The official list of musicians for the 1953 coronation service at Westminster Abbey includes 182 boy choristers. Most came from the choirs of Westminster Abbey, St Paul’s Cathedral, the Chapels Royal and St George’s Chapel, Windsor. Overall, though, the geographical net spread far wider, not least to choristers selected via the Royal School of Church Music – only 20 such boys, but representing far-flung parts of Britain.
The 1953 RSCM choristers who survive have some of the most colourful stories to tell. Their narratives form one magical dimension in the University of Hertfordshire’s current ‘Choristers of the Coronation’ oral history project. Such choristers, who had no expectation of a coronation call-up, were selected in a variety of ways. Stanley Roocroft MBE learned he’d been chosen from his choirmaster at Blackburn Cathedral. ‘He called me in after a service and I thought, “Hello… am I in trouble? What have I done now?” And he said, “Next Sunday morning, I’d like you and your parents to see me after the service.”