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It
was a warm sunny afternoon as our interview team met and entered
the doors of Mrs. Zimmern's apartment. There she stood eagerly
awaiting us, all changed and prepared for the occasion of our
long-awaited interview. Mrs. Zimmern held in her fragile hands
some notes she had written and started to take the lead in talking
the moment everyone sat down. To our surprise, she spoke perfect
Cantonese throughout in a very lively manner and occasionally
broke out in little giggles as some thoughts flashed across
her mind.
Early
days of Mrs. Zimmern in DGS uniform (1930's)>>
"I
am the eighth daughter in the family. After me came my brother,
the only son of the family, followed by Patsy (mother of Kim
Fenton, and grandmother of Robyn Lamsam, who all attended DGS)."
"At our time, schooling was not as strictly regimented
as nowadays. Classes were not divided according to age, but
according to academic standard. When I entered DGS, I was placed
into Grade 8 as I knew not a single word of English. St. Paul's
where I went prior to DGS, was taught totally in Chinese. DGS
however was taught wholly in English."
DGS in those days, according to Mrs. Zimmern, was not divided
into Junior and Senior School. Students were placed in Grade
10 to 1, with Grade 10 being the lowest. Having graduated from
Grade 1 you would then go on to university level. There were
about 15 to 20 girls in one class and all the students sat together
in one big hall. The clever ones got to sit in the front row
closer to the teacher. Some of the ones in the back row may
end up sitting there for several years.
"When I first joined DGS, Miss Sawyer was the headmistress.
Every morning, she would stand on a high chair and bellow out
each girl's name to take the school roll call, and we had to
call out 'Present'. I was terrified of her, as I did not understand
any English."
However, it did not take Mrs. Zimmern long to learn some English
from the friends she made at school. These were the girls who
also lived on the Hong Kong Island like she did. They would
cross the Star Ferry each morning (at $0.25 per trip) as a school
bus awaited them at the Ferry to take them back to 1 Jordan
Road in time. The Hong Kong girls became a close and friendly
community. Some were Chinese and some were English or Portuguese
who could converse in Cantonese which they had learnt from their
Chinese amahs. They had good fun on this journey and soon, would
make use of the ferry ride to collaborate on their homework
together instead of doing them independently at home.
So what was school like in those days? Well, school lasted
the whole day. A bell would ring after each session to signal
a change of activities. The first bell would ring for the Chapel
where students had morning prayers and sang hymns. School hymn
at that time was "Blessed are the Pure in Heart" (which
was also sung at Joyce Symons' Memorial Service recently). Lessons
followed afterwards. Lunch was provided by the School at a cost.
Everyone ate together at the dining hall - Western style with
knife and fork. The menu consisted of potatoes every meal, served
with meat, fish or chicken. As there was no tuck shop during
those days, students had to bring their own if they wanted a
snack during break.
We then prompted Mrs. Zimmern for a view of sports and recreation
at that time. "During break and what remained of the lunch
time, we chatted and played games. We liked rope games. We also
played netball, rounders, basketball and hockey in school. Outside
School, I also played tennis and swam (there was no swimming
pool at school in those days). I was tall and quite a good sportswoman
and good shooter for basketball. This stood me in good stead
every year at the Annual Sports Day. We would form our own teams,
because there was no system of having "Houses" as
you have now. DGS girls were in general quite athletic and energetic.
We were known to be good sportswomen, fair, open and fun to
be with."
And what about school uniforms in those days? Quite to our
surprise the summer uniform was very much like the one we have
now, blue and white, except without the cardigan. Mrs. Zimmern
explained with pride that they had to wear white shoes and socks
and looked very smart indeed. Selina Chan (the youngest member
of our interview team) who will be attending DGJS this year,
modestly and respectfully presented Mrs. Zimmern with her brand
new summer uniform which Mrs. Zimmern examined carefully with
a grin on her face.
Young
DGS girl showing our present summer uniform
"In the winter, we wore a tunic of dark blue wool. Inside,
we wore a white shirt of "Vyella" material which was
quite soft and warm. When it was very cold, we were allowed
to wear woollen knee socks. We had no school blazers at that
time. We could wear a Western style overcoat of our choice but
not Chinese padded jackets.
Mrs. Zimmern later explained that the entire School was run
by one Headmistress together with four teachers for each subject
- English, Mathematics, Botany and Gymnastics. Only the Botany
teacher was Chinese, or at least looked Chinese. There were
no male teachers during that time.
Although not a School Prefect Mrs. Zimmern was usually asked
by Miss Sawyer to collect all the students' exercise books to
be graded and distributed afterwards. The best students were
acknowledged at the Annual Speech Day.
One of the most popular events was the Annual Bazaar. Mrs.
Zimmern vividly exclaimed that there would be all sorts of things
to be bought and sold such as scarves, shoes, dishes. She could
not recall what else were sold, except than it was great fun
and that it was open to the public. All the proceeds went to
charity for children and everyone bought generously.
And what were the characteristics of DGS girls in those days?
"Well, we were lively and inquisitive girls. We respected
our teachers, but were not terrified of them although they were
quite strict. DGS had quite a liberal atmosphere, and we were
encouraged to use our brains and express our opinion. We like
to talk and argue and would giggle in class and chat about everything
under the sun."
Later on, Miss Sawyer was succeeded by Miss Gibbons as headmistress,
who was referred fondly by the girls as "Gibby". Eventually,
with the good education provided by DGS, Mrs. Zimmern graduated
with three A's and entered the University of Hong Kong to study
Economics. Joyce Symons (known to Mrs. Zimmern as Joyce) was
already in HKU before Mrs. Zimmern. After graduating from university,
Mrs. Zimmern became a teacher at St. Paul's School before she
worked as a secretary at Watsons. Whilst working, she was dated
by Archie Zimmern, who was subsequently appointed as a Queen's
Counsel and became the first Supreme Court Judge appointed from
the local Bar. The Kotewall family survived the War years under
the careful planning of their father, Sir Robert Kotewall who
was particularly under great pressure to protect the virtue
of his nine daughters against the Japanese soldiers. After the
War, Cicely and Archie got married (three of the Kotewall sisters
eventually married three of the Zimmern brothers!) They have
a daughter Annabel, who is a restauranteur and a son Hugh, who
is a partner of an international architect firm in Hong Kong.
Even though Joyce Symons was not in the same class as Mrs.
Zimmern, the two got on remarkably well. As Cicely Zimmern portrayed,
Joyce was kind, clever and great fun to be with. When they traveled
together in England, Joyce would tell people in the train that
Mrs. Zimmern was a princess, and the gentlemen would give up
their seats for her. Joyce also relished on the tale of how
she dropped one of her shoes in a LegCo session, and how Sir
Maclehose, the Governor of Hong Kong then, embarrassingly retrieved
it for her!
Their friendship lasted more than half a century through life's
ups and downs. Whenever Joyce visited Hong Kong after her retirement,
Cicely would always take her to the horse races. Joyce also
invited Cicely to visit her new home which she had bought about
three years ago (because she didn't want to live in a 'home').
The new flat was beautifully renovated by her niece and nephew
and overlooked a pond with ducklings. Mrs. Zimmern felt that
Joyce was able to enjoy peace in her home in her last days.
May she rest in peace.
<<A
lovely afternoon of chatting
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