Pain, Arthur Clement

Pain, Arthur Clement[1]

Male 1913 - 2010  (96 years)      Has 23 ancestors and 16 descendants in this family tree.


 Set As Default Person    

Personal Information    |    Media    |    Notes    |    Sources    |    Event Map    |    All    |    PDF

  • Relationshipwith Living
    Birth 18 Jun 1913  Montague House, Church Street, Leatherhead, , Surrey, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    • First name(s) Arthur C
      Last name Pain
      Birth quarter 3
      Birth year 1913
      Mother's maiden name Maw
      District Epsom
      County Surrey
      Country England
      Volume 2A
      Page 74
      Record set England & Wales Births 1837-2006
      © brightsolid online publishing ltd
    Gender Male 
    Name Clement 
    Name Clement Pain 
    Occupation Teacher, Headmaster, Administrator 
    Reference Number 36 
    _UID 2B657D16375149BB8F68FAC782DC3BD2D2FE 
    Death 12 Apr 2010  1 Morris Rd, Broadway, , Worcestershire, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Address:
    1 Morris Road
    1 Morris Road, WR12 7RD WR12 7RD 
    Patriarch & Matriarch
    Pain, Clement
              b. Abt Jul 1845, Clapham,, Surrey, England Find all individuals with events at this location
              d. Between Jan and Mar 1924, District Hampstead Find all individuals with events at this location  (Grandfather) 
    Nelson, Mary
              b. 1 Aug 1818, East Retford,, Nottinghamshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location
              d. Between Oct and Dec 1893, District Marylebone Find all individuals with events at this location  (Great Grandmother) 
    Headstones Submit Headstone Photo Submit Headstone Photo 
    Person ID I20650  The Family Maw
    Last Modified 6 Jan 2023 

    Father Ancestors Pain, Dr. Basil Hewitt
              b. 17 Jan 1879, Forenta Villa, Cavendish Road, Willesden, , Middlesex, England Find all individuals with events at this location
              d. 3 Oct 1973, Meadow Cottage, Speldhurst, , Kent, England Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 94 years) 
    Mother Ancestors Maw, Sidney "Kitty" Ruth "Kitty"
              b. 16 Mar 1877, Paddington, , Middlesex, England Find all individuals with events at this location
              d. 8 Jan 1947, Ridgeways, High Trees Road, Reigate, , Surrey, England Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 69 years) 
    Marriage 20 Jun 1905  St Mary's, Kilburn, , Middlesex, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [3
    • BROWNE Charlotte Alice Hampstead 1a 1310
      MAW Sidney Ruth Hampstead 1a 1310
      Pain Basil Hewitt Hampstead 1a 1310
      WEST Frank Hampstead 1a 1310
    Age at Marriage He : 26 years and 5 months - She : 28 years and 3 months. 
    Alt. Marriage 20 Jun 1905  Kilburn, , Middlesex, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    St Mary 
    Family ID F1404  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Ancestors Mann, Cecilie Winifred
              b. 5 Nov 1913, "Bodwyn", Cheam Rd, Sutton, , , England Find all individuals with events at this location
              d. 13 May 2006, Evesham, , Worcestershire, England Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 92 years) 
    Marriage 10 Dec 1942  Namirembe Cathedral, Kampala, , Kampala, Uganda Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Age at Marriage He : 29 years and 6 months - She : 29 years and 1 month. 
    Children 2 children 
    Family ID F17721  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 25 Oct 2017 

  • Event Map Click to display
    Link to Google MapsBirth - 18 Jun 1913 - Montague House, Church Street, Leatherhead, , Surrey, England Find all individuals with events at this location Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsMarriage - 10 Dec 1942 - Namirembe Cathedral, Kampala, , Kampala, Uganda Find all individuals with events at this location Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDeath - Address:
    1 Morris Road
    1 Morris Road, WR12 7RD WR12 7RD - 12 Apr 2010 - 1 Morris Rd, Broadway, , Worcestershire, England Find all individuals with events at this location
    Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 
    Pin Legend Address Cemetery Church Parish Location Village Town City District County/Shire Province Region State Country Continent Not Set

  • Photos
    I20650 - Clement Pain
    I20650 - Clement Pain
    I20650 - Clement Pain

    Documents
    I20650 - Clement Pain
    I20650 - Clement Pain
    I20650 - Clement Pain

  • Notes 
    • Documents: Birth certificate (short version)
      Marriage certificate

      He has always been called by his second name, Clement. These notes contain only a summary of his life as he has written considerable memoirs about various aspects of his life.

