LEO editor

Peter Hermon – Trailblazer in Computer Management. One of the very first computer specialists to make it all the way to the board of a major corporation, Peter Hermon blazed a trail and set standards for successful computer management that were years ahead of their time, most notably for Dunlop Rubber Company from 1959-65 and then for British Airways and its predecessor companies, BEA and BOAC, from 1965 through to the early 1980s.

For BOAC, he developed, virtually from scratch, a computer communications system that covered every aspect of the airline’s business activity, including reservations, departure control, message switching, flight planning, crew rostering, engineering and financial control.  

This developed into the celebrated Boadicea project, a network of computers linking cities around the globe from the USA to New Zealand, from Finland to South Africa, to a central computer complex in London.  The system, implemented on time, within budget and without problems, set standards for the airline industry that have survived to this day.  It also had airlines all over the world clamouring to buy the company’s know-how and software, leading to sales to over 50 airlines. By 1983, these sales amounted to some £40m a year at 2008 values, enough to cover the airline’s investment in computers many times over, a success acknowledged by two Queen’s Awards for both technological innovation and export achievement.

When BOAC merged with BEA in 1972, Hermon became Group Management Services Director with the immediate task of integrating two separate computer installations based on IBM and Univac equipment.  The role then broadened to embrace organisation and productivity and it was Hermon who produced a report for the Secretary of State for Trade & Industry that led to the full integration of both airlines to produce British Airways in 1976.  He also led the team that, in the late ‘70s/early ‘80s, developed a strategy for cutting staff numbers from 57,000 to 38,000, achieving savings in excess of £100m a year.

His last appointment at British Airways was as Managing Director of the airline’s European Division.

As well as serving on the boards of both BOAC and British Airways, Hermon was also Chairman  of SITA, a worldwide communications operation specialising in  the needs of the travel industry, and of International Aeradio Ltd (IAL), a BA subsidiary later sold to STC.

He left BA in 1983 to join Tandem Computers as UK Managing Director from where, shortly after, he was headhunted into Lloyds of London, the world’s premier insurance market, with a brief to effect a root and branch modernisation of its computer systems.  When it came to the crunch, this proved a bridge too far, as Hermon once described it, for such a traditional organisation and he moved on to Harris Queensway and then, as a freelance management consultant, to handle assignments for, among others, Saatchi and Saatchi, Argos and Credit Lyonnais. In 1970 he was appointed a part-time adviser  to the Civil Service on computer strategy and later served on the Government’s Central Computer Agency

Peter Hermon was born in 1928, His parents were Arthur and Beatrice (nee Poulter). His mother was a dressmaker and his father worked for Morris Motors in Oxford as a technical manager.

He was educated at Nottingham High School where he held two scholarships.  He went from there to Oxford University on no fewer than three further scholarships – a state scholarship, a major open scholarship to St John’s College and a Henry Mellish scholarship, a single award open to anyone living in Nottinghamshire.  He then took a double first in Pure and Applied Mathematics and a prize for the best result across the university. He was then elected to a Harmsworth Senior Scholarship at Merton College for research in Pure Mathematics.

Grounding in LEO credited for later successes 

Hermon left Oxford in 1954 to join J. Lyons & Co of teashops and catering fame.  It was here that he cut his computer teeth as one of a remarkable group of British computer pioneers who developed the world’s first business computer and the applications to run on it. These were stirring days, Hermon recalled, when the computer buff had to turn his hand to everything – business analysis, programming, operating and sweeping the floor before VIP visitors toured the LEO (Lyons Electronic Office) site in Cadby Hall to pay homage to the groundbreaking work that was going on there.

Hermon’s particular role within Lyons involved the installation of the first of the second generation LEO 2 computers for the Imperial Tobacco Company in Bristol.  The complexity of the tobacco company’s pricing and credit terms led to the largest and most complex suite of programs yet attempted at the time.  This was followed, in 1959, with the installation of an integrated sales accounting system, a concept years ahead of its time, running on the first of a third generation LEO 3 computers for Dunlop Rubber at Fort Dunlop.  Hermon at this time had joined Dunlop and went on to coordinate the company’s computer strategy worldwide.

Much of the later computer successes at British Airways were credited by Hermon to his time with LEO.  The team he built up at BA contained no fewer than nine managers from LEO Computers with many other ex-LEO people further down the line.

