Greystone Heath Approved School.

Greystone Heath Approved School.

Crimes in Cheshire the ‘tip of an iceberg’

 Matthew Brace Saturday 08 March 1997
The full extent of a widespread paedo-phile ring, whose members abused hundreds of children in care, can be revealed for the first time today.

Court orders restricting the reporting of details of several cases, for fear of prejudicing later trials, were lifted by Judge Huw Daniel at Chester Crown Court yesterday as he jailed the senior Cambridge-shire social services manager Keith Laverack for 18 years for abusing children in care.

Twelve paedophiles who preyed on hundreds of vulnerable youths in children’s homes in Cheshire and Merseyside were exposed by one of the biggest investigations into child sex abuse ever mounted. Eleven have received lengthy prison sentences. Cheshire’s social services department was one of the prime movers in the investigation when allegations first came to light.

None of the county council’s own homes was involved but the department worked closely with the police on investigations which began in August 1993 and developed into a massive and complex three-year operation which cost the authority roughly pounds 250,000.

Police and social workers in Cheshire and Merseyside worked closely to investigate allegations from former residents of children’s homes, their attentions focusing on Greystone Heath approved school in Warrington. Cheshire investigations alone unearthed a total of 534 allegations, 353 of them sexual.

However, the social services officer who helped mastermind the wide- ranging investigation into the homes in Cheshire warned yesterday that the crimes unearthed in the county were only the tip of a national iceberg, with similar events waiting to be uncovered all over the country stretching back to the Sixties and Seventies.

David Whitehead, Social Services Officer (Operations) for Cheshire, said: “The way in which this country treated its children in care 20 or 30 years ago was intrinsically unsafe,” he said. “We must not make the same mistakes again, however tempted we might be because of the strong emotions that are raised about children who cause trouble.”

With further child sex allegations still coming to light, the Cheshire force is setting up a permanent Paedophile Investigation Unit. On Merseyside, detectives are investigating allegations of abuse in about 17 more homes.

Senior officers are convinced similar patterns of widescale abuse by paedophiles in children’s homes in the Sixties and Seventies will emerge from other investigations around the country.

The Independent 08/03/97

It was just three months ago that Malcolm King, the chairman of social services in Clwyd, North Wales, declared: “The evidence emerging is that children’s homes were a gulag archipelago stretching across Britain – wonderful places for paedophiles but, for the children who suffered, places of unending nightmares.”

At the time it may have seemed a lurid and alarmist claim. There had been some isolated, if notorious cases, such as the Frank Beck affair in Leicestershire and the Pindown scandal in Staffordshire. The terrible saga of Clwyd – at least 100 children sexually abused over 20 years, of whom 12 subsequently died – was only just becoming known. It still seemed too much to suggest that this was a nationwide problem.

But if anyone wanted to dismiss Clwyd as a freak, a one-off instance of systematic sexual mistreatment of children in care, they must now reckon with Cheshire. All the evidence now indicates that what has taken place there is actually worse than Clwyd, in the sense that it was on a larger scale.

The figures tell their own story. Six care workers have so far been jailed in separate court cases. Another nine trials are in the pipeline. Four residential establishments in the county are implicated. One hundred instances of abuse have come before the courts so far and the final figure for children abused may be 300 – one in seven of those in care in those institutions. The squad of 24 detectives in Cheshire, conducting Britain’s biggest investigation of its kind, is also studying links with Clwyd and Liverpool.

Who now could deny with any confidence the claim of a gulag archipelago stretching across Britain?

THE victims of these crimes were among the most vulnerable children in the country. Many came from broken homes, or homes where the parents could not cope. Some were rowdy children, officially declared beyond parental control, and some had already been abused by their parents. They were all, in one sense or another, victims even before they came into public care.

Their allegations are mounting up today, rather than at the time in the 1970s and 1980s when residential children’s homes – and the abuse – were at their height, for a clear, understandable reason. When a child is being abused he or she is often both threatened and made to feel guilty by the perpetrator. That guilt later turns into shame and a reluctance to discuss what happened. Many victims feel that their failure to speak out at the time made them accomplices.

Most of today’s complaints come from people in their thirties, a time when the lucky ones among them have settled down and found a stable lifestyle. They have begun to recognise the injustice of what happened to them. They see that they were not to blame, and in a climate of opinion where abuse is more openly discussed than before, they feel able to come forward.