      As the only son of a doctor, Clement was sent at the age of nearly 8 to board at a Preparatory School at Hook Heath near Woking, having previously been taught, alongside his sister Mary, by a governess at home. The Prep School was run by one of his mother's cousins, Reggie Maw and his wife Gertie. Five years later, he went to Sherbourne School where he was streamed into Classics which is what he ended up doing at Cambridge, although his gifts and interest really lay with Maths and sciences, which remained true throughout his life. Like Cecilie, he later changed midway from Classics to read Theology at Cambridge.

      After university, Clement offered himself to CMS as a missionary teacher and left in September 1935. He travelled by train from Mombasa to Nairobi and then on to Kampala, where he was sent to teach at King's College, Budo, the top school in Uganda. In June 1940, he was called up into the East African Forces, when Italy came into the War and had thousands of troops in Ethiopia, to serve in Kenya for 8 months. He was then sent (on 31.1.1941) to be Headmaster of Mbarara High School (MHS) in Ankole Throughout these years, he continued to correspond with Cecilie and eventually sent her a telegram in June 1941asking her to marry him, not having seen each other for 6 years. She arrived in 1942 and they married at the end of 1942 although at first they didn't see very much of each other as she was at Mwiri (Jinja) before they married and then at Buloba for another term before she was allowed to join him in Mbarara. They were married in Namirembe Cathedral, Kampala by the Bishop of Uganda, with Hugh and Peggy Trowell organising and hosting the wedding; Hugh Trowell "gave Cecilie away", and Celia Herbert and Jenny Trowell were bridesmaids. There weren't many at the wedding, and no family members. Unfortunately, everyone suffered from food poisoning as a result of the reception.

      After the honeymoon, Clement returned to MHS, where Cecilie joined him a term later.

      Letter from Clement Pain in Uganda to his family in England

      PASSION SUNDAY 11 APRIL 1943 MBARARA HIGH SCHOOL, UGANDA

      My dear Mother, Daddy, Ruth, Joan and Mary,
      Another week has gone which brings the day of our meeting nearer and nearer. We shall probably be together for Easter, but whether here or there we do not yet know. We have decided to break up on Thursday, April 22, the day before Good Friday, owing to food difficulties. There is plenty of matoke 65 miles away, but that means that it is costing us over sh60/- a week extra to feed the school. Therefore it seems rather extravagant to stay for the long Easter weekend which is all holiday. Of course it would be good to be here for Easter because many boys will not be able to have their Easter Communions in their villages. However, it cannot be helped. But whether Cecilie will be released on Maundy Thursday or will have to wait until after Easter is still uncertain. If she is not released, then I will go up there. That would be very nice as we should have Good Friday, Sat., and Easter Sun. when she would not have any work to do, so that would be nice and peaceful. I should quite like to see the place where she has been working, too. Then I would spend the two or three days after Easter in seeing the Dentist, Doctor for my annual medical examination, and another Doctor about my eyes, while she worked in the daytime, and I would sleep at Balaba.
      Last Wednesday I had to go 20 miles out in my car in order to get food. The lorry went to this place 65 miles on Monday and then broke down 51 miles away on the return journey as the battery gave up and probably dynamo trouble as well. So the school did not have full rations for Tuesday night and there was nothing for Wednesday lunch. It is lucky I have still got my car which can take 2 people and 1100 or 1200 lbs. of matoke, in all about 3/4 of a ton. Of course I have to go very slowly and carefully with such a heavy load, and I don't expect it is too good for the car. The Roman Catholic School on the next hill to ours went home yesterday, so we have managed to last longer than they have, chiefly owing to my car, I suppose.
      The rains have been good this last week, and one day we had over an inch. One of the things which have accentuated the food difficulties is of course the war. That makes trnasport difficult. There is a surplus of food in some parts, but there are not the lorries to transport it. Ankole is said by the writer of one school Geography book to be a semi desert. That may be true of the part round here, but there are fertile parts where the food is plentiful. And even in those parts where food is not plentiful there is as yet no real hardship, only there is not sufficient food over to supply our rather big needs. If the rains continue for another two months, then I think we in Ankole will be all right, although we shall have a difficult time for the next three months and we may have to have an extended holiday.
      The electric light engine continues to go well. Considering its age it is doing very well. Being British, a Lister, it is very well made and I suppose it should go on for two years or more especially if I can get it rebored. Well, I've come to the end, so very much love to you all.
      (Signed) Clement A.C.PAIN

