“Fight Against
Stupidity And Bureaucracy”
This
week seems to be turning into a bit of a tribute week. Yesterday I paid tribute
to Stephen Pile who was the worst founder of a club ever! Today I would like to
take a little time to pay my tribute to Mr Harry Meadows.
I’ll
come back to Harry in a moment. First a general comment. Old folk are peculiar
at times. As I get older myself I understand more and more why. But despite my
tolerance level for idiots heading inexorably towards zero, I’d like to think
that even in my later years, if I am spared, I would retain my sense of humor.
I would hate to just become another miserable old ‘git’.
Speaking
of which, when one of my aunts died a lot of years ago, I was helping to make
the funeral arrangements, part of which involved organizing the undertaker.
When he arrived at the Nursing Home she had been staying in to do his thing I
noticed that he was in a van and not a hearse.
Always
curious, I asked him why this was the case. “Oh
dear,” he said. “You have no idea. We were forced to buy the van for coming to
places like this. If we arrived here in the hearse it caused so much distress
and panic amongst the residents who all thought their time had come and we were
there for them that the Home owners all demanded that we get a different form
of transport or lose the business.” So now you know.
Back
to Harry Meadows.
I
have no doubt that most, if not all, of you will never have heard of Harry. He
wasn’t a famous man, didn’t invent anything special, wasn’t a public
personality, in fact he was just an ordinary person like the rest of us.
Except
one thing he did have in common with me at any rate was a sense of humor, and
one that was right on the edge.
Harry
was a resident at an old peoples’ home in the 1960s. It was called the Haslemere
Home for the Elderly and it was located in Great Yarmouth in Britain. Haslemere,
at that time anyway, had the largest elderly population in the country.
The
Home had first hit the headlines in September 1960, when another of the
residents, 81 years young Gladys Elton, decided it would be good fun and would
break the monotony of the place if she performed a striptease, which she duly
did.
Unfortunately
Gladys must have been hot stuff, too hot in fact, because the excitement she
generated with her performance was too much for one of the male residents who
as a result died of cardiac arrest. Five more of the inmates of the Home also
had to be treated for shock.
Old
Gladys must have been quite a ‘goer’!
So
what about Harry Meadows?
Well
Harry didn’t take part in the striptease, but the following year, in 1961,
Harry who at the time was 87 years old, thought it would be funny if he dressed
up as the Grim Reaper. He duly did so and then from outside the Home, peered
through the windows complete with a scythe in hand.
Unfortunately
Harry had an even bigger effect on the inmates than Gladys. This time three of
them died of shock at seeing the Grim Reaper outside their window!
The
Home was subsequently closed. I don’t know what happened to Harry.
Is
this tragic or funny? To me it’s funny that it happened and tragic that there
are not more people in the world like Gladys and Harry.
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