Robert Aagaard

British magistrate, and founder of the youth movement Cathedral Camps.
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroBritish magistrate, and founder of the youth movement Cathedral Camps.
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain
wasMagistrate
Work fieldLaw
Gender
Male
Birth27 June 1932
Death1 April 2001 (aged 68 years)
The details

Biography

Robert Aagaard OBE JP (/ˈeɪɡɑːrd/ AY-gard; 27 June 1932 – 1 April 2001) was an English furniture maker and conservator, magistrate, and founder of the youth movement Cathedral Camps.

Early life

The son of Villien Valdemar Aagaard and Florence Aagard (née Brooke), Aagaard was born at Norwich in 1932, after his father's family had migrated from Denmark at the time of the rise of Fascism in Germany. He was educated at the junior and senior schools of Gresham's School, Holt, from 1941 to 1949, where he was a member of Farfield. His exact contemporaries at Farfield included Martin Burgess, later a master clockmaker.

Career

After National Service, Aagaard worked at Woolworth's, a company of which his father was a director. However, his love of antique furniture led him to train as a furniture maker, in the Cotswolds and at Harrogate, Yorkshire. At Harrogate he had his own showrooms and an operated a factory at Knaresborough which made period fireplaces and decorations needed by conservation schemes, with thirty employees.

Aagaard was Managing Director of Robert Aagaard Ltd (Antiques), from 1960 to 1980, and the company's consultant, 1980 to 1995; a Director of Aagaard-Hanley Ltd, Fibrous Plasterers, 1970 to 1980, and Consultant, 1980 until his death; Consultant, Robert Aagaard & Co., Period Chimneypieces and Marble Processing, from 1995. He acted as a specialist consultant to the National Trust, supervising important projects in England and Scotland, and as Secretary of the Harrogate Antiques Fair.

He became a Justice of the Peace for North Yorkshire, serving as a magistrate on the Harrogate bench for twenty years.

Cathedral Camps

With his wife, Fiona, Aagaard was the founded Cathedral Camps in 1980 and served as its Chairman until his death. This is a youth movement recognised as a residential section of the Duke of Edinburgh's Award. The beginning of the movement came when the Dean of Ripon Cathedral asked Aagaard to organise on a voluntary basis the restoration of a house the cathedral owned. While this work was in hand, he visited his son who was staying at a National Trust Acorn Camp and realised that cathedrals could also harness the enthusiasm of young people, training them as volunteer labour and giving them in return an interesting working holiday.

In the early 1980s, the Aagaards raised funds and found trustees, including architects, artists, and deans of cathedrals. Establishing a supply of suitable tools and conservation materials, insurance, accommodation, and transport all needed careful planning. In the twenty years during which Aagaard headed the organization, Cathedral Camps enabled some nine thousand students to spend time working and living in cathedrals. Camps were organized every year at twenty-four centres, mostly English cathedrals, but also some larger parish churches and some Church of Scotland, free church and Roman Catholic places of worship.

Church of England appointments

Aagaard was a churchwarden at Knaresborough and from 1995 a member of the General Synod of the Church of England. He was Chairman of the Ripon Diocesan Advisory Committee and a member of the Ripon Cathedral Fabric Advisory Committee from 1993, a member of the Bradford Cathedral Fabric Advisory Committee from 1997, of the Cathedrals' Fabric Commission for England, from 1995, and of the Ripon Diocese Redundant Churches Uses Committee, from 1984.

Private life

In 1960, he married Fiona Christine Drury, and they had two sons and one daughter.

In Who's Who, he gave his recreations as "Gardening, walking" and his address in the year of his death as Manor House, High Birstwith, Harrogate, North Yorkshire.

Honours

  • Officer of the Order of the British Empire, 1993

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