Monday, 13 October 2025

Allen Memorial Boys’ High School


  Pran Nathji and Priya Nathji had studies at Hampton Court for seven years, from 1945 to 1951  but as it was only till 4th standard, they had to shift to another school for higher studies so in 1952 they enrolled at Allen Memorial Boys’ High School. The principal of the school, Reverend W.J. Biggs, who was an Englishman, unlike the rest of the Anglo Indian staff and teachers of the school. When he first Shri Nathji and Mateshwari he invited them to meet Mrs. Biggs in their home on the first floor of the office building. Both Shri Nathji and Mateshwari were struck by the absolute cleanliness and spic and span décor of their house. Shri Nathji would ever afterwards allude to Biggs house and urge people to emulate such cleanliness and order.Shi Nathji also occasionally invited Mr and Mrs. Biggs to their house for tea.  

 Reverend W.J.Biggs and his wife had developed a great fondness and respect for Shri Nathji. Biggs knew that there was nothing in Shri Nathji's teachings that opposed any religion in the world, and, he, as a Christian, found himself perfectly at home with Shri Nathji. Both Mr. and Mrs. Biggs would visit Shri Nathji's house at Savitri Nivas whenever invited by Shri Nathji and Mateshwari. Shri Nathji would lay out the dining table in the dining room very carefully on these occasions, calling for tea and pastries from Hakman’s Hotel for his English guests and engaging a waiter from the hotel to serve the tea.
 Often during prayer time in the morning school assemblies, Mr. Biggs would ask the school gathering to pray for the recovery of the ailing "wife of a loved friend." He would be referring to Mateshwari who was ill at the time.
 Both the boys had an unusual career at school. They were always at the top of the class in each monthly test, in almost all of the subjects, and first, in the final examination. This continued over the years. It was due to the unusual blessings they derived from Shri Nathji each morning they went to school; and also due to the enormous amount of hard studying they did, till late hours in the night.
 "Why do we have to study so hard to come first in the class, if Pitaji is God?" the children would innocently ask their mother. And Mateshwari would laugh: "God helps those who help themselves!"
 It was obvious that Pran Nath and Priya Nath were not going to derive any special benefits from their father's divine powers–they would have to struggle for success like any other person in the world. Shri Nathji would not be favouring his own family, in preference to the families of the world.  

 Pran Nath and Priya Nath, who had been accustomed to an atmosphere of great love and affection at home, suddenly found themselves in an environment that was hostile and frightening. The soft spoken nuns and lady teachers of Hampton court were replaced by the harsh male teachers of Allen Memorial. These teachers known as “masters” invariably carried canes in their hands and spoke in tones that were altogether imperious and commanding, giving the impression that they hated the boys that they were teaching. There was not a trace of love in them. The boys had to stand up before them and say “Sir” all the time.
 Many of the boarders in the school had become hardened by their contact with such sadistic teachers and were bullies of the worst sort. Allen Memorial had at one time been an orphanage, and the customs and traditions of the orphanage had been carried across to the school as it existed. The harshness and discipline wielded on the students made life a nightmare for them. There were instances of the masters getting carried away by their sense of power and beating the students with their canes with ruthlessness.
 Pran Nath had always been a brilliant student when he was at Hampton Court and stood at the top of his class even at Allen Memorial. However, Priya Nath had never cared to study when he was at Hampton Court, because of the lenient attitude of the lady teachers there. He had always been amongst those at the bottom of the class. However, coming face to face with the male masters of Allen so terrified him that he studied hard for the first time in his life and began topping his class in every test and every examination, thus realising the vast potential for study that existed within him.
 Mateshwari would ever afterwards say that Priya Nath had lost his jolly nature after going to Allen Memorial and had become serious and studious, and that it was a loss. Priya Nath’s humour and childish antics had filled the home with great happiness and made Shri Nathji and Mateshwari laugh in the otherwise silent atmosphere of the house.

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Wynberg-Allen School is a boarding school in Mussoorie, Uttarakhand, India, founded in 1888. It is located at Bala Hissar in Mussoorie, India. The alumni of Wynberg Allen School are known as Alwynians
Initially started as Christian Training School and Orphanage with Eugenie Catherine West (died 1895) as its first superintendent, later it was named Wynberg Homes and eventually became the Wynberg Allen School.[4] It provided education in the hills for twenty children. It was established as a Non-Conformist School though from the beginning, as far as funds permitted, no child of any denomination was refused admission. In 1894, the school moved to the present Wynberg Estate.
In 1916 the Governing Society was formed. The object of the society was to provide for and give to children, wholly or partly of European descent, an education based on Protestant Christian principles. It was a boys school  but in 1963, the school became a co-educational institution. The school further went through major renovations during the last couple of years encompassed around a vast campus of over 300 acres. This included world-class sports facilities including an indoor swimming pool, basketball courts, tennis. The school is managed by the Wynberg Homes Society, a society registered under the Societies Act of 1860, on inter-denominational lines through a Board of Management. Currently the school accommodates around 900 children.


 

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