In retirement, Peter Hermon, devoted much of his time to writing.  He was a contributor to a book on the development of the LEO computer, entitled in the UK ‘User-driven Innovation’ and in the US and Hong Kong “LEO: the incredible story of the world’s first business computer,” published by McGraw Hill. Peter became increasingly involved in the activities of the LEO Computers Society, attending reunions and contributing to keep the LEO flame burning, repeating his conviction that the standards set by the LEO ethos underlay his own success.

He also authored a two-volume “Hill-walking in Wales,” the definitive guide to climbing the 170 or so 2000ft mountains in the principality, as well as “Lifting the Veil,” a plain language guide to the Bible.  He had also preached widely for the Association for the Propagation of the Faith, the official missionary society of the Catholic church.

Peter Hermon was married in January 1954 for 57 years to Norma Stuart Brealey who died in 2011. He had four children with Norma, David, who predeceased him in 1976, Juliet, Robert and Caroline.  Six grandchildren and five great grandchildren also survive him.  He was married for a second time in December 2016 to Patricia Cheek.

Peter Michael Robert Hermon, b. 13 November 1928, d. 1 November 2022

Published in Computer Weekly 18 Nov 2022

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Mavis Hinds – 1929-2009  Worked for the Meteorological Office and used LEO I for weather forecasting – the earliest use of computers for modelling the weather in the early 1950s.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wea.502/abstract  See also Wikepidia: She went on to work with Bushby in using the Lyons Electronic Office (LEO), an early computer developed by J. Lyons & Co of Cadby Hall, London, becoming an expert in writing, running and correcting computer programs for weather forecasting. She was seen at that time as one of the first prominent female meteorologists and also the first to play a leading role in the development of Numerical Weather Prediction, not only in the UK but also worldwide   See Wikipedia for a fuller account:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mavis_Hinds

Mavis Hinds: Read More »

Goffrey Howells We are sad to report the death in January 2020 in Australia of Geoff Howells, who worked for ICL in Melbourne for 24 years from 1965 – 1988. It was Geoff who with Anthea Gedge, a colleague, started the regular reunions in Melbourne for former ICL staff. Some of you will have read and enjoyed the ICL AllStars newsletters which come out several times a year and which we post on our LEO website. Geoff kept the database for its distribution – to over 2000 people. Ian Pearson who edits the newsletter is writing a fuller tribute to Geoff. In the meantime he writes ‘the dear chap will be sadly missed

Goffrey Howells: Read More »

Lord Edmund Ironside, born 21.09.1924, died 13.01.2020.  Lord Ironside, an active member of House of Lords, joined first Marconi  and in 1959 English Electric.  On the merger of English Electric, Marconi and LEO Computers to form EELM, Ironside was appointed head of LEO Government Sales, becoming involved in some of the major purchases by the Government of LEO III range computers.

Lord Edmund Ironside: Read More »

Derek Jolly – Born 1930, Died June 2018. Joined LEO circa 1953-54, After grammar school started training as an accountant, but decided to try something else and was interviewed by David Caminer, and Tony Barnes and offered a job with LEO I as an operator.  Worked on LEO I, LEO II and LEO III.  Became shift leader and then Chief Operator.  Left LEO in 1974 to join Access at Southend.  Retired aged 60.  Derek was one of the most popular people at Hartree, always caring and very competent in his various roles.
Oral History at CCH

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Ernest Joseph Kaye – 1922-2012 Joined John Pinkerton as his assistant in 1949 in the design of LEO I and later LEO II, having been recruited as an electronic engineer from GEC. Later took on the role of procurement officer for the engineering side of LEO.  Retired in 1968 to the family firm of renting material for television and theatre productions.  See also page 205 for a biographical sketch in Peter Bird’s LEO: The First Business Computer. 

