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The Quiet Reformer: Remembering Alan Rudwick
(1927–2009)
A Tribute from the Achimota Trust UK on behalf of
the Old Achimotan Association
by Franklyn Ayensu
Mr Alan Rudwick, former headmaster of Achimota
School, died on 18 December, 2009 on the Isle of
Wight, UK. During his 12 years as headmaster, Mr
Rudwick oversaw many important reforms. The Old
Achimotan community pays him tribute in the
following piece.
Alan Percival Rudwick—or just “Rudwick” to the
thousands of students whose lives he helped shape
during his 27 years at Achimota School—was one of
the school’s longest-serving, most-admired and
best-remembered headmasters.
That long association began offhandedly enough. He
said that Alex Kwapong and Patrick Anin, two of his
colleagues at Cambridge—later Vice Chancellor of the
University of Ghana and a justice of the Supreme
Court, respectively—urged him to consider going
there to teach.
Mr Rudwick had heard about Achimota, vaguely. The
Commonwealth Institute in fact had pic¬tures of the
school on display at its offices in London. Still,
the entire idea must have sounded a little exotic to
the 23-year-old Englishman, at the time a final-year
History student. Kwapong and Anin spoke so
passionately about their former school, however,
that he decided he would apply anyway. “They
literally propelled me to,” he would later say.
As part of the process, Mr Rudwick had to travel to
London to be interviewed by the Reverend Alexander
G. Fraser. Not surprisingly, he arrived a nervous
wreck. Most Achimotans would consider a one-on-one
with Achimota’s legen¬dary first principal and
co-founder as only slightly less holy than a private
audi¬ence with the Pope. Mercifully, Fraser offered
him the job on the spot: “Yes, young Rudwick, you’ll
do very well at Achimota.” And that is how it all
began.
In certain ways, Mr Rudwick’s time at Achimota
paralleled the milestones of his own life: Born the
same year the school opened—1927—he arrived there in
1951, just before he, like Achimota, turned 25. He
retired at 50, just after the school’s own Golden
Jubilee. Kwame Mfodwo, a former student who now
teaches law at Monash University in Melbourne,
Australia, notes that Mr Rudwick indeed helped to
shape Achimota for almost half of Ghana’s
independence era, steering the school through many
of the fledgling nation’s successes, transitions,
and challenges.
He moved up the ranks quickly at Achimota: History
teacher, then Cadbury housemaster, then at 32
assistant headmaster. Then in 1965, just 38 years
old, he was appointed the sixth headmaster, and
ninth head, of the school. So completely did the
Achimota community accept him that, two years later,
in 1967, in a solemn and memorable tribal cere¬mony
complete with palanquin, drumming, kente cloth, and
sacred libations, he was enstooled as “Nana of
Achimota” by the school and its alumni community.
This gesture of full acceptance into Ghanaian
culture so moved him that, in later years, he would
fre¬quently make reference to it in conversation.
In his quiet but steady way, Mr Rudwick brought
significant change to Achimota. His vision was to
raise academic standards even higher than they were,
and to modernise the facilities. Under him, roads
were resurfaced, street lamps replaced, bathrooms
upgraded, and electrical systems rewired. He guided
the formation of Achimota’s Parent-Teacher
Association and oversaw the expansion of the
campus—already Ghana’s largest—to include the
Western Compound. Dur¬ing General Acheampong’s
Operation Feed Yourself program in the mid-70s,
Achimota’s vastly expanded yam, corn and cassava
plan¬tations fed not only the school but many a
calorie-challenged Anumle villager grateful for the
easy opportunity to raid the farms at night and help
themselves.
Sprucing up school infrastructure is one thing;
strengthening school spirit is another. This was the
1960s and ’70s, a time when the nation was gingerly
working its way through the teething problems of
self-government. Mr Rudwick, above all, wanted
Achimota students to be confident and proud—proud of
their school, their country, their culture, and
themselves. Be¬yond the upgrading of buildings, he
set himself the goal of restoring school spirit,
concentrating on those intan¬gibles that constitute
the character of any great academic institution and
infuse its atmos¬phere.
To cultivate these, he promoted a dazzling array of
extracurricular activities—the Current Affairs Club.
The Debate Society. The French Club. The Achimotan
magazine. The Red Cross. The Cadet Corps. The Boy
Scouts. The school orchestra. Afternoons and
weekends at Achimota simply buzzed with activity. He
revamped the Art School and arranged for the works
of students such as Ato Delaquis and Sam Bentil,
both now acclaimed international artists, to go on
exhibit in the Administration Block. On Sundays, the
Science Theatre showed documentaries on a range of
topics to jam-packed audiences who paid little
attention to the stuffy ventilation.
