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Thomas Moscrop What better choice of a successor could there have been. Many an Old Boy Will echo the sentiments of one who sat at his feet.
He was a great thinker and a very able writer. He was equally happy in the pulpit and in the lecture room. He possessed considerable administrative ability and organizing skill. His was one of the most comprehensive intellects and he was with all very warm-hearted and brotherly. He was, of course, one of the greatest Principals that Wesley College has had. In everything he did conscientiousness was the dominant note. To him shoddy work was abhorrent. For every hours work in College he put in twice as much time in preparation: and on his Sunday sermons he worked diligently from Monday morning till Saturday evening; and no wonder that his sermons were' gems of purest ray serene. Every week saw a steady improvement in the quality of his pulpit utterances. What a rebuke to our slipshod methods of work "The Utmost for the Highest" is what is expected from young and old alike. House Master : |