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Re: [TR] Maybe the last lunch

To: John Macartney <johnbmacartney@gmx.com>
Subject: Re: [TR] Maybe the last lunch
From: James Henningsen <trguy75@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 23 Dec 2023 14:05:47 -0500
Cc: triumphs@autox.team.net
Delivered-to: mharc@autox.team.net
Delivered-to: triumphs@autox.team.net
References: <F3A049BE-87D9-4F13-91A7-1BF15EBBA839@gmx.com>
Awesome story and one of the reasons I love triumphs. I have six and I may have 
a problem. ð???

Jim Henningsen
Ocala FL 
61 3A
67 4A
67 250 CD2L
75 TR6 (2)
81 TR8 fourth to last built 


> On Dec 23, 2023, at 10:15â?¯AM, John Macartney <johnbmacartney@gmx.com> wrote:
> 
> Jim, very many thanks for your kind words. The Sir John Black policy of 
> recruiting vets affected all services, not just the RAF in isolation. We have 
> in the UK an organisation called the Corps of Commissionaires. The Corps is 
> made up of mostly Serjeants, Colour Sergeants and Sergeants Major. They 
> provide reception services to large companies as they have their own uniforms 
> and theyâ??re always incredibly smart. We had these men at all reception 
> points throughout the company in the UK, and in accordance with the John 
> Black directive issued at the beginning of WW2, if any ex employee was later 
> re-employed through honourable discharge, their retirement age would be when 
> they wanted to leave and not at age 65.
> We had three Commissionaires in key locations in Coventry and all of them 
> were in their late seventies. They were always scrupulously polite, 
> immaculate in their uniforms and charming conversationalists. I used to talk 
> to all of them as I was able and apart from the pleasure of having a chat, it 
> was an opportunity to study their medal ribbons. All three men had won the 
> Victoria Cross, our highest award for bravery and the man who worked the 
> Sales Block reception desk had won it twice! But between all of them, anyone 
> with the knowledge of medal ribbons could see they proudly wore the Victoria 
> Cross, the Mons Star, the Distinguished Service Order, the Gallipoli medal 
> and the Military Cross, plus the various other general service and victory 
> medals aka Pipsqueak and Wilfred. All those men had done WW1 from start to 
> finish in the desert, in Greece, at sea and the horrors of trench warfare in 
> France and Belgium. They were always very quiet but never a day passed 
> without a nod of the head, a smile or a friendly greeting. The thing I 
> remember about all of them was that even after a brief conversation on any 
> subject, you parted company feeling better for having spoken to them. They 
> were true gentlemen who had somehow survived the nightmares of close quarter 
> engagement on many occasions and amazingly had not been sent mad through what 
> they had seen or done. Those are the people I remember and respect the most.
> 
> Jonmac
> 
>> On 23 Dec 2023, at 12:32, Jim Henningsen <trguy75@gmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>> John, a tip of a Bass Ale to you and all those who served.  I have always 
>> appreciated your personal stories that covered all the emotions.  Just like 
>> this one, sad as it is.  Cheers to you.  My favorite that I still share with 
>> others when they comment on how sloppy the commission plate stampings look 
>> is the one where you told us triumph standard hired disabled RAF war vets to 
>> give them a job and some of them punched those plates as best they could.  
>> To me they are perfectly imperfect!  
>> Merry Christmas to you
>> Jim Henningsen
>> Ocala, fl USA
>> 
>>>> On Dec 22, 2023, at 10:59â?¯PM, John Macartney <johnbmacartney@gmx.com> 
>>>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> For at least the last thirty years, I have attended a self-funded 
>>> Christmas lunch held in Coventry for former employees of 
>>> Standard-Triumphâ??s Home and Export Sales departments, Export Shipping, 
>>> Dealer Development, Advertising and staff from the Parts Division. These 
>>> were what anyone visiting the building known as Fletch South would have 
>>> encountered had they arrived at that location. All in all, about 250-300 
>>> people tops. My first lunch back in 1992 (Iâ??d been living overseas until 
>>> then) saw a total headcount of about 180 and over the years that followed 
>>> we always drank a toast in memory of those who had died during the previous 
>>> year or who were absent through ill health. During the pandemic and the two 
>>> lockdowns of 2020 and 2021, we didnâ??t have a Christmas lunch because of 
>>> infection risk but we do know too many people died through COVID, cancer or 
>>> just old age. Today was sobering for all of us as only 10 place settings 
>>> were at our usual table and the Memorial Toast was for 49 people who were 
>>> hale, hearty, life and soul, happy and jolly at the 2019 lunch which 
>>> everyone today also attended.
>>> It seems but only yesterday we were all together working for one objective, 
>>> young women, young men, together with many more older examples of the same. 
>>> And in a finger snap, but just a few survive and for maybe only a little 
>>> while longer? Who knows? How many place settings for the 2024 lunch? Iâ??d 
>>> rather not ponder that.
>>> 
>>> Jonmac
>>> ** triumphs@autox.team.net **
>>> 
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> 
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