      But he was called to Kampala in August 1943 where he spent 6 months based at Namirembe as the Educational Secretary General for Protestant Missions. He was then given a two month leave in 1944, which they mainly spent in Tanganyika, having crossed Lake Victoria on a steamer, before returning to MHS in April. Margaret was born at Mengo Hospital, Kampala 7 months later.

      Clement was an excellent HM and got to know all his pupils, visiting them in their homes throughout Ankole and occasionally beyond. With his phenomenal memory, he rememberd all their names and details for the rest of his life and was rarely caught out! He also had an amazing memory for places and roads, journeys and events. He and Cecilie left Uganda in 1954 to return to England for the benefit of Margaret's and Dennis's education, living for the first 9 years in Tunbridge Wells (144 St John's Road) to be near his family.

      He found life very hard when he tried to look for a teaching job, having been in Uganda for 19 years and having never taught in England. Eventually, he got a job teaching Art and Crafts, and then Maths, in a tough secondary modern school (Swanscombe) in Greenhithe (north Kent) which required an hour's drive each way. It was so different from teaching in Uganda that he was very unhappy. After just over two years there, he got a job in 1957 at the Royal Victoria Secondary Modern School in Tunbridge Wells, but after only one term, he was appointed by the Uganda Government as the Assistant Adviser in the Uganda Students Office, working at Uganda House in Trafalgar Square. He was responsible for placing and looking after 1500 Ugandan students who, at that time, when Uganda was still a Protectorate, were coming to the UK to study. Many of them were former students or their relatives, so he remained in close contact with Ugandan friends. He travelled all over the UK visiting them in their colleges etc.

      In 1963, he was made redundant and got a job as Secretary (=Administrator) of the Institute of Education at Durham University. At first, they lived in a residential caravan until the new house at 27 High Meadows, Shincliffe (just outside Durham) was completed.

      After 6 years in Durham, they went back to Uganda in January 1970 as he was appointed the Warden of University Hall at Makerere, Kampala. He did a wonderful job there at a very difficult time, when the university was a ferment of political dissent both before and after Amin took over from Obote in a coup in January 1971. As Amin became more and more repressive and irrational and violent, the halls of residence were frequently 'raided' by the security men who arrested students and staff, and Clement was often at the police station late at night trying to intervene and procure their release, or was hiding threatened people in his home. A number of their friends and former pupils were killed. As a very reserved, sensitive and gentle person, he found this time increasingly distressing and stressful and was perhaps on the verge of a breakdown when they went on holiday to Kenya for Christmas 1972. Whilst there, it became impossible for them to return and they had to go back to England without ever going back to their home at Makerere.

      Although they returned to their house in Shincliffe (which had been rented out), at 59-60, he was too old to get another job. So they planned to sell the house and gave notice to the tenants who were renting "Porters" to leave so that they could go and live there. It took a long legal battle to get them out, and by the time they moved in, the house (which had been converted into 3 separate dwellings) was in a terrible state, as was the 'garden' which was overgrown. They paid to have the house beautifully restored, but worked on the one acre garden themselves, gradually turning it into an extensive and very productive fruit and vegetable garden. He used the Elizabethan barn as a workshop and developed his skill and love of carpentry.

