Allan George Ramsay Lunn
April 16, 1921 ~ November 28, 2023
Born in:
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England
Resided in:
Swannanoa, North Carolina
Allan George Ramsay Lunn, 102, passed away peacefully on November 28, 2023, after a brief illness.
Allan was born in Newcastle-upon-Tyne in northern England on April 16, 1921. He attended the Royal Grammar School where at age 14, he developed a lifelong love of the cello and became an accomplished musician.
Upon graduation, he worked briefly for Procter and Gamble before joining the Royal Navy in 1941. He spent the war years as the navigating officer aboard a frigate on antisubmarine patrols in the North Atlantic and was assigned to accept the surrender of German U-Boat captains at Loch Eriboll at the end of the war. In 2019, Allan was awarded the French Legion of Honor for his participation in D-Day.
Returning to Procter and Gamble upon discharge, he began a remarkable career while concurrently earning a business degree from the University of London. In the mid 1950s he was assigned to a team of six to assess a corporate move into Germany. Allan’s responsibility was for legal and financial affairs. Upon acceptance by P&G of the team’s recommendation to proceed, he was assigned to Frankfurt, Germany to help establish the growth of the business in Europe.
In 1977 Allan was transferred to the P&G corporate headquarters in Cincinnati where he was named Manager, Finance and Accounting, Latin America Division.
He retired from P&G in 1985 and resumed his passion for the cello, studying at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. He played in university orchestras, the Baroque Ensemble, and was a member of the Kentucky Symphony Orchestra for many years.
In 2006, he and his wife Elenore (Elen) Louise moved from Cincinnati to Asheville, dividing their time there with Savannah, Georgia for seven years.
Allan stayed active, traveling internationally to visit family and friends and was a layreader and choir member at Trinity Church until he was 98.
Allan is survived by his wife Elen, daughters Hilary Lunn (Marea Murray) and Stephanie Lunn and her daughter Charlotte; sons Walter Rhame (Ashlyn) and Robert Rhame (Silke), and their children.
A memorial service celebrating Allan’s life will be held Wednesday, January 3rd at 11:00 a.m. at Trinity Episcopal Church, 60 Church Street, Asheville, with music prior and a reception following. In lieu of flowers, contributions in Allan’s memory may be made to the Trinity Music Fund or a charity of choice.
Groce Funeral Home is assisting the family.
Allan George Ramsay Lunn
On the Occasion of his 100th Birthday
04/16/2021
In his Own Words
Allan George Ramsay Lunn was born on 16th April 1921 in Newcastle-on-Tyne, the second child of George Ramsay and Beatrice MacCoy Lunn who were married in 1914. George Ramsay was born into the Lunn family which was formed when George Lunn of Newcastle married Charlotte Reeves of Hexham in 1887.
George Lunn was born in 1860 and when he married at age 27 he was already a well-established businessman owning two merchant ships. He sold these ships at the outbreak of World War I and devoted the rest of his life to civic affairs in the course of which he served as Lord Mayor of Newcastle for the whole of World War I. In 1919 His Majesty King George V honored him with a knighthood.
Sir George Lunn had been educated at the Newcastle Royal Grammar School, founded in 1545 and granted a Royal charter by Queen Elizabeth I in 1601. Allan, like his grandfather and father before him, graduated from the Newcastle Royal Grammar School. He attributes his nine years there to his later success in life as well as his early love of music, especially the cello which he played then and to this day.
Sir George and Lady Lunn had nine children, four boys and five girls. Allan’s father, George Ramsay Lunn, was the eldest of the boys. For his service in World War I, having already been educated at the Newcastle Royal Grammar School, George Ramsay was sent to be an officer in the King’s African Rifles in British East Africa. Following the war George Ramsay returned to Newcastle and became active in the coal trade. This provided Allan his first experience of going to sea when he and his best friend were sent aboard a Danish merchant ship to Copenhagen at the age of 13. Following a week in Copenhagen, the boys were taken to two ports in Finland in the Baltic Sea to pick up a shipload of timber and bring it back to Britain in Cardiff from which they were returned to Newcastle by train. This six week expedition to sea was the first of Allan’s many voyages.
Allan’s father, during his military service in Africa and like his father before him, had gone down with malaria on two occasions. This affected his health to the point that he died at the early age of 49 as Allan was leaving the Royal Grammar School. Because Allan had to support his mother and sister he was not able to continue to the University but had to continue at home, studying for a London University external degree while earning a modest salary from full time employment. He was fortunate in landing a job with the British subsidiary of the Procter & Gamble company which had established its UK head office in Newcastle. Allan worked for Procter & Gamble in positions of increasing responsibility for the next 45 years.
