Rowed number 3 for Oxford in the 1949 Boat Race.
Leander Club, founded in 1818,[1] is one of the oldest rowing clubs in the world, and the oldest non-academic club. It is based in Remenham in Berkshire, England and adjoins Henley-on-Thames. Only three other surviving clubs were founded prior to Leander: Brasenose College Boat Club and Jesus College Boat Club (the two competing in a Head race in 1815) and Westminster School Boat Club, founded in 1813.
Rower and associate of Percy Bullock
William George Ranald Mundell "Ran" Laurie (4 May 1915 – 19 September 1998) was a British physician, Olympic rowing champion and gold medallist. He was the father of actor Hugh Laurie.
Early life, education and rowing career
Laurie was born in Grantchester, Cambridgeshire, in 1915, the elder son of William Walker Laurie (1882–1976), a tenant farmer who later worked for the Ely Sugar Beet Company, and Margaret Grieve (née Mundell) (1886–1959), who took in paying guests at their house, and during the Second World War was live-in housekeeper for Bishop George Chase, then master of Selwyn College, Cambridge. He was of Scottish descent.
Laurie began his rowing career at Monkton Combe School,[3] and continued rowing when he attended Selwyn College, Cambridge, in 1933, where he was a member of the Hermes Club. A. P. McEldowney, the chronicler of Selwyn rowing and founder of University of London Boat Club, said of Laurie: "This year (1933) there arrived at Selwyn a Freshman who was not only the most famous oarsman Selwyn ever had, but also one of the most famous Great Britain ever had – WGRM Laurie. And we can truly claim him as a Selwyn oarsman. He had always told me he learnt all his rowing from Taffy Jones [W J Llewellyn-Jones] at Monkton Combe School. And where but Selwyn did Taffy learn his rowing?"
Laurie rowed for Cambridge in the 1934, 1935, and 1936 boat races, all of which were won by Cambridge. He was in the boat with Jack Wilson, who was to become his rowing partner later in their careers. At the 1936 Olympics, he rowed as stroke in Great Britain's eight, the team eventually finishing in fourth place. Together, Laurie and Wilson, rowing for Leander Club, won the Silver Goblets at Henley Royal Regatta in 1938.
After war interrupted their rowing careers, Laurie and Wilson returned to Henley in 1948, once again winning the Silver Goblets. This was followed a month later by a gold medal in the coxless pair event at the 1948 Olympics in London, rowing on their familiar Henley course. It was described by Laurie as "the best row we ever had". Laurie and Wilson were the best pair of their generation, and it was not until Steve Redgrave and Andy Holmes won the Olympics in 1988 that Britons once more excelled in this class of boat. Laurie and Wilson were known as the "Desert Rats" because of their sojourn in the Sudan. They were trained at Leander Club by Alexander McCulloch, who won a silver medal at the 1908 Olympics. Their boat is now on show at the River and Rowing Museum at Henley-on-Thames, hanging above the boat that won the 1996 Summer Olympics with Redgrave and Pinsent.
Laurie was elected a steward of Henley Royal Regatta in 1951, and also served as a Henley umpire. He sat on Henley's management committee between 1975 and 1986.
Colonial and medical career
Laurie joined the Sudan Political Service in 1936, becoming District Commissioner of Nyala.[8][9] In 1954, he qualified as a medical doctor, working for 30 years as a general practitioner in Blackbird Leys, Oxford. He also chaired the Oxford Committee of The Duke of Edinburgh's Award between 1959 and 1969, and the Oxford branch of Save the Children from 1986 to 1989. In 2005, it was proposed that the newly refurbished health centre in Blackbird Leys be named after Laurie in recognition of his service to the local community; however, it was subsequently named The Leys, after the local area, when it opened in February 2006.
Personal life
In 1944, Laurie married Patricia Laidlaw; they were married until her death from motor neurone disease in 1989. Both were members of their local Presbyterian church, now St Columba's United Reformed Church, Oxford. They had two daughters and two sons, the youngest of whom is the actor Hugh Laurie, who followed in his father's footsteps, rowing for Selwyn College and Cambridge University.[6] Ran Laurie married Mrs Douglas Ernest Arbuthnot, (Evaline) Mary Arbuthnot, née Morgan in 1990 in Norfolk.
Laurie died of Parkinson's disease in 1998 at the age of 83.
Mr James Laurie opened a successful ironmongers shop at 121-124 Fitzroy Street which was known as Laurie and McConnal. In recognition of advice given by his friend, Mr McConnal, James Laurie decided to use both names as a trading title, though only members of the Laurie family actually held shares. In February 1903 the premises were burnt down in a massive fire and the business moved to temporary premises in Fair Street whilst the premises were rebuilt as one of the biggest departmental stores in East Anglia. The store opened in November 1903 "with brand new stock of furnishing, general ironmongery, stationery, haberdashery, china and glass". The shop was described as "the first entirely steel-frame buildings erected in this country. Those who remember the former premises cannot but be struck with the immense improvement effected, with lifts, driven by an electric motor, at the service of customers any time of the day". It had a band stand on the roof from which bands would serenade shoppers on a Saturday.
In 1954 the department store was purchased by the London firm of Shirley Bros.
In 1954 a fire seriously damaged Laurie and McConnal’s warehouse in Willow Place, Fitzroy Street. Children and old folk were evacuated as over 50 firemen fought Cambridge’s biggest fire for years in near-arctic conditions. They were taken to the Church Army Hall
In December 1977 - the store was forced to close due to indecisions about the development of the Kite area. "The news that Laurie and McConnal’s department store is closing will have come as a surprise to most people. But to anyone who regularly used the store it was only a question of time before they succumbed to the inevitable. Even at the height of the shopping day you could be the only potential customer in any one department. It had 50,000 sq ft of selling space, spread over five floors to service, heat, decorate and keep full of merchandise and the passing trade had dropped off dramatically as so many houses have been knocked down and food shops have disappeared from the Kite area".
In 1981 - the former Laurie and McConnal store and a number of small adjoining shops in Fitzroy Street were sold to Grosvenor Estates, who were redeveloping the Kite. It was one of the city’s largest and longest-established department stores and had been empty since the firm closed down at the end of 1977. It was refurbished and brought back into retail use with Habitat moving into the premises in 1983