      Porters was, on the east side of Coopers Hill Road. It was originally a small detached tenement of Hathersham manor, itself a sub-manor of the manor of Nutfield. John Freeman held Porters in 1461 for an annual rental of 1s.3d. A John Porter held the adjacent land of Farnhills and Nomansland in 1528. In 1577, Nicholas Isted (aged 64) was living in it. In 1662, it became another addition to the holdings of the Clements of Kentwins.

      After 10 years at "Porters", they sold Porters and all but one of the few remaining few fields that were all that were left of the large Clement (Pain) estate which had included Kentwyns and much land near Nutfield and Blechingley in Surrey. But he held onto one lovely south-facing field on the west side of Coopers Hill Road which he passed on to his children, Margaret and Dennis. They then moved to Broadway, Worcestershire, for a more restful retirement. In a letter to Margaret written on 20 Feb 1983, following a cataract operation, he wrote: "I am a little depressed about my eye. I got my new glasses on Friday, but about a fortnight ago, the eye, which had been quite clear, got cloudy again. Consequently even with the new lens in my glasses I can't see much. For instance, I can't read this letter at all with my right eye."

      They lived at first in "Peel House", the converted Police station and house. Clement's eyesight continued to deteriorate, strating initially due to a bad cataract operation in Surrey, but then due to glaucoma and macular disease developing, until, in about 1991, he was registered blind and had to give up driving. However, he made the most of the little sight he still had and continued to be very active in the church and community and to go a woodwork class for some years. In 1993, they moved to a smaller and easier house in garden in Broadway. Although he was left with virtually no sight, his determination and memory and methodical ways enabled him to continue helping in the house and shopping etc so that few people realised that he was blind. And he could still navigate for Cecilie, who continued to drive, because of his amazing memory for routes and journeys. He also mastered basic computer techniques and learnt to touch type so that he was able to continue to write letters and to start on recording memories and parts of his life story. These are attached elsewhere.
      Documents: Birth certificate (short version)
      Marriage certificate

      He has always been called by his second name, Clement. These notes contain only a summary of his life as he has written considerable memoirs about various aspects of his life.

      As the only son of a doctor, Clement was sent at the age of nearly 8 to board at a Preparatory School at Hook Heath near Woking, having previously been taught, alongside his sister Mary, by a governess at home. The Prep School was run by one of his mother's cousins, Reggie Maw and his wife Gertie. Five years later, he went to Sherborne School where he was streamed into Classics which is what he ended up doing at Cambridge, although his gifts and interest really lay with Maths and sciences, which remained true throughout his life. Like Cecilie, he later changed midway from Classics to read Theology at Cambridge.

      After university, Clement offered himself to CMS as a missionary teacher and left in September 1935. He travelled by train from Mombasa to Nairobi and then on to Kampala, where he was sent to teach at King's College, Budo, the top school in Uganda. In June 1940, he was called up into the East African Forces, when Italy came into the War and had thousands of troops in Ethiopia, to serve in Kenya for 8 months. He was then sent (on 31.1.1941) to be Headmaster of Mbarara High School (MHS) in Ankole Throughout these years, he continued to correspond with Cecilie and eventually sent her a telegram in June 1941asking her to marry him, not having seen each other for 6 years. She arrived in 1942 and they married at the end of 1942 although at first they didn't see very much of each other as she was at Mwiri (Jinja) before they married and then at Buloba for another term before she was allowed to join him in Mbarara. They were married in Namirembe Cathedral, Kampala by the Bishop of Uganda, with Hugh and Peggy Trowell organising and hosting the wedding; Hugh Trowell "gave Cecilie away", and Celia Herbert and Jenny Trowell were bridesmaids. There weren't many at the wedding, and no family members. Unfortunately, everyone suffered from food poisoning as a result of the reception.

      After the honeymoon, Clement returned to MHS, where Cecilie joined him a term later.