At the outbreak of World War II, Allan joined the Royal Navy as a Seaman posted to the aircraft carrier HMS Illustrious which was then sent to the Indian Ocean for one year based in Mombasa. On returning to Britain, he was transferred to officer training at the Royal Navy’s land base HMS King Alfred in Hove, and subsequently to the Royal Naval College Greenwich on the Thames where he qualified in navigation. Following his qualification he was sent to the United States to be the navigating officer of the frigate HMS Bligh then under construction as a destroyer escort in the Bethlehem Steel yard in Hingham, Massachusetts.
Allan spent the remainder of World War II as Navigating Officer aboard HMS Bligh engaged in anti U-boat operations in the North Atlantic from its base in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Part of this service included active participation in the preparation for and then in the D-Day landings in 1944. The French referred to this as THE LIBERATION and some 60 years later commenced honoring those who had taken part and still survived as Chevalier of the French Legion of Honor into which Allan was enrolled in 2015.
Allan rejoined Proctor and Gamble in 1946. During those post war years the business climate in Europe was being transformed by the Marshall Plan and, in particular, business activities in Germany were flourishing. This was a market in which P & G was not active and it took the unusual step of appointing a small team of six experts to examine the feasibility of getting into the German market. Allan was chosen as the representative for finance and legal activities and, following the positive recommendation of the team, he was transferred with his wife and family from Newcastle to Frankfurt to head the finance and legal divisions of the new German company for the next 17 years. Then, although Allan had expressed a marked preference for continuing to live in Germany, P&G transferred him and his family to the head office in Cincinnati where he was given additional responsibility as supervisor for all financial and legal operations of the four P & G companies comprising the new Latin America Division (Mexico, Venezuela, Peru, and Puerto Rico) until his retirement in 1985.
In Allan’s earliest education at the Newcastle Royal Grammar School, he commenced taking cello lessons and entered on a career in music which has extended to the present day. He became principal cellist of orchestras such as the Newcastle Baroque Concert, the Northumberland Orchestra, and a Bach orchestra in Frankfurt. He frequently played as a member of well-established chamber groups In Newcastle, Frankfurt, and Cincinnati, so it was almost a natural development that, following retirement, he would enter the Cincinnati College Conservatory of Music at age 64 for further cello and orchestra studies. Leaving the Conservatory, Allan crossed the bridge over the Ohio River with his cello and finished up playing cello for 16 years in the Kentucky Symphony Orchestra until his eyesight failed him and he had to resign at the age of 90.
Services
Memorial Service: January 3, 2024 11:00 am
Trinity Episcopal Church
60 Church Street
Asheville, NC 28801
(828) 253-9361
http://www.trinityasheville.org
Funeral Home Assisting The Family:
Groce Funeral Home on Tunnel Road
856 Tunnel Rd.
Asheville, NC 28805
(828)299-4416
http://www.grocefuneralhome.com
Ellen, everyone who met Alan loved him immediately. And with such a loving, supportive group of people we have at CVC, I hope he felt the warmth of the loving blanket that was created just for him every day. We are all here to help you as you navigate the future. Just ASK or hold out a hand “in the grocery store.” With sadness and with love, Mary Fraser
Dearest Elen and family, Allan was joyful and kind, and I’m so thankful to have been your neighbor. Continued prayers for you all. Love, Joni
Jeff and I enjoyed listening to Allan talk about his World War II experiences especially over the lunch he prepared for us. We cherished our friendship with Elen and Allan.
Though I did not have the pleasure of knowing Alan, I do know Elen ( his wife) who is one of the very kindest and devoted women I have ever met! “Like attracts like,” so I am sure Alan was much as Elen—a dear person, and good neighbor. And such a wonderful career he had as a professional cellist and teacher too!! I only wish that I could have heard him play his cello. Much Love, Bonnie
It was such a pleasure to talk with Alan, and marvel at his alert and active mind! Don and I remember him tending his “garden”, wearing his Wellies in an oh-so-British fashion. It always brought a smile to our faces. Rest in peace, Alan. We are here for you, Elen, whatever you might need
With love and heartfelt sympathy, Pat and Don Niemas
I relished my
What an incredible life he was given. My sympathies to Elen and his entire family.
What a life and a gentleman in the truest sense of both words. Allan will always have a laureate seat in the KSO as a charter member and musical contributor. There is still a photo of Allan playing cello that flashes on screen prior to the KSO education concerts which to date have seen over 160,000 students. Condolences and best to Elen and family.