Radstock Museum pays tribute to Dr Nicolas Hall , A True Gentleman

By Susie Watkins

21st Jun 2021 | Local News

Dr Nicolas Hall, A True Gentleman

It is with great sorrow that the Trustees, Volunteers and Manager of Radstock Museum announce the passing of their Chairman, Dr Nicolas Hall. Nick, as he preferred to be called, died peacefully at home on Tuesday 15th June 2021 after a short illness and the truly heartfelt thoughts of everyone involved with the Museum are with Nick's wife Kitty, also a dedicated Museum volunteer, and his family.

Nick volunteered at Radstock Museum as a steward before becoming a Trustee in 2012 and Chairman in 2014. He was a very popular Chairman with all the volunteers; he was always good humoured, a great listener, a keen supporter of new ideas and a superb leader of the Museum team.

When he took over as Chair the world outside the Museum was changing with many of the original Museum founders and former coal miners moving on or passing away. New technologies and ideas were helping to keep other local and national museums relevant for the next generation. Nick realised the Museum needed a refresh and a rebrand so that it would remain attractive to returning and traditional visitors, whilst becoming a destination for a wider, all-inclusive and ever-changing audience. The new name of "Somerset Coalfield Life at Radstock Museum" was aimed at giving the public a better understanding of what they might encounter on visiting, which is the story of the everyday life of all those who lived and worked in the Somerset Coalfield in its heyday.

With the new name in place, Nick worked hard with the Museum team, including employing a dedicated, temporary Development Coordinator, to improve the displays by making them more interactive and 'hands on'. On one occasion this led him to giving a temporary home to Trigger the horse (a fibreglass horse on a long-term loan to the Museum from the Oasis Carnival Club). The horse needed repairs, a repaint and a new mane and tail. And so it lived for many months in Nick's garage while the work was carried out! Trigger now stands centre stage in the Museum pulling the Co-op bread van and really bringing to life the Victorian street scene on the ground floor.

Nick embraced working with partners in the community and one very successful project was with Bath (formerly Radstock Technical) College where he supported students with developing the 'Virtual Reality Coal Mine Experience' for the Museum that has become a very popular attraction for children, teenagers and adults alike. He also worked with local solicitors Thatcher and Hallam on various projects that would attract more visitors. One in particular was the production of a voucher given out to all visitors offering a discounted price for a Will. Working with the Alzheimer's Society Nick instigated dementia training which encouraged many volunteers to become 'Dementia Friends'. Just before the pandemic he was working on projects with John Turner, CEO of Visit Somerset, for the Museum to be a welcoming destination for the LGBTQ+ community and to bring Chinese tourists from Bath to the Museum as part of regular day trips to Wells.

Perhaps one of the most challenging projects Nick supported was to turn the entire upstairs of the Museum into a theatre for a week complete with set, lighting and sound rig plus audience seating, with the downstairs converted into a backstage changing room for the huge cast and the theatre foyer and bar; this was so that a local youth theatre company could stage a sell-out play for the community to commemorate the centenary of the end of WW1 in November 2018. Black Hound Productions Theatre Company wrote the play about a local Somerset Coalfield family, which followed their lives throughout the war years tackling issues such as women's rights, post-traumatic stress disorder and the grief of families losing sons in the trenches. The powerful production brought tears to the eyes of practically all who watched and was a great success for the Museum. Nick with his 'can-do, nothing is impossible' attitude managed to persuade the Trustees to wholeheartedly support closing the Museum for a week to stage the event, a gamble that paid off.

In 2019 Nick's plans to hold community cafés for local people came to fruition. During the mornings when the Museum was closed to the public, the tearoom provided a venue for cafés for people with memory loss and their carers, for local history cafés, and for a café for veterans in conjunction with the Royal British Legion. These proved to be a great success and it is hoped that they will resume either later this year or early next year once Covid restrictions allow.

Jill Webb, Head of Education at the Museum, said: "Nick gave the Education Team a great deal of support, he was always ready to listen and act as a sounding board to some quite wacky ideas. With some discussion and a few tweaks, we were always able to achieve what we set out to do and most importantly, nothing was ever dismissed as being impossible. He will be remembered for his kindness and unfailing good humour."