      Letter from Clement Pain in Uganda to his family in England

      PASSION SUNDAY 11 APRIL 1943 MBARARA HIGH SCHOOL, UGANDA

      My dear Mother, Daddy, Ruth, Joan and Mary,
      Another week has gone which brings the day of our meeting nearer and nearer. We shall probably be together for Easter, but whether here or there we do not yet know. We have decided to break up on Thursday, April 22, the day before Good Friday, owing to food difficulties. There is plenty of matoke 65 miles away, but that means that it is costing us over sh60/- a week extra to feed the school. Therefore it seems rather extravagant to stay for the long Easter weekend which is all holiday. Of course it would be good to be here for Easter because many boys will not be able to have their Easter Communions in their villages. However, it cannot be helped. But whether Cecilie will be released on Maundy Thursday or will have to wait until after Easter is still uncertain. If she is not released, then I will go up there. That would be very nice as we should have Good Friday, Sat., and Easter Sun. when she would not have any work to do, so that would be nice and peaceful. I should quite like to see the place where she has been working, too. Then I would spend the two or three days after Easter in seeing the Dentist, Doctor for my annual medical examination, and another Doctor about my eyes, while she worked in the daytime, and I would sleep at Balaba.
      Last Wednesday I had to go 20 miles out in my car in order to get food. The lorry went to this place 65 miles on Monday and then broke down 51 miles away on the return journey as the battery gave up and probably dynamo trouble as well. So the school did not have full rations for Tuesday night and there was nothing for Wednesday lunch. It is lucky I have still got my car which can take 2 people and 1100 or 1200 lbs. of matoke, in all about 3/4 of a ton. Of course I have to go very slowly and carefully with such a heavy load, and I don't expect it is too good for the car. The Roman Catholic School on the next hill to ours went home yesterday, so we have managed to last longer than they have, chiefly owing to my car, I suppose.
      The rains have been good this last week, and one day we had over an inch. One of the things which have accentuated the food difficulties is of course the war. That makes trnasport difficult. There is a surplus of food in some parts, but there are not the lorries to transport it. Ankole is said by the writer of one school Geography book to be a semi desert. That may be true of the part round here, but there are fertile parts where the food is plentiful. And even in those parts where food is not plentiful there is as yet no real hardship, only there is not sufficient food over to supply our rather big needs. If the rains continue for another two months, then I think we in Ankole will be all right, although we shall have a difficult time for the next three months and we may have to have an extended holiday.
      The electric light engine continues to go well. Considering its age it is doing very well. Being British, a Lister, it is very well made and I suppose it should go on for two years or more especially if I can get it rebored. Well, I've come to the end, so very much love to you all.
      (Signed) Clement A.C.PAIN

      But he was called to Kampala in August 1943 where he spent 6 months based at Namirembe as the Educational Secretary General for Protestant Missions. He was then given a two month leave in 1944, which they mainly spent in Tanganyika, having crossed Lake Victoria on a steamer, before returning to MHS in April. Margaret was born at Mengo Hospital, Kampala 7 months later.

      Clement was an excellent HM and got to know all his pupils, visiting them in their homes throughout Ankole and occasionally beyond. With his phenomenal memory, he rememberd all their names and details for the rest of his life and was rarely caught out! He also had an amazing memory for places and roads, journeys and events. He and Cecilie left Uganda in 1954 to return to England for the benefit of Margaret's and Dennis's education, living for the first 9 years in Tunbridge Wells (144 St John's Road) to be near his family.

      He found life very hard when he tried to look for a teaching job, having been in Uganda for 19 years and having never taught in England. Eventually, he got a job teaching Art and Crafts, and then Maths, in a tough secondary modern school (Swanscombe) in Greenhithe (north Kent) which required an hour's drive each way. It was so different from teaching in Uganda that he was very unhappy. After just over two years there, he got a job in 1957 at the Royal Victoria Secondary Modern School in Tunbridge Wells, but after only one term, he was appointed by the Uganda Government as the Assistant Adviser in the Uganda Students Office, working at Uganda House in Trafalgar Square. He was responsible for placing and looking after 1500 Ugandan students who, at that time, when Uganda was still a Protectorate, were coming to the UK to study. Many of them were former students or their relatives, so he remained in close contact with Ugandan friends. He travelled all over the UK visiting them in their colleges etc.

      In 1963, he was made redundant and got a job as Secretary (=Administrator) of the Institute of Education at Durham University. At first, they lived in a residential caravan until the new house at 27 High Meadows, Shincliffe (just outside Durham) was completed.