Achimota’s annual Festival of Nine Lessons and
Carols became a much-anticipated date on Accra’s
cultural calendar. Under the expert direction of
John Barham, the carol service drew thousands from
the city, often compelling repeat per¬formances. And
every other year or so, it seemed, the school would
stage a Gilbert and Sullivan opera, with staff and
students playing both lead and support roles.
Although all of this may look like high culture, Mr
Rudwick had none of the high-brow air sometimes
associated with an Oxbridge background. He wanted
his students to be Ghanaians and insisted that we
embrace cultural traditions, the spirit of service,
and even manual labour as integral parts of a
well-balanced life. And so in the real spirit of
Achimota, children of ministers and ambassadors
scrubbed, swept, hoed, and polished side by side
with children of small-hold farmers.
Under Mr Rudwick, the great sports rivalry between
Nigeria’s Kings College and Achimota—in cricket,
hockey, soccer, swimming and track and
field—flourished. So did the Triangular Athletic
Games, matching Adisadel, Holy Child, Mfantsipim,
Wesley Girls and Achimota against one another in a
contest of wills and testosterone. He initiated the
Inter-House Singing Competition and the annual
Gardening Competition, pushing the houses into
friendly rivalries that could get quite heated.
Indeed, it was not entirely unknown for fresh-cut
stems of bougainvillea, frangipani and heliconia to
sprout up overnight—like mysterious crop circles—in
the flower beds surrounding a Lugard or a
Livingstone House, just hours before the judges
walked in.
The ruse never worked. Almost invariably, the
competition would be won by Cadbury, with its
terrific rock garden fanatically nurtured by the
late Adrian “Terror” Sherwood, Achimota’s legendary
English teacher of the 1960s and ’70s—himself an
amateur horticulturalist, much like the Rudwicks.
Although outwardly reserved, Mr Rudwick sought out
personal relationships with students, and he and his
wife Ann, a paediatrician, often invited Sixth
Formers to their home for lunch. In an initiative
perhaps unprecedented at the school, he even
encouraged a few students to try their hand at
teaching. Audrey Quaye, a financial analyst and
consultant based in the US, recalls for example
that, while teaching the General Paper course to
Lower Sixth Formers, Mr Rudwick invited Nkrabeah
Effah-Dartey, then in Upper Sixth, to teach the
current affairs sessions on the Vietnam War.
When he realized that Joris Wartenberg was a budding
playwright, he promoted him, staging his full-length
multi-act play, The Ghost’s Revenge, on the
capacious grounds of the Headmaster’s Residence. The
play was produced, directed and performed by the
students themselves. Wartenberg would later create
Osofo Dadzie, Ghana television’s longest-running and
most successful sitcom.
When the British Council showed Jacob Bronowski’s
groundbreaking documentary series The Ascent of Man,
Mr Rudwick was so excited that he made a special bus
available for a number of us to leave school on
Saturday evenings—without exeat, mind you—to attend
the entire 13-part BBC series in the Council’s
air-conditioned auditorium in Accra. Now that was a
real treat. The no-exeat part, especially, made us
feel grownup and trusted.
These examples of vibrant and inclusive school life,
which transcended boundaries of race, class and
culture, are partly what Mr Rudwick meant by
reviving the old Achimota spirit. In part because of
the Rudwicks, many students left Achimota carrying a
new sense of ex¬tended family with them, convinced
that, despite the challenges, blacks and whites
could work side by side to promote progress. This
was the dream Achimota’s founders had dared to dream
half a century earlier, when they chose the black
and white keys of the piano as a symbol for the
school crest.
Achimota’s sixth headmaster could on occasion be a
stickler for order. If you saw his bespectacled form
coming down one of the hallways, with that
characteristic forward-leaning gait and the slight
paunch and close-cropped beard, you instinctively
adjusted your belt buckle and run your finger along
your shirt buttons to make sure they were all done.
Because he would check. Just a month ago, a chance
visit to the BBC website revealed that the man had
not changed one bit: Down there in the Comments
Section, in 2007, he had chided the BBC Symphony
Orchestra for the unseemly casualness of its dress
code—especially the conductor— and the “dreary”
black they had worn for a performance of Beethoven’s
Seventh.
Despite his attention to form, he took a genuine,
even informal, interest in many students, and he
would personally intervene in their lives if he
sensed they were in real difficulty. He and Ann even
arranged for a student to receive emergency surgery
overseas; she recovered well and went on to excel in
her career. Former senior prefect James Dormon, a
US-based architect and project manager, recalls:
Besides being an excellent manager, Nana Rudwick was
a generous man. When it came to students he saw the
total picture, and from a perspective that often
differed from that of some of his staff. On several
occasions he blocked the recommendation of a
suspension because he felt the punishment did not
quite fit the crime. I personally know that he
helped to work out bursary schol¬arships for several
underprivileged students struggling to pay their
fees, preferring that they not be sent home. Many
Old Achimotans who are successful today may not even
be aware of the tussles that he had with the
Bur¬sar’s Office on their behalf, so that they could
continue their studies uninterrupted.
