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David Briggs (English Headmaster)


John Davidson Briggs (born 1917) (known as David Briggs), is a former Headmaster of King's College School, Cambridge.

He was born in Norwich, England, son of Canon George Wallace Briggs and Constance Barrow. One of his godfathers was the Archbishop of Canterbury Randall Davidson. He sang in King’s College Choir both as a chorister, from 1927 to 1931, and as a choral scholar, from 1936 to 1939. He attended Marlborough College as a Foundation scholar, and then studied classics and history at King's College, Cambridge, where he held simultaneously an academic exhibition and a choral scholarship.

He sang in the first broadcast Christmas Eve carol service from King’s College Chapel in 1928, and continues to sing in a church choir. He was interviewed by Mishal Husain in A Celebration of Christmas Carols broadcast on BBC Radio 2 on 25 December 2013, making his broadcasting career span 85 years. He was again interviewed on the BBC Today programme on 24 December 2015 in which Briggs, aged 98, believes he is the last survivor of the 1928 choir.

In 1940 he married Catherine Mary Lormer, a mathematics teacher whose students would include Sir Andrew Wiles who later proved Fermat’s Last Theorem and Sir Timothy Gowers, Rouse Ball Professor at Cambridge. Their children are Johnny, who farms in Wales, Andrew, Professor of Nanomaterials at Oxford, Catherine, who teaches the visually impaired, and Anne Atkins, writer and broadcaster.

As a conscientious objector Briggs was drafted into the Pay Corps, a job which he disliked intensely and his father negotiated him a transfer into the Medical Corps. However, it became a requirement that members of the Medical Corps had to bear arms, an order which he refused to obey on the grounds that he would not bear arms that he would not use, and faced the possibility of court-martial, but this was withdrawn after the order was found to be against the Geneva Convention, and for the rest of the war he continued as a corporal, being ineligible for promotion or decoration as a conscientious objector. In early June 2014 Briggs movingly recalled some of his experiences from this time in a radio interview given in a brief BBC D-Day anniversary presentation. While in the Medical Corps he formed and conducted an a cappella choir.


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