Volunteer conference

20 11 2008

Today I’ve been at the first Volunteer conference of the year. The Trust are running three, this one in Elstree, one in Sheffield and one at central office: Heelis in Swindon.

It went really well. Which was a pleasant surprise. I wan’t sure how interested our volunteers would be in the Trust as a whole, as many volunteers tell me they volunteer for the places they help look after, not the organisation. And indeed we didn’t get as many volunteers as we originally hoped for signing up to come to the conference. But that turned out for the best, the 130 (approx) who came all had a good time, all had a chance to say their piece, and all contributed to the workshops and activities. More might have been a little unwieldy.

Fiona Reynolds was there and people really seemed to appreciate the chance to talk to her, face to face. I made good contacts with a number of volunteers who wanted to try new things, an internet forum for newsletter editors for example. And I also made contact with a supporters’ association in Belgium, who’d like to come under the wing of a region, so of course I offered them space in the South East’s nest.

All in all, a very good day, apart from getting on the wrong train with the Director General…





A memory

25 10 2008

Here’s a thing: I was tidying in my garage the other day, and came across this tee-shirt. Ten years old today, just about, a vaguely remember getting it printed in Croydon, and gently rear-ending the car in front in my 2cv when the driver didn’t pull out of a merge lane as quickly as I expected her to. My car was more damaged than her’s (which was not-at-all), but she gave me a hard time about it none-the-less.

But that’s not the memory that this tee-shirt first awakened. What it actually reminded me of was the first time I got paid for heritage interpretation. I’d been doing it voluntarily for three years by then, at Kentwell Hall in Suffolk. Kentwell’s Tudor Re-Creations lasted for three weeks every summer. And in 1988 we were celebrating 1588 and the defeat of the Spanish Armada.

About three hundred volunteers would participate in these annual re-creations, many of them displaying craft skills, weaving, candlemaking, potting, charcoal burning and the like. I could do none of those, being a junior bank-clerk, so when I joined in I took the option that generations of young men with no vocation have taken: I became a soldier. The soldiers of Kentwell Hall were a pretty rag-tag bunch of mercenaries most years, and the only enemies they ever had were the Players, a bunch of jugglers, musicians and other ne’er-do-wells of a generally more hippyish bent.

But in 1588 we got more organised. We agreed to join forces in making our Tudor clothes, resulting in a far more uniform livery, complete with thigh-high riding boots. And though suitably equiped with Tudor weapons during the day, we switched to replica Uzi waterpistols in the evening, all the better to soak the Players with. Tired of being called “the Soldiers,” we re-branded ourselves the Avant Guard.

All this effort galvanized us as a team, and our ring-leader, Jane (who was camp-follower during the day, but Dominatrix after hours) stuck a deal with a big Armada celebration taking place at Tilbury Fort, Essex. Kate O’Mara was playing Elizabeth, and we were each to get fifty quid to put on an archery display. Our first paid gig!

Before then, organizations like the Seal’ed Knot, the English Civil War Society, or the White Company, would turn up at any event for the cost of some grub and enough gunpowder to have a bit of fun. But that Tilbury gig gave Jane the crazy idea that people could actually make a living doing that stuff. And a few years later, I became the first P.A.Y.E employee of Past Pleasures, and possibly the first P.A.Y.E employee in the whole costumed interpretation industry.

Nothing to do with the National Trust of course, except that after work with two live interpretation companies, I got a job here. And I’m not the only one, the brother of the bloke wrapped round Jane’s thigh on the tee-shirt was one of those damn’d Players. And now he too works for the NT, as Communications and Marketing Manager in our East of England region.







My first day

13 06 2008

My first day was on Wednesday. Officially it was Monday, but Sarah, who’s seat I’m keeping warm, didn’t start her new job until Wednesday, so was still around and handing over to me on Monday and Tuesday. How did my first day go? OK, I think. I was at a meeting, which gathers together the all the Property Managers from National Trust sites in Kent, Surrey, and the two Sussex’s.

I had in fact put most of the agenda for the meeting together, as part of my old role. We were looking at Volunteer management, with a focus on our volunteers being the main touchpoint for our visitors. The speakers were great, Mark Crosby our head of volunteering talked about volunteers managing volunteers, Julia Barker PM at Uppark talked about managing change and volunteers, and in the afternoon we had a great talk from Chris Gidlow, Head of Live Interpretation at Historic Royal Palaces, about how they manage their volunteers, employees and contractors as interpreters.