From Scientist to Silversmith
......... Ron Hutton
I was always interested in science, and it was chemistry that attracted me
to University at Manchester, UK,
where I obtained a first class honours B.Sc, and entered industry. After 5
years in research, I developed a new synthetic process that my company
patented and licensed, for a substantial fee. I was able to write up the
work as an external degree and was awarded an M.Sc. As a reward, the
company proposed that I return full time to University, on full pay, to
obtain a Ph.D. This I did, and graduated in 1966, returning to my company
as Research Manager, aged 26. I got married in the middle of my Ph.D, and
my new wife, Margaret spent her time typing my thesis, while I laboured in
another room writing it. We had met 5 years before, and my wife came from
Scotland, whilst I lived 300 miles away in England, so it was a long
distance courtship!.
In 1970’s, I was promoted to Research Center Manager, and developed
another new process for a new
product, used to process plastics. The route was of academic interest
also, and I was invited to lecture on it in Moscow and New York. Later, I
managed other Research Centers in the UK and in the USA, and over my
research career, filed around 20 worldwide patents, and published a large
number of papers in scientific journals.
Our first child, Neil, was born in 1967, Eric was born in 1969 and our
daughter Sharon was born in1973.
We lived in a town called Southport on the West coast of England. A very
pleasant place, with a long beach and sandhills for the children to play
in, the largest man made boating lake in Europe and a famous shopping
parade of shops known as Lord Street. This is a wide boulevard, with
sophisticated shops, nice restaurants and lined with trees either side. It
runs parallel to the Promenade.
By 1987, I was Assistant Director of Research at a Research Center in
Illinois, and wished to return to
the UK. The company offered me the position of Site Director of a large
chemical factory in the south of
England, covering 18 acres of chemical plant and employing 180 people at
that time. I was made a UK Director, and became a Trustee of the pension
scheme. All the family, and our golden Labrador and a rabbit called
Fluffy, moved to a new home in Kent, in a village called Selling, 7 miles
from the cathedral city of Canterbury.
The next 10 years was an intense period, building up the factory from a
poor state of repair to one which
became the first site in the group to obtain the Quality Assurance
standard ISO 9000, and the first site in the UK to achieve the new
Environmental standard BS 7750. I received the latter award from the
government Minister For The Environment, at a ceremony in London. Local
awards were achieved in Kent Company of the Year, Kent Exporter of the
year, (we exported 95% of our manufacture), and Investors in People.
It was an intense period for the family too. Neil graduated in chemistry
at my old university and took a
job with a company making starch derivatives, and was able to live at home
and travel to work in his company car. He met his wife Jackie, they were
married in 1994 , and have made us grandparents twice over with Emily, now
3 years, and Sophie, 10 months. Eric also graduated, got a job in the
Paper industry, met Ana, and got married in 1996. They have also given us
two grandchildren, Jack 4 years old, and Erin 17 months. After also
graduating, Sharon is now a teacher at a primary school, and is courting
strongly with her boyfriend Drew. All three children live within a
relatively easy car trip, Neil being furthest away at 1 hour 10 minutes,
whilst Sharon is only 10 minutes away.
During this period, following an illness, I had an intensive company
medical in 1991. The doctor wound
my arm round, noted the cogwheel rigidity, and told me I had Parkinson’s
Disease. I saw a neurologist, who
confirmed the diagnosis, and I started on 3 Sinemet Plus per day. We now
know it would have been better to delay this. I was in my “honeymoon
period” period, when I did not need medication, and felt no advantage
taking it. For several years, I refused to believe I had PD. However,
within around 5 to 6 years it became evident I had it, although it did not
bother me until after I retired at the age of 60 in 1997. I am now 10
years into PD, it is only now starting to bother me. Without medication, I
have considerable difficulty walking. However, with medication, I can
drive without problem, and in my 5 years retirement, my wife and I have
visited Hawaii,Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, Las Vegas, Chicago,
Boston, and many European cities from Prague to Antwerp. We visit Mexico
in Feb. 2002. We are not letting PD stop us!!
Previously, I had not done a lot of work with my hands. I was a DIY person
(Do It Yourself), through
financial necessity when the children were young. Now in retirement, I
have found hidden skills, and have
become an enthusiastic silversmith! I buy scrap silver, and melt down with
a propane blowtorch, and beat it into shape the old fashioned way. The
photographs show some of my efforts. For a Christmas present this year, my
3 children have together bought me my own makers mark. This means I am a
registered silversmith at the London Assay Office, and I have my initials
on a punch, which the Assay Office uses to insert my makers mark amongst
the UK silver hallmarks.
I have not totally abandoned my science upbringing. I follow avidly, the
medical research being done for
Parkinson’s Disease, via the Internet. I correspond with both researchers
and other PD sufferers worldwide, again via the Internet mainly. I have
recently become the European Co-ordinator for a USA based PD lobbying and
drug tracking group, called the PD Pipeline. Hopefully, our efforts will
help speed up the long awaited cure.
Ron E. Hutton
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