By the mid-1970s, however, there were signs of a sea
change. The national education budget was
tightening, and schools were being asked to do more
with less. When Achimota celebrated its Golden
Jubilee in 1977—with HRH Charles, the Prince of
Wales and President Sir Dauda Jawara of The Gambia
(himself an Old Achimotan) in attendance—Nana
Rudwick gave his final speech. For his service to
Ghanaian education, he received the Grand Medal of
Ghana. Later the same year, he was awarded the Order
of the British Empire (OBE) by HM Queen Elizabeth
II.
The Rudwicks spent the next eight years enjoying the
balmy Mediterranean weather of Jávea, on Spain’s
Costa Blanca coastline. “You must come and visit
us!” he would often say before they departed. It is
not known if any of us ever took him up on it. Did
we still see him as “headmaster”?
In 1983, the couple moved back to England. He became
the Royal Commonwealth Society’s membership
secretary; she joined the Community Child Health
Department. Both positions were ideal for staying in
touch with Old Achimotans living in or passing
through London, as were the alumni reunions they
attended in London and the United States.
For many former students, by then in their late 20s
to mid-40s, it was almost surreal to relate on an
equal basis to a headmaster who had once virtually
wielded plenipotentiary powers over your very soul
when you still had pimples. As unsettling as this
feeling of parity was, it captured in a simple way
the truth that pre¬paring boys and girls to take
their place in society is what education, after all,
is all about.
In 1994 the Rudwicks, now both retired, moved south
to the cosy Isle of Wight. Even with his health
declining, when a group of Old Achimotans known as
AC2010 approached him in 2006 and asked if he would
assist with an ambitious new capital campaign for
the school, he did not hesitate to lend his weight
as a honorary co-chairperson.
Although his health during the final years kept him
from attending the OAA meetings in London, reliable
sources confirm that he always made sure Ann brought
back sizeable “care packages” of aponkyenam,
abenkwan, nkatsenkwan and dodokyi. One former Deputy
Senior Prefect remembers that Mr Rudwick sometimes
would invite himself, unannounced, to the Prefects
High Table on the West—but only on Wednesdays, when
nkatsenkwan (peanut soup) was being served. He came,
no doubt, for the stimulating conversation and keen
updates about school affairs, and only incidentally
for the meal.
He denied remembering any of this but did confess to
setting one record that surely must still stand: No
faculty member in Achimota’s history has consumed
more dodokyi (fried plantain) in one sitting than he
has, nor perhaps over a lifetime.
Nana Rudwick’s title as a Ghanaian chief was, after
all, more than skin-deep.
A great tree has fallen. In the early hours of 18
December, 2009, Nana Akora Alan Rudwick, the
Cambridge student who took a chance and purchased a
one-way ticket to Accra in 1951, passed away in Ryde,
Isle of Wight. He was 82. Achimotans everywhere will
miss him.
It would be fitting to end with a eulogy that speaks
on behalf of all Old Achimotans, a tribute from a
former student who withheld her name in order to
make it an homage from all:
Nana Alan Rudwick, thank you for inspiring a whole
generation of Ghanaians! Thank you for creating an
intellectually and culturally vibrant campus that
en¬sured a well-rounded education for us! Thank you
for promoting the arts and music at our great
school! Thank you for encouraging concern and
financial support for those less fortunate among us!
Thank you for recognizing the value of positive
input from parents and helping to establish the PTA!
Thank you for laying a foundation of success for so
many Ghanaian professionals, both in Ghana and
abroad! Akoras and Ghanaians thank you!
Damirifa due! Ya wo odzogban; Nuntso le akwe ono!
Funeral services were held at All Saints Church in
Ryde on 11 January, 2010. There will be a memorial
service in Aggrey Chapel, Achimota School on 31
January. Plans for memorial services in the UK and
the US will be announced shortly. Nana Rudwick’s
widow, Ann, requests that donations, if desired, be
made out to The Achimota Trust, with a note saying
“In memory of Alan Rudwick.” The donations can be
made either online at www.achimotatrust.org, or
mailed to 4 Cranfield Drive, London, NW9 5WH, UK.
You may also contact Mr. Ken Agra, Achimota Trust,
at k.agra@sky.com.
The author is indebted to the many other Old
Achimotans who offered useful suggestions and
comments during the preparation of this tribute,
which is based in part on a biographical sketch
received from Mr Rudwick.
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