Linda Hughes, Head of Catering and an Education Team volunteer added: "The Museum's children's activities, especially the Victorian and Edwardian Christmas events, became a 'must attend' outing for many families in the local area; the fact that this was achievable was very much down to Nick's support. At these events Nick would be master of ceremonies, directing families to activities dressed as a Victorian school master or in his stripy blazer and straw boater at the Victorian seaside events, always with a smile on his face and a twinkle in his eye."

Nick was also passionate about the more serious, informative side of the Museum and worked with the exhibition team for many years producing well researched and exquisitely presented exhibitions with artefacts. He was instrumental in modernising the upstairs exhibition area in which one of his mini exhibitions on the Spanish flu pandemic is currently on display. Some exhibition posters he completed earlierthis year, commemorating the 1921 coal strikeand other key events, will be on display from early July until theend of November.

Nick greatly respected the former colliery workers and miners whose story the Museum tells. Their numbers are dwindling as the years go by, but every year Nick and his wife Kitty helped run the annual miner's reunion. Julie Dexter, Editor of the Museum's history journal Five Arches and organiser of the reunion said: "My lasting memory of Nick will be at the miners' reunions where he would always just get on with whatever needed doing, which was usually the washing up. I will never forget him quietly behind the scenes in the kitchen, washing up, drying up, making pots of tea, pouring glasses of ale, or wiping down the tables after the miners' lunch. He will be missed terribly."

Simon Carter, Acting Chairman, Museum Trustee and Head of Documentation said: "Nick was always very enthusiastic about everything that concerned the Museum. Often, he would appear on a Tuesday morning when the Documentation Team was in full swing. His choice of shirts (particularly in summer) usually gave him away even before he came into view. Loud and colourful."

Museum Manager Nick Turner said: "Nick made a huge impact on the Museum on so many levels and in so many ways with his positivity, his enthusiasm, his energy and his friendly, encouraging and supportive approach. He will be greatly missed."

Jos Binns, Museum Treasurer, said: "Nick was a man of many shirts, mostly of a tropical variety which were best viewed through sunglasses.He was able to extract money for the Museum from a large number of grant-giving bodies by a mixture of charm and determination; it was a bit like mugging, but no violence was ever threatened. He had an encyclopaedic knowledge of railways and could probablytell you the name of every engine which had ever travelled past the Museum, and ho was driving it. Right up until just before he died he was working on converting model rolling stock for use on the Museum's railway layout. I will miss him both professionally and also as a good friend."

Head of Science in Radstock and former Museum Chairman Clem Maidment said: "In 2013, Nick did sterling and vital work in the production ofDocumentation, including aForward Plan, for accrediting the Museum with the Arts Council.I recall he gave two interesting talks for Science in Radstock, the first on Rheumatoid Arthritis in April 2012 and another on Drug Developments in November 2016.The news is a tragic event for his family, we deeply feel for them and a sad loss for the Museum."

Anny Northcote, Head of Research said: "Nick was committed to making the Museum a place where visitors of all ages could have a good time whether at an event, an informative session or even a browse through the collection on a cold afternoon, when the buffet he so liked beckoned with a cup of tea and a cake (maybe was the main reason for the visit!). His commitment to research was laudable and I will miss the discussions we had when trying to unravel an enquiry by finding a missing piece of the jigsaw."

Janette Stock, Outside Events Coordinator and organiser of the Museum's annual quiz night said: "Nick always marked the quiz rounds and totted up the scores on quiz nights, he sat concentrating for hours on the task surrounded by the hubbub of the quizzers, the buffet and the raffle all around him and never made a mistake. We will all miss him very much. "

Lucy Tudor, Head of Museum Publicity said: "The last time I saw Nick was earlier this year when the Radstock heritage boards, which we worked on together, were put into place in the town. It was a beautiful, sunny day and Nick looked so well and happy and was raring to get back to museum business as soon as lockdown was over. We chatted and laughed and had our photo taken by the boards (socially distanced of course) and I am so glad he was able to see our work complete and in situ. I will miss him terribly."

Every one of the Museum volunteers has fond thoughts and memories of Nick, too many to add in here, but essentially the message from all your Museum colleagues Nick, is this, "Thank you so much for the fun and laughter, the kind empathy and support, the passion and enthusiasm, the new and innovative ideas and for being the father of the Museum family and a true gentleman. We will miss you so much."

The Museum plans to have some form of lasting memorial to Dr Nicolas Hall within the Museum and will shortly begin to consider what that might be.

Lucy Tudor

     

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