a few weeks later, when my
       Dad  received  a  letter  confirming  I’d  been  awarded  a  scholarship,  which
       guaranteed  me  entry  to  Sandhurst  in  September  1966,  subject  to  satisfactory  A
       levels. The scholarship was a huge boost to my cash strapped parents as it paid
       my school fees for my last two years at school and gave me a small allowance.
       Sixth form passed quickly in a blur of A level subjects, mock exams, rugby, sailing,
       joining the  local  TA  regiment  as  a soldier and  finally, in  the  summer of 1966,  the
       dreaded  exams.  My  results,  a  few  weeks  later,  weren’t  brilliant,  but  they  were
       acceptable! Sandhurst was now in view, but first, at the army’s request, I had to
       complete an Outward Bound course at Towyn in mid Wales. With that out of the
       way, with a good grade, I joined Sandhurst in early September 1966.

       SANDHURST CADET

       At that time the commissioning course was two years long. Sandhurst had about
       1000 cadets and was organised rather like a public school in three colleges, each
       with four  companies. Each  company  had  commander and  a number  of officer
       instructors plus a host of senior NCO instructors, many of them from the Brigade of
       Guards. I was posted to Blenheim Company, in Old College, as part of a platoon
       of 22 young men (all men then, of course).  The first term was tough, really tough,
       with quite a high dropout rate. The middle terms were more academic and I took
       an additional A level and an O level. The final terms had a military emphasis again.
       Throughout,  there  was  a  lot  of  drill,  oodles  of  weapon  training,  study  of  various
       military subjects (I won the Military Law prize) and a series of exercises on a variety
       of training areas in UK and abroad.
       There was time, too, for sport and adventurous activities. I did a lot of dinghy and
       offshore sailing, and the army paid for me to obtain a Private Pilot’s Licence.

       We paraded for the final time for the Sovereigns Parade on 1st August 1968. The
       salute was taken by a very attractive Princess Alexandra, and we marched up the
       steps  of  Old  College  to  the  strains  of    ‘Auld  Lang  Syne’  and  I  received  my
       Commission as a second lieutenant in the Royal Regiment of Artillery, the Gunners,
       from  Her  Majesty  on  2   August  1968.  That  date  assumed  much  greater
                             nd
       significance a number of years later.

       ONE PIP WONDER

       New 2  lieutenants usually go straight off to learn their new trade, and I was no
            nd
       exception. Next stop was the School of Artillery at Larkhill on Salisbury Plain for the
       Young  Officers’  course  for  three  months.  That  completed,  including  a  brief

 52                                          33
   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38