Councillor
Don
Fisher
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Photo:
Courtesy Bourne Local
Councillor
Fisher at the mayoral installation ceremony at Bourne Town hall on
Tuesday 19th May 1998 with the outgoing mayor, Councillor Shirley
Cliffe. |
There are few people
in Bourne who do not know of Don Fisher. He has devoted more than a quarter of a century to the affairs of this town and his is a familiar face in our streets, having been mayor twice and holding office with innumerable organisations devoted to the welfare of its citizens. But Bourne is his home only by chance although his roots in administration and what he calls "a commitment to the cause" go back to his boyhood years in the north of England and a willingness to serve that has never left him.
Donald Fisher was born on 11th September 1933 at Woodlands, Doncaster, South Yorkshire, the son of electrician Elijah Fisher and his wife Mabel, who came from a prominent railway family. His was a middle class childhood and he was fortunate to obtain a place at the Woodlands Secondary School, the equivalent of today's grammar school, where he revelled in social history which gave him his first taste of organisation because he soon became secretary of the Field Club, a group devoted to the closer study of a subject that was to become a lifelong passion.
On leaving school at the age of 16, he enrolled as a cadet with the West Riding Constabulary and a career with the police force beckoned but he found the army a more attractive option and in 1951 at the age of 17½, enlisted as a regular soldier and was sent to the guards' depot at Caterham in Surrey for basic training before being posted to the Coldstream Guards at Wellington Barracks, next to Buckingham Palace in London, where most of their ceremonial duties were carried out.
He served with the colours for 15 years and his military career took him to many parts of the world. While based at Krefeld in Germany, there was a young subaltern in his battalion called Lord Bingham who later became notorious as the missing Earl of Lucan. Said Don: "I got to know him quite well and found him to be a very quiet chap and although I'm convinced that he is now dead, I cannot believe for one moment that he ever murdered anyone not unless perhaps it was in a fit of rage. He was just too gentle to be that violent."
Don was subsequently posted to Templar Barracks in Nairobi where he was involved in the changeover of Kenya from a British colony to an independent nation in 1964. From there he went to Aden where he saw action in which he lost several of his colleagues while others were wounded. He was seconded on detachment from his regiment to the Trucial Oman Scouts, part of the ruler's national army in the Arabian oil state, and although still a colour sergeant, he became acting governor of the prison in
Sharjah, a small centre with 20 or so prisoners, where he stayed on active service for two years before taking the troopship back home to England with the ribbon of the General Service Medal on his chest. He returned to Wellington Barracks and duties of an administrative and less exciting nature although he did take part in
four
Trooping of the Colour ceremonies in Horse Guards Parade.

|
A
portrait of Don in his uniform
of
the Trucial
Oman
Scouts, oil on board,
painted
by his father
Elijah
Fisher
in
1974. |
His career came to a crossroads in 1967 and he took the route that led him to Bourne. Don's younger sister Eunice was studying at York University and while visiting her he met Celia Rodgers, a former pupil of Bourne Grammar School and the girl with whom she was sharing a flat. They hit it off but decided that the army was not the place for a wife and so he applied for discharge. Celia graduated with a BA degree in English Literature and in 1968 they married and moved to London, living first in Kensington and then in Uxbridge, he working as a manager for Lilley and Skinner in Harrow Road, London, and she for the Civil Service.
But the marriage was not to last and they were divorced after four years. There were no children from the partnership but because of it, Don became acquainted with Celia's family, well known in Bourne for their butchery and farming interests, and it was during one visit that he had a chance meeting in the street with Eric Cross, the furniture dealer who was then building his warehouse store in Manning Road, now occupied by Anglia Furnishings. He asked Don if he would like the job of manager, the offer was accepted and in 1972, Bourne became his future home.
He never remarried but devoted his energies to the community which became his consuming interest and four years later he was elected to Bourne Town Council, representing the old Dyke and Twenty ward, since absorbed into the East Ward, and has remained a town councillor ever since, serving his first spell as mayor from 1983-84 and again 1998-99.
He is an ardent royalist and one of the most vivid of his early memories was on his birthday in September 1948 when the King and Queen visited Doncaster to see the famous St Leger race. The town had turned out to line the streets for even a fleeting glimpse of the Royal couple but 15-year-old Don was allowed to stand near to the entrance of the Mansion House with a group of other children and as she passed, the Queen, later the Queen Mother, turned smiling to wave at the party. "I was so thrilled that I could barely speak for the rest of the day", he recalled later. Then, while serving in the army, he came into close contact with the Royal Family several times and actually met the Queen Mother in person. "But nothing was quite the same as the first time I saw her", he said. In 1985, he was honoured with an invitation to attend one of the annual garden parties at Buckingham Palace and stayed as a guest with his former regiment, the Coldstream Guards, at Wellington Barracks. No one in Bourne therefore was better qualified to mastermind
Bourne's Silver Jubilee celebrations in the summer of 1977 and he was also the first to sign the Book of Remembrance opened at the Town Hall after the Queen Mother died in March 2002.
His politics have been conservative and he has been a member of South Kesteven District Council since 1979 and served on Lincolnshire County Council from 1981-89. But his first love is with the Town Council where politics play little part. "Our business is conducted far quicker without such complications", he said. "But politics do not matter at this level. I strongly believe that the Local Government Act of 1974 took far too many powers away from the immediacy of the parishes in the small towns and placed them in distant organisations in far away places and that cannot be right."
Don has been involved in numerous other organisations. He remains a member of the Coldstream Guard Association and the Royal British Legion, serving as chairman of the Bourne branch
from 1996-2001 when he received one of the legion's highest awards, the Gold Badge, together with several certificates of appreciation for his work. He was a founder member of the Civic Society in 1978 and its chairman from 1994-96.
One of his main interests remains the village of Twenty where he served as secretary of the
village hall management committee since 1977, a job he took for just six months but held office for 21 years and has served for a similar period on the village hall management committee at Dyke. He is a tireless worker for charity and since 1989, has been a member of Bourne United Charities, serving for a period as chairman of the organisation which he considers to be one of the most important in Bourne.

Photo:
Courtesy Bourne Local |
Councillor Fisher,
when Mayor of Bourne, officially opened the closed circuit
television (CCTV) facility for the town at the police control
headquarters in Grantham on Thursday 22nd October 1998. The system
involved the installation of surveillance cameras at various
vantage points around Bourne in a bid to reduce crime. |
Don's other interests include education. He served as a governor of Bourne Grammar School for ten years and is presently the longest serving governor of the Robert Manning Technology College as well as being on the board of the Abbey Road Primary School (since 1981) and of Morton Primary and the Willoughby Special Schools. He is also a committee member of the South Lincolnshire Branch of the Alzheimer Disease Society and has been chairman of the Kesteven Museums Panel (1985-89), former secretary of Age Concern in Bourne, an organiser of the Bourne Evergreen Club, during which time he arranged meals for the elderly, and vice chairman of the Bourne branch of Disability Links. Said Don: "I have always felt it extremely important to become involved with these organisations if you want to do something positive for the town." He has also been an active supporter of the Bourne Outdoor swimming pool, sitting on the trust committee, and has been a co-opted member of the Bourne Chamber of Trade and Commerce.
He is also a local historian of some repute and has traced the antecedents of many prominent Bourne families, keeping a large archive of photographs, documents and mementos relating to the town and its past residents, while his history of the village of Twenty, published to mark the millennium in the summer of 2000, was sold out.
Don retired in 1995 but this merely released him to give more time to his community work. His former wife's grandfather Harry Barnatt, a member of the Bourne milling family and a well-known local character, died in
1977 and left his only child Mrs Kath Rodgers, Don's mother-in-law, the house in West Road, appropriately called Barnatt House, that subsequently passed to him and is now his present home. Don suffered a stroke in 2001 but this has failed to dampen either his spirit or his enthusiasm for public work and although less mobile than he was, he continues to attend all meetings and
keep all appointments. His commitment to public service is undiminished and although he refuses to discuss personal involvement, he is known to provide practical as well as advisory help and more than one person or organisation in Bourne has been known to say: "Don Fisher has been very good to us."
His life since moving to Bourne has been one of dedication to public service. He explained: "I love Bourne. It has so much character and I will always fight to preserve things like the church and the Red Hall. It is institutions such as this that are the very essence of our town and must be protected at all costs. I think that in finding this place to live, almost by accident, I made a very fortunate choice."
Many will agree that this fortuitous circumstance has also been of great benefit to the people of Bourne who have taken Don Fisher to their hearts.
WRITTEN JUNE 2002
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