Dr Halley Harwin Stott
Dr. Halley H Stott, founder of the Valley Trust, died peacefully at home on 13th June 2004.
He will be remembered as a man with the vision and energy to establish a socio-medical project for the promotion of health and that had such imaginative and practical approaches to nutrition and medical care that the wider development of Primary Health Care in the international community has been influenced by it’s results.
Dr Halley Stott, who qualified in medicine from Edinburgh University, pressed on to establish The Valley Trust as a registered welfare organization in 1953. He then donated the property that he had developed to the Trust and he set about raising funds to support the wider project. Meanwhile he was busy leading a clinical service to the Zulu community through the Bothas Hill Health
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He will be remembered as a man with the vision and energy to establish a socio-medical project for the promotion of health and that had such imaginative and practical approaches to nutrition and medical care that the wider development of Primary Health Care in the international community has been influenced by it’s results.
Dr Halley Stott, who qualified in medicine from Edinburgh University, pressed on to establish The Valley Trust as a registered welfare organization in 1953. He then donated the property that he had developed to the Trust and he set about raising funds to support the wider project. Meanwhile he was busy leading a clinical service to the Zulu community through the Bothas Hill Health
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Owen Clarkson
died suddenly of a heart attack on the Kearsney Campus on Friday 18 February.
He was one of the school’s most passionate and loyal old boys and his death will be deeply mourned by all his colleagues.
He will be remembered as a man of great integrity, courage, courtesy, a true sportsman in every sense of the word with a wonderful sense of humour.
He was highly respected by all of those who had the privilege of being his colleague and friend.
His father, Wally Clarkson, together with his Springbok and Natal colleagues Alf Walker and Bill Zeller were some of the original members of the "Old Crocks" formed in 1932 to play against Kearsney College.
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He was one of the school’s most passionate and loyal old boys and his death will be deeply mourned by all his colleagues.
He will be remembered as a man of great integrity, courage, courtesy, a true sportsman in every sense of the word with a wonderful sense of humour.
He was highly respected by all of those who had the privilege of being his colleague and friend.
His father, Wally Clarkson, together with his Springbok and Natal colleagues Alf Walker and Bill Zeller were some of the original members of the "Old Crocks" formed in 1932 to play against Kearsney College.
Read more