THSCameron Talbot |
Tewkesbury Historical Society |
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Thomas
Cameron Boyle Talbot, ‘Cam’ to
family and close friends, a founder member of our Society, died in June 2001,
aged 79. He was born in Gorey, Co. Wexford, the son of the Rev.
Thomas Talbot and Mrs. Constance Talbot (née Lyster). His father was Archdeacon
Talbot, of Ferns, of the Church of Ireland. His mother died when he was young
and he was educated at Campbell College, Belfast, and later studied Engineering
at Trinity College, Dublin and Queen’s University, Belfast. However, World War
II intervened and he left before completing his degree to join the R.A.F.,
training in electronics. He worked in Radar, serving mainly in the Middle East,
especially in Egypt.
After
the war he did not resume formal education but joined the electronics industry
in design and, later, administration. He worked for Bush Radio in Plymouth
before setting up his own firm, Orbit Controls, in Cheltenham in 1968, which
specialised in control instrumentation. He sold his business, retiring to
Eckington in 1985.
At
last, he had time to spread his multiple talents into other fields. His
interests had always been wide: Music -
his wife Marion says that he really wanted to be an operatic tenor:
Literature,
in which he always read widely; a keen crossword solver, he then took up Bridge.
Although he was a great family man and always enjoyed a party, it is sad that he
never saw his first great-granddaughter, born in October.
His
interest in History came late. It began, as so often, in a study of his family
tree which proved difficult as so many of the Irish records were destroyed in
the 'Troubles' of the 20’s. An appeal for help from the Worcester
Records Office got him more directly involved. Finding he could not read old
documents he attended a course at Bromsgrove, and some years later, a course in
Medieval Latin. He subsequently transcribed many Eckington wills.
In
1990 he saw our notice about starting a Society and was involved from the start.
He was a committee man and Research Coordinator. He involved me in sharing in
his research, resulting in two volumes of Tewkesbury Wills. He
insisted on putting my name first, although he did most of the work recording
the wills on disk and binding the books. He acquired a word processor in 1990
and a computer in 1997. As late as 2000, he attended a computer course.
Marion
and he devised their own Millennium Project, to drive round the complete
coastline of Great Britain, doing it in sections. They were within a few days of
completion when he was taken suddenly ill at Loch Carron and died soon
afterwards in Inverness. On the day of his attack, they had visited the Ian
Cameron Museum!
His
wide and scholarly interest in History can be appreciated from his contributions
to this Bulletin. Had the Woodard Award been available in the
early years then his elegant style and original research would have surely won
the prize. His articles include Wills, The Capell Family
in the seventeenth century, Dora Bland mistress of William IV,
The Cotswold Tobacco Industry, Early Tewkesbury Freemen and
finally Dudley Digges. This
article, I have been privileged to complete: truly a labour of love and respect!
Dudley
Digges was a remarkable man
of many interests and accomplishments. So too was Cameron. He will
be sadly missed.
Bill
Rennison
This obituary was published in Volume 11, 2002 page 3
Copies of the two volumes
of Tewkesbury Wills can be consulted at the Town Library and they
have also been entered, thanks to Cameron’s computer expertise, to the Woodard
Database.
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