        Ben Rooney in Wall Street Journal  http://blogs.wsj.com/tech-europe/2012/05/07/u-k-computer-pioneer-dies/

        Daily Telegraph 10th May 2012 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/9255130/Ernest-Kaye.html

        From BBC’s Jamillah Knowles on the Next Web

http://thenextweb.com/uk/2012/05/07/business-computing-pioneer-ernest-kaye-dies-aged-89/

        From Frank Land in Guardian Online 14th May 2012 http://m.guardian.co.uk/technology/2012/may/14/ernest-kaye?cat=technology&type=article

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GE6TX70A3Rc

http://blogs.wsj.com/tech-europe/2011/11/14/worlds-first-business-computer-celebrates-60th-anniversary/

http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/outriders/2011/11/leo_making_history.shtml

E

Ernest Joseph Kaye: Read More »

Mike Keen – Mike died on 27th January, 2020, the day after his 83rd birthday, following a long illness. He was always proud of his association with LEO, starting with his days at Minerva Road

Mike Keen: Read More »

Ernest Lenearts – 1910-1997  Despite an interest in things technical his parents persuaded him to take a clerical job at J. Lyons starting in the late 1920s. Bored by his job he asked for more technical training in the hope of getting a job in the Lyons laboratories.  His chance to progress came during World War II.  In 1941 he became a wireless mechanic in the RAF rising to the rank of sergeant before demobilisation.  He returned to Lyons, but was now appointed Radio Mechanic working on innovative microwave technology.  On the inauguration of the collaboration between Cambridge University and Lyons on the EDSAC/LEO project he was sent to Cambridge for the year 1948 both to learn about computer technology and to help in the design of EDSAC.  When Lyons commenced building LEO he joined John Pinkerton in the design team.  He made many contributions and also helped in the writing of many technical papers including one selected as the best paper of that year.  He subsequently took an interest in the man-machine interface including working on speech recognition.  He retired in 1969. A biographical sketch of his career can be found on pages 206 to 207 of Peter Bird’s LEO: the World’s First Business Computer.

http://www.cs.man.ac.uk/CCS/res/res17.htm#f  

A biographical sketch by his sons Paul and David is provided below and in Dropbox at https://www.dropbox.com/s/rq527ow3d8kkgak/Ernest%20Lenaerts%20recollections%20from%20sons.docx?dl=0

Ernest Lenaerts Biographical sketch by his sons, Paul and David.

Dad met Mum (Gladys Minnie Buckledee) when they both worked in the Joe Lyons accounts office at Cadby Hall in the early 1930’s. They married at Kew Green Church on 20th June 1936 and set up home in a new house at 2 Pavilion Way, Eastcote shortly after.

The war years were clearly difficult but typical for a young couple in the London suburbs with a Morrison shelter in the living room and a lodger (Aunty Enid – who would become a lifelong family friend) as company for Mum. Dad was in the RAF but his eyesight precluded him from flying duties and he ended up untypically as a round peg in a round hole operating and maintaining ‘beam-bending’ machines in Alexandra Palace. He told us stories of looking out over London and seeing ‘buzz-bombs’ coming straight at him and being powerless to do anything ! He could play the piano by ear and often entertained his unit playing the huge organ. He said that when you hit the bass notes, glass could be heard tinkling down from the broken windows!
We grew up in the family home when Dad was working on Leo in the early days. We didn’t see much of him except at breakfast and week-ends as he rarely got home before our bedtime. Sometimes he wasn’t even home for breakfast. He had a camp bed at the office and when Leo was doing all night runs he was there to do running repairs. He loved his job and often commented how lucky he was to be able to combine work with his interests.
He tried to teach us binary arithmetic with limited success. One particular memory was when he came home with one of the first ferrite core memory ‘blocks’ and explained that this brick sized object could actually store 1kB of binary information ! Compared to the mercury delay lines, this must have seemed awesome.
We did have week-ends as a family and our favourite day out was to the Lyons sports ground at Sudbury Hill. We would have a swim in the outdoor pool, practise tennis at the tennis ‘wall’ and Dad would often play cricket – he was quite a capable spin bowler.
In the ‘60’s we were in our teens and becoming more independent (difficult ??). Dad’s work became more managerial but he hated meetings and politics. When English Electric arrived there was talk of moving to Kidsgrove, but retirement came to the rescue and he took up golf. It wasn’t long before he was programming his home computer using machine code to produce the weekly handicap list !
Mum and Dad had a long and happy retirement and stayed at “No 2” until Mum died in 1990. After that Dad struggled on for a few more years but he suffered from dementia and ended up in a nursing home, where he died in 1997.
David & Paul Lenaerts – 15th April 2019

Ernest Lenearts: Read More »

Diane Lewis (nee Bray), died March 8th 2020, LEO Programmer and wife of John Lewis, LEO Programmer and Consultant.

Diane Lewis: Read More »