LORD Mayor of Chester, Councillor Sherin Akhtar, and representatives from the Bluecoat Charity and Chester Civic Trust have recognised Cyril Morris for his lifelong services in the architectural preservation of the city of Chester.

Born within the city walls in 1927, Cestrian Cyril graduated in architecture and town planning before joining the Cheshire County Architect’s department shortly after the Second World War in 1949. Following the Blitz, many of the UK’s historical towns were in a sorry and neglected state with notable buildings of character and value damaged or destroyed. Chester was no exception.

In his role as director of technical services, Cyril led the post-war clean up and was actively engaged in the development and management of an innovative conservation programme dedicated to restoring and reviving the special architectural character and identity of the town.

Since retiring, Cyril has kindly donated some of his earliest architectural drawings, many of which were done by hand, to the Bluecoat Charity where they now hang proudly in the offices on Upper Northgate Street.

As a thank you, the Lord Mayor and representatives from Bluecoat presented Cyril with a beautiful drawing of his own, a pencil sketch of the historic Bluecoat building which now has pride of place alongside other mementoes in his bedroom at Grosvenor Manor.

Lord Mayor of Chester, Cllr Akhtar, was honoured to make the presentation to Cyril. She said: “It is thanks to the tireless work of Cyril in protecting and preserving Chester’s heritage that we have an architecturally significant city that we can be proud of, one that garners interest and visitors from around the World. On behalf of the city and all at Bluecoat, I’m delighted to make this presentation today. Thank you Cyril.”

Christine Russell added; “Cyril is a founder member and former Vice-President of Chester Civic Trust who we were honoured to see at our Garden Party in 2024. The drawing of the Bluecoat shows the building without the decorative railings that had been removed earlier in the 1940s for ‘the war effort’. The Civic Trust campaigned for the reinstatement of the railings, finally restored and unveiled by the former Duke of Westminster in 1987. Cyril Morris has been a lifelong champion for heritage and conservation. He is one of Chester’s unsung heroes.”

Cyril summarised; “Conservation is not about living in the past, it is the creation of an environment within which our architectural heritage can survive for future generations.”

LtoR: Chief executive officer at Chester Bluecoat Charity Mike Jenkins, Grosvenor Manor resident and architectural preservation hero Cyril Morris, chairman of Chester Civic Trust Christine Russell and Lord Mayor of Chester Cllr Sherin Akhtar.