      After 6 years in Durham, they went back to Uganda in January 1970 as he was appointed the Warden of University Hall at Makerere, Kampala. He did a wonderful job there at a very difficult time, when the university was a ferment of political dissent both before and after Amin took over from Obote in a coup in January 1971. As Amin became more and more repressive and irrational and violent, the halls of residence were frequently 'raided' by the security men who arrested students and staff, and Clement was often at the police station late at night trying to intervene and procure their release, or was hiding threatened people in his home. A number of their friends and former pupils were killed. As a very reserved, sensitive and gentle person, he found this time increasingly distressing and stressful and was perhaps on the verge of a breakdown when they went on holiday to Kenya for Christmas 1972. Whilst there, it became impossible for them to return and they had to go back to England without ever going back to their home at Makerere.

      Although they returned to their house in Shincliffe (which had been rented out), at 59-60, he was too old to get another job. So they planned to sell the house and gave notice to the tenants who were renting "Porters" to leave so that they could go and live there. It took a long legal battle to get them out, and by the time they moved in, the house (which had been converted into 3 separate dwellings) was in a terrible state, as was the 'garden' which was overgrown. They paid to have the house beautifully restored, but worked on the one acre garden themselves, gradually turning it into an extensive and very productive fruit and vegetable garden. He used the Elizabethan barn as a workshop and developed his skill and love of carpentry.

      Porters was, on the east side of Coopers Hill Road. It was originally a small detached tenement of Hathersham manor, itself a sub-manor of the manor of Nutfield. John Freeman held Porters in 1461 for an annual rental of 1s.3d. A John Porter held the adjacent land of Farnhills and Nomansland in 1528. In 1577, Nicholas Isted (aged 64) was living in it. In 1662, it became another addition to the holdings of the Clements of Kentwins.

      After 10 years at "Porters", they sold Porters and all but one of the few remaining few fields that were all that were left of the large Clement (Pain) estate which had included Kentwyns and much land near Nutfield and Blechingley in Surrey. But he held onto one lovely south-facing field on the west side of Coopers Hill Road which he passed on to his children, Margaret and Dennis. They then moved to Broadway, Worcestershire, for a more restful retirement. In a letter to Margaret written on 20 Feb 1983, following a cataract operation, he wrote: "I am a little depressed about my eye. I got my new glasses on Friday, but about a fortnight ago, the eye, which had been quite clear, got cloudy again. Consequently even with the new lens in my glasses I can't see much. For instance, I can't read this letter at all with my right eye."

      They lived at first in "Peel House", the converted Police station and house. Clement's eyesight continued to deteriorate, strating initially due to a bad cataract operation in Surrey, but then due to glaucoma and macular disease developing, until, in about 1991, he was registered blind and had to give up driving. However, he made the most of the little sight he still had and continued to be very active in the church and community and to go a woodwork class for some years. In 1993, they moved to a smaller and easier house in garden in Broadway. Although he was left with virtually no sight, his determination and memory and methodical ways enabled him to continue helping in the house and shopping etc so that few people realised that he was blind. And he could still navigate for Cecilie, who continued to drive, because of his amazing memory for routes and journeys. He also mastered basic computer techniques and learnt to touch type so that he was able to continue to write letters and to start on recording memories and parts of his life story. These are attached elsewhere.

  • Sources 
    1. [S467] Margaret Ruth Pain, Margaret Ruth Pain.

    2. [S118] England and Wales, Civil Registration Index: 1837-1983, (FreeBMD. England and Wales, Civil Registration Index: 1837-1983. [database online] Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 2001. Original data: Microfilm and microfiche of the England and Wales, Civil Registration Indexes created by the General Register Office, in London, England.), GRO Reference - District Epsom - Volume 2a Page 74 (Reliability: 3).

    3. [S118] England and Wales, Civil Registration Index: 1837-1983, (FreeBMD. England and Wales, Civil Registration Index: 1837-1983. [database online] Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 2001. Original data: Microfilm and microfiche of the England and Wales, Civil Registration Indexes created by the General Register Office, in London, England.), GRO Reference - District Hampstead - Volume 1a Page 1310 (Reliability: 3).