The Cheshire inquiry has its origins in just such an initiative. Four years ago, a young man walked into a police station and made a complaint about the abuse he had suffered. A second complaint followed some time

later and the work got under way in earnest in February 1994, with a team of detectives based initially in Warrington.

A crucial decision was made at an early stage which was to determine the character and scale of the investigation: detectives decided to cast their nets wide. Instead of limiting inquiries to original complainants, they went looking for victims. One officer explained. “We decided that … the last thing we wanted was somebody knocking on the door six months after we finished and saying, `You never came to see me’.”

So they set out to trace every single young person who had been in care in the area since the mid-1960s. The list came to 2,500 names. “The aim was to trace and speak to them all, to ask them about their experiences. We left nothing to chance. It has been a detailed, thorough inquiry,” said the officer.

In each case, the police explained that they were investigating the specific homes and they asked: did they have any complaint to make about their time there? When personal calls failed, registered letters were sent which had to be signed for, showing they had been received. Those who received letters but made no contact were assumed to have no complaints. In all, just over 2,000 people were contacted and more than 300 made allegations that they had been sexually abused.

The investigation has resulted in the following convictions:

Alan Langshaw, care worker, pleaded guilty at Warrington Crown Court to 30 counts of serious sexual assaults and indecent assaults against boys aged under 16 at homes in Cheshire and Liverpool. Jailed for 10 years.

Colin Dick, care worker, guilty of nine counts of serious sexual offences and indecent assault against children at one home in Cheshire. Jailed for four years.

Dennis Grain, care worker, pleaded guilty to 19 cases of serious sexual offences and indecent assault at homes in Cheshire and Yorkshire. Jailed for seven years.

Terrence Hoskins, found guilty of 22 counts of indecent assault and physical assault and serious sexual offences at home where he was the head. Jailed for eight years.

John Clarke, convicted of indecent and physical assault at a care home in Cheshire. Jailed for three-and-a-half years.

Roy Shuttleworth, care worker, found guilty of 11 counts of serious sexual offences and indecent assaults on boys in a care home in Cheshire. Jailed for 10 years.

In addition two men have been jailed in Liverpool in prosecutions arising from the Cheshire inquiry. They are: Philip Savage, who was given 13 years, and Edward Stanton, now serving 15 years.

To take just one of those cases in more detail: Shuttleworth, who was jailed just a week ago, molested boys over an 11-year period starting in 1974 when he first got a job at the home. Now 63, he abused them both sexually and mentally. In court, he denied 11 charges of serious sexual offences and indecent assault and claimed that the former residents were making up the allegations to get money from the Criminal Injuries Compensation Board.

One 33-year-old witness in the case told the court that he had been unable to tell his father about what Shuttleworth had done to him; it was only when his father had died and he was standing at the graveside that he poured out his feelings. Judge Robin David, passing sentence, told Shuttleworth that his behaviour had been beneath contempt.

Detectives have explored the idea that the perpetrators of these crimes belonged to organised paedophile networks, but they have been hampered by the refusal of all the convicted abusers to talk. “In the ideal world, and on TV, one of these offenders would break down in court and tell us everything,” said the officer. “But no one has said anything. There were guilty pleas, but no one has told the story. There have to be some links – everyone networks at some stage – but no one has ever said anything.”

CHESHIRE may be the biggest scandal so far, but there are grounds for believing that we might have woken up to the dangers in our children’s homes long ago. It was in 1980 that the story broke of the abuse of boys at the Kincora home in Belfast. This was revealed by the Irish Independent after several years in which complaints by residents and social workers were ignored. Three men were later jailed.

The abuse in Staffordshire occurred in the 1980s and compensation claims were made in 1992. It involved abuse at two homes in the county and led to an inquiry by Allan Levy QC. The scandal of Frank Beck, who abused dozens of children in care in Leicestershire between 1973 and 1986, became known to the public when he was prosecuted in 1991. He has since died in prison. The Clwyd abuse scandal emerged in the early 1990s and subsequently led to a police investigation lasting two years in which 300 cases were referred to the Crown Prosecution Service. The scale of the scandal, and the refusal of the authorities to be open about it, were revealed in this newspaper in April.

