Wednesday, 11 June 2025

Alan Furness Tropical Diplomat

How to Order

HARDBACK  £12.50  & UK postage £3.50
By Post: Mail to Lynn Davidson, The Memoir Club, 34 Lynwood Way, South Shields, Tyne & Wear, NE34 8DB cheque payable to Lynn Davidson.
By Email memoirclub@msn.com   or MOBILE 0755 2086888
Paypal: account access - memoirclub@msn.com
Bank transfer details    Lynn Davidson      Barclays
20 83 69        83948145  please insert Furness  as bank reference

ALAN FURNESS



Tropical Diplomat covers the diplomatic activities of Alan Furness at his postings abroad in India, Indonesia, Poland and francophone West Africa, both his dealings with the foreign governments there, as well as the internal workings of the diplomatic posts he served in. Some of these posts were in countries that had been subject to colonial rule, whether British, French or Dutch (or one could add, Russian, as far as Poland was concerned) and where their relations with the former colonial powers were especially interesting, to put it politely.

Visiting British ministers could also be a problem as well as an opportunity. Sir Geoffrey Howe’s visit to Warsaw in 1985, evoked some responses within the British Embassy that were not wholly concordant.

Diplomatic activities is an expression that covers his relations with the British ambassadors he served under, and his relations with other members of the staff, especially when he was the Head of Post himself, as in Bombay in the 1980s and in Dakar in the 1990s.

His diplomatic activities concluded on an unusual note for a British Ambassador, when he became the Sovereign Order of Malta’s Ambassador to Senegal. 

AUTHOR

Alan Furness was born in 1937. He was educated at Eltham College and at Jesus College,Cambridge, where he read history. He then spent a year at the University College of the West Indies (as it was then called) in Jamaica, doing research into the period of plantation slavery, a subject as fraught then as it still is today. But he decided that an academic career was not for him. 

He joined what was later to become HM Diplomatic Service, starting work in the Commonwealth Relations Office, including a period as Private Secretary to the Parliamentary Under- Secretary of State, the 11th Duke of Devonshire, whom he accompanied on visits to Nigeria and to Canada.

His career in the Diplomatic Service then took him to India (twice), to the UK Delegation to the European Communities during the negotiations for British entry into the Common Market. He met and married his wife, Elizabeth, in Brussels in 1971. She too was working in the UK Delegation. Thereafter, their service overseas took them to Dakar (twice), to Jakarta, to Warsaw in the early 1980s when the Solidarity movement was being suppressed, and to Bombay.

After he reached the compulsory retirement age of 60 in 1997, a second overseas career beckoned. He had been received into the Catholic Church in 1979 in Jakarta; and in 2000, he became the Ambassador to Senegal of the Sovereign Order of Malta. He and his wife continued to live in their own house in Dakar, until they returned to England in 2008. He continued to undertake various activities with the Order of Malta in England.

 

Friday, 6 June 2025

TONY GODDARD

                                                                     


                                                                How to Order

HARDBACK  £12.50  & UK postage £3.00
By Post: Mail to Lynn Davidson, The Memoir Club, 34 Lynwood Way, South Shields, Tyne & Wear, NE34 8DB cheque payable to Lynn Davidson.
By Email memoirclub@msn.com   or MOBILE 0755 2086888
Paypal: account access - memoirclub@msn.com
Bank transfer details    Lynn Davidson      Barclays
20 83 69        83948145  please insert GODDARD  as bank reference



This book records how after three exciting years as a district officer as recounted in his first book My African Stories the author then returned to England to the Thames Valley where he qualified as a solicitor.

After three years practising as a solicitor in the Thames Valley the author and his wife moved to South Devon and settled in an area that was predominantly based on agriculture.

The book describes a tight-knit farming community of a type that has now largely disappeared.

The key to entering this community as the author discovered was horses and hunting.

It was against this background that the author practised law and the book contains a host of splendid stories based on the author’s experiences.


Reviews or articles

Kingsbridge & Salcombe Gazette and Totnes Times

https://www.kingsbridge-today.co.uk/news/author-tony-goddards-unforgettable-colonial-service-797633







Monday, 2 June 2025

THE GREAT RECOVERY CAPTAIN JOHN WATSON


AVAILABLE TO BUY  30TH JUNE 2025


HOW TO ORDER 

Softback - PRICE £12.50 & P & P  UK  £3.00

Hardback - PRICE £20.00 & P & P  UK  £3.00

The Memoir Club, 34 Lynwood Way, South Shields. NE34 8DB

Cheques payable to Lynn Davidson or bank transfer: 

BARCLAYS  20 83 69   83948145

Telephone:  07552086888  Email: memoirclub@email.msn.com 


Captain John J Watson











It was a three-week holiday in Turkey at the beginning of the 1990s that began he and Maureen’s love for the country and its people. Between 2001 and 2014 it was their second home allowing them to travel extensively west of a line drawn from Trabzon in the north to Adana in the south, with occasional sorties to the east of that line. John became a huge admirer of Ataturk, and it was travels to Gallipoli and latterly to Ankara to visit the Ataturk Mausoleum during 2008 that whetted his appetite to explore how the Republic was born, especially after buying a copy of Kamuran Gürün’s book from the mausoleum library upon which this volume is based. It has taken more than fifteen years of consideration to finally bring his work to print with the hope that it might be regarded as having been produced without prejudice.


Captain John Watson was born in Barr, near Girvan in 1939. His career has been long and varied. From joining the Merchant Navy to become Master Foreign Going in 1965 he left to join the ports industry with the British Transport Docks Board in 1966. That was the start of another successful career. He eventually left that organisation and become Harbourmaster and Pilotmaster of Dundee Port Authority and eventually its Chief Executive in 1986 and also Deputy Chairman in 1988.


Before the port was privatised at the end of 1995 he was active in the national and worldwide ports industry being appointed as the Chairman of the International Association of Ports and Harbours Marine Operations Committee in 1989. Then in 1992 he was elected as the inaugural Chairman of the new British Ports Association and was nominated and appointed an OBE for his services to the ports industry in that same year.

 

Between 1996 and 2001 he worked as a management and ports consultant at home and abroad. It was during this time he developed a new career in the conservation and restoration of historic wooden ships which remains his passion today.