John Hunter Padel – pacifist schoolmaster and psychoanalyst

John Hunter Padel was a leading British psychoanalyst and Shakespeare scholar in the last century who taught classics at Preston Grammar School during World War Two. Padel was a conscientious objector whose beliefs brought him into conflict with the authorities when conscription was introduced.

See also: Preston’s World War 1 conscientious objectors

Padel was born in Carlisle in 1913, the son of the headmaster of Carlisle Grammar School. He studied Classics at Queen’s College, Oxford, where he became a Quaker. After leaving university, he taught at a public school, resigning because of objections to his pacifist teaching. He moved to Preston to teach at the grammar school, and found accommodation in Grimsargh at 3, Lynwood Villas, Whittingham Lane.

Padel continued in teaching until 1949, when, at the age of 36, he began his medical training. He met his wife, Hilda, a granddaughter of Charles Darwin, during the war, and in 1944 they were married. The couple had five children, including the poet Ruth Padel. He died in 1999, aged 86.

The Preston Grammar School Association used to have a website and a Facebook page which may have contained more information on Padel, but neither seems to have survived the demise of the association

The Lancashire Daily Post published a report of his appearance before an Objectors’ Tribunal at Lancaster on 5 August 1940, followed by a report of his appeal against the decision of the tribunal at an Appellate Tribunal in Lancaster on 1 March 1941.

Preston Grammar School 1953
Preston Grammar School 1953

Padel’s articulate defence of his position provides insight into the factors that motivated conscientious objectors. Transcripts of that defence in the Lancashire Daily Post reports.


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