reproduced by courtesy of Richard
Moore
T Drummond
Hunter
Born: 22 December, 1918, in Cumnock, Ayrshire
Died: 13 April, 2002, in Edinburgh, aged 83
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RICHARD MOORE
DRUMMOND Hunter was
"a big man: in build, in spirit and in life", a creative,
imaginative, always positive thinker, and an energetic campaigner. After his
sudden death, the family found a diary full of engagements and commitments to
the many organisations with which he was connected. His loss will be keenly
felt over the coming months, with countless meetings and social occasions set
to be deprived of a lively and engaging presence, and a vigorous contributor.
Equally, the letters pages of so many newspapers and publications will not
seem the same without their regular missives signed either by "TD"
or "Drummond Hunter".
But the greatest sense of loss will be felt by his family and his friends.
This was hardly an exclusive club. He was, above all, a humanitarian,
believing sincerely and deeply in, as he might have put it, the infinite
potential of people. "There are no strangers," he would often say,
"only friends who haven’t yet met."
Drummond Hunter was born in Cumnock, one of eight children. He shone
academically and was offered a scholarship to George Watson’s, in Edinburgh,
where he became joint dux in 1936. Another scholarship followed, this time to
Oxford University, but he was reluctant to place a financial burden on his
family and felt unable to take his place at Balliol College.
Instead, he chose Edinburgh, where he studied History and Law, until his
university career was interrupted by the outbreak of war. After serving in the
OTC Glencorse he travelled to Hong Kong with the Royal Scots in 1939.
In a remarkable life, it was this time in Hong Kong that would provide the
most extraordinary, harrowing, and possibly formative, experiences. Not least
among these on the positive side, in the summer of 1941, was his first meeting
with his future wife, Peggie.
In December, when the Japanese attacked Hong Kong with overwhelming force,
Drummond was wounded and reunited with Peggie, a volunteer nurse at the
British Military Hospital. Then, on 24 December, while being transferred to
another hospital, he suffered a broken back when his ambulance crashed during
an air raid. Again, he was reunited with Peggie, and on Christmas Day, 1941,
an hour after the surrender to the Japanese, the couple were married in a
ceremony witnessed by five people and celebrated with some Christmas cake and
the only bottle of Champagne in the hospital.
But their hopes that marriage might keep them together were in vain. As
prisoners of war, they spent three years apart. Drummond was held in the
Shanshuipo internment camp, an ordeal that took an obvious physical toll, his
6ft 4in frame reduced to just eight stone.
The experience also left a psychological mark, though he hardly ever spoke of
his experiences as a PoW. He might reasonably have argued that the effects
were positive, for he resolved not to be a passive member of society, but to
set about actively changing it for the better. And until his death this
fuelled a consuming desire to inspire institutional reform, most notably in
hospitals and prisons, when he judged them to be inhumane, ineffective and
counter-productive.
Towards his Japanese captors, he felt no bitterness. Last month, on the TV
series, The Real Tartan Army, he said: "You have to forgive, because
hatred corrodes you."
Drummond and Peggie were reunited in 1945 and returned to Scotland, settling
in Edinburgh, where Drummond was able to complete his law degree. He served
his apprenticeship with Dundas and Wilson, then joined Blair and Cadell,
before, in 1954, leaving the profession to become secretary and treasurer of
the Royal Edinburgh Hospital Group.
There was a big job to be done, and his first priority was to improve living
conditions for the patients and thus to restore their dignity. As a manager,
he was charismatic but kind, and a non-conformist, willing to take risks that
could benefit the patients, and always challenging traditional hierarchical
structures - in this respect he has been called a "responsible
schemer" - believing in consensus management techniques that today are
more widely accepted.
Typical of his unorthodox approach was his collaboration with well-known
artists in establishing "one of the finest art galleries in
Edinburgh" at the hospital. This was open to the public on several
occasions each year. A former colleague recalls: "The artists were happy
(they sold a few paintings), members of the public began to see the hospital
in a different light, and the hospital staff were encouraged by seeing the
walls of prejudice begin to tumble." Using art, again, he occasionally
opened the hospital as a concert and theatre venue, staging a controversial
Fringe production by Francis Warner.
In 1974 he left the Royal Edinburgh Hospital to become the first secretary to
the Scottish Health Service Planning Council. Throughout his career in the NHS
he published extensively and authoritatively on the organisation and
management of the Health Service. Present preoccupations with effective policy
implementation, devolution of decision-making, and encouraging innovation were
all issues Drummond Hunter felt passionately about as a senior NHS manager
more than 40 years ago.
Then, in two decades of so-called "retirement", Drummond’s impact
on the voluntary sector was perhaps equally significant. He was an active
member, invariably a leading light, in the Scottish Institute of Human
Relations, Scottish Council on Disability, SACRO, Howard League for Penal
Reform, Penumbra, the Child Psychotherapy Trust, the Sutherland Trust and Art
Extraordinaire. He was also a trustee of the Rudolf Steiner School and an
enthusiastic member of the Royal Scots Club and the Carlyle Society. Another
cause he led in recent years was the struggle for ex-gratia payments for
prisoners of war.
At the age of 80 he provided both the vision and driving force for the
creation of the Scottish Consortium on Crime and Criminal Justice, bringing
together the main voluntary groups and academics working in the youth and
criminal justice fields. To honour his contribution, the Consortium has
announced plans to establish an annual Drummond Hunter Memorial Lecture.
Beyond his sincere and deeply held beliefs and ideals, Drummond loved hearing
and telling jokes and regaling his audience with a well-selected quotation or,
indeed, some of his own recollections or wise words. Always a rationalist, he
was able to see the positive in any situation and he felt an affinity towards
life’s underdogs, as well as the desire to speak up on others’ behalf. He
was a practical idealist, a thinker and a doer, or, as one former colleague
put it, "tall enough to have his head in the clouds, but always with his
feet planted firmly in the ground".
In 1998, seven months before Peggie’s death, Drummond Hunter was appointed
OBE, for services to the community in Scotland. He was devoted to his family
and is survived by his children, Katherine, David and Stephen and eight
grandchildren.
May 2002
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