In retrospect, it is not just the high-profile cases that ought to have alerted us. Many of the indicators of abuse were always there: children running away from homes; complaints against some care staff; lack of regulation and consequently the entry of unsuitable people into care work. Council homes were run almost at arm’s length from the local authority; in some cases the homes were outside the council area and out of sight. In this climate, an attitude took hold that the children were an underclass who had no rights, and should have been grateful for anything they got. It seemed that the public did not care.

Should there be a public inquiry? “I have no doubt in my mind that there has to be – will be – an inquiry,” said one Cheshire police officer. “I think the whole bloody child-care system needs looking at.”

The Cheshire MP Mike Hall agrees: “I am concerned about the number of cases of child abuse in Cheshire. There is a level of concern within the county to merit such an investigation.” Pointing to Clwyd, where the latest of 14 separate inquiries has taken place but the results have again been withheld from the public, Mr Hall said: “I am predominantly concerned with what happens in Cheshire, but it is now quite alarming that we still haven’t got the Jillings report published. I think it would be quite useful to get a nationwide picture of what is going on. There is a growing body of evidence about child abuse. A national look at this would be in everyone’s best interests.”

One of the parents who has written to John Major about the issue, but who cannot be named for legal reasons, said: “There must be an investigation to find out what really went on. There are still hundreds of people out there who were abused but who are ashamed to come forward because of the guilt complex that these molesters instil in them.”

Panorama script 10/03/97

‘Often the links between abusers lie beneath the surface of less horrific conspiracies. Take, for example, the case of Greystone Heath, an approved school for boys in Warrington, which for years enjoyed an unsullied reputation until police finally discovered that it had become a hot spot for paedophiles. This one institution – whose history of abuse is echoed now in scores of others – is a model of everyday paedophile collusion.

It appears to have started in 1965 when a 21-year-old student teacher named Keith Laverack went to work there and embarked on a campaign of buggery and indecent assault. Over the ensuing four years, he raped at least 16 boys, three of whom he shared with his colleague, Brian Percival, the clerk and storeman at the home. Once these two men had established sexual rights over the boys at Greystone, other abusers joined the staff: Alan Langshaw, who raped at least 24 boys; Dennis Grain who raped at least 18; Roy Shuttleworth who raped at least ten; Jack Bennett who indecently assaulted two; and Steve Norris who assaulted an unknown number.

The Greystone abusers then fanned out. Keith Laverack went to childrens’ homes in Cambridgeshire; Alan Langshaw became Principal of St Vincent’s Catholic boys’ home in Formby; Grain and Shuttleworth were both promoted to other homes in the Warrington area; Steve Norris went to North Wales. At their new homes, all of them continued to rape boys who were in their care and wherever they went, they crossed the paths of other paedophiles.’

The Guardian 1998

22 responses to “Greystone Heath Approved School.

  1. Lee Redgrift

    Lee redgrift do u remember me I was in popular house with langshawe he raped me and so did shuttleworth and the other one he humiliated me in my underwear because I was in popular I can’t think of his name now I was there from 80 .till 82 the police contact me when he was been prosecuted down in Devon but at the time langshawe was my nephews God father and I was recently married so to protect them both I said he never did it it’s now been ,, over 30 years and I wish I said something then it has ruined my life depression PTSD and concilling and suicide attempts .still suffer now you probably don’t know me but hope you r ok x

  2. Eddie

    I am doing my fathers research when he was in this place between the years 1940/44 but strangely the records at this time is closed till 2049,why would they be closed till 2049,I have been in touch with the Liverpool records office and filled in forms for my fathers records but they have told me the forms I filled in seemed to been misplayed,anyone else think this is strange.

  3. Gerry

    My dad was in that place 1940 till 1943 he told me some horrible times in that place,he mentioned a name from that time dick ashcain,he put a young lad in a wheelchair after beating him with a billiard que,me dad was put in the cellar and fed bread and water for a week,shaved his hair and made him sew bright yellow circles on his clothes cause he was always escaping.

  4. albert lloyd

    I was there in greystone heath from 1957/1960 it was going on then,I was sexually abused and physically abused not only by the staff but older ( raped)
    lads.word got around they thy tried it on i was hit in the throat with a bottle by the house captian,ran away told police and staff,not believed.it went on the showers dorms/classes woodwork shop anywhere,even matron.To say it started 60s/70s it was well before that .I seeked helped i am76 old, I have had 65 years of hell could not tell any one not even my dad or wife she now nos.I am being couselled now went to the doctor,I am getting help, I was sexually abused by female relitive from11/15 yeares old stopped when i was 15 years old. As you can see went thou hell menttlly.So its not to late to tell some one The scumgs bags ie staff only some, ie scumbags older lads will be dead now ,no justice, but it is of my chest and mind,i have peace of mind now . Ps for give my spelling PS It went on in woolton remand home

  5. William Friday

    I was there 1967/70 there was some evil bastards at that Laverack the dear my bastard and the Deputy head Arkles he caned me in the Willows 6 strokes my arse was pouring with blood and he made all the lads in the Willows watch our house master was Skidmore another horrible person Laverack never touched me but he had his favourites 1 dirty human being hope he rots

  6. Jacqueline Barnes

    My boyfriend was there in the 80’s he was raped and beaten many times by Alan Langshaw. Im horrifide he got 10 years. What he did to them poor boys was horrendous. And he shoukd have been sentenced to life. As he got older he managed to fight Langshaw off and he stoped coming for him. He was left so beaten and ashamed he never told.

  7. Des

    Paul Waldron you was there the same time as me you where from Kirkby wasn’t you ?

  8. Jack Healy

    Urgent call out to all former residents of St Aidan’s and St Vincent’s Care Homes in Widnes, Cheshire

    The IICSA Public Inquiry issued a press release urgently calling from former residents of St Aidan’s and St Vincent’s children’s homes in Cheshire to come forward and apply for core participants status in the Accountability and Reparations Investigation. A link to the press release can be found here:

    https://www.iicsa.org.uk/news/call-former-residents-st-aidan%E2%80%99s-children%E2%80%99s-home-come-forward

    Howe & co Solicitors represent a very large number of the victims and survivors who are core participants in the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse. At a recent hearing on 28 March it was made clear that the Inquiry may drop St Aidan’s and St Vincent’s childrens’ homes as case studies unless former residents applied to be core participants. Howe & Co urged the Inquiry not to do this.

    As such this is urgent and important for persons who were residents at these homes. If potential core participants do not come forward, their chance to be heard and to have abuse investigated will be lost.

    Howe & Co’s dedicated team of expert solicitors will be happy to assist former residents of St Aidan’s and St Vincent’s who need confidential and expert assistance in applying for core participant status. There will be no charge whatsoever for our advise and assistance. Interested persons can contact us at :

    d.enright@howe.co.uk
    a.tear@howe.co.uk
    Thank you

  9. Des Coffey

    I was at gray stone Heath 1977-1979 I remember the beatings the staff dished out I feel sorry for the children who was abused by the staff but I keep asking myself how come the staff who wasn’t doing anything wrong didn’t stand up and say something let’s face it if you work somewhere you know what’s going on even if you hear something like that shouldn’t you ask the question am sure I would ask just sick sick people . My name is Des Coffey

  10. yeokaron817@gmail.com

    R.i.p Lee Centell he was in greystone heath and he was crying to me wanted to go home to his mam coz of the horrendous beatings.We escaped but on way home to Liverpool there was a car accident and sadly Lee passed away.My heart is still broken.love and miss you bro.R.I.P..He was only trying to get home to his Mam..

    • Alan Galley Sent

      That’s a sad story Karen : ( losing Lee like that must of broke your heart !!! : ( I was at Greystone Heath from 1960 to 1965 and suffered at the hands of those monsters many times and escaped only to be taken back and beaten then caned in front of the other boys who were ordered to about face so they could only hear the screams as our arses were cut open on every stroke !!! Counting one sir, two sir, three sir, four sir, five sir, six sir after every stroke then we had to say thank you sir. That was the official punishment we received but the unofficial beatings were worse !!! I am currently involved with a police operation investigating Greystone Heath Penketh Warrington and I would advise anyone who suffered abuse there or any other institution to contact Cheshire police at Blacon, Chester and quote ” Operation Carpultimate ” R.I.P. Lee : (

      • Paul Dixon Davies

        hi alan i was there from 