Harrogate composer commemorated in new book about impact of war on school

A Harrogate composer is among those commemorated in new book about impact of war on a school community
Composer Ernest Farrar.Composer Ernest Farrar.
Composer Ernest Farrar.

Composer Ernest Farrar’s musical promise was tragically cut short at the age of 33, two months after he had conducted his last orchestral performance in Harrogate.

In September 1918, only a matter of weeks before the Armistice, Farrar was killed by machine gun fire as he led his men of the 3rd Battalion, Devonshire Regiment, in the Battle of Epéhy Ronssoy.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Farrar was one of 130 LGS old boys who lost their lives in World War One. His last completed work was Heroic Elegy (for Soldiers), which he conducted in Harrogate in the July before his death.

John G Davies, author of A High Ideal: Leeds Grammar School and the Great War.John G Davies, author of A High Ideal: Leeds Grammar School and the Great War.
John G Davies, author of A High Ideal: Leeds Grammar School and the Great War.

He left a significant body of work including works for orchestra, organ pieces, and choral music both sacred and secular, and undoubtedly would have made a great name for himself had he lived.

Farrar was an old boy of Leeds Grammar School (LGS), and his story is one of a number commemorated in a new book published to coincide with the centenary of the war. A High Ideal: Leeds Grammar School and the Great War by John G Davies, historian and school archivist, records the contributions of 776 old boys and staff members involved in the conflict and explores how the school was affected during and after the war.

John said: “With the centenary of World War One there was an obligation on the school to recognise those former pupils who served, and those who lost their lives. It became a labour of love to record their stories as the period is a particular fascination of mine, and I hope this book will help to keep their memory alive in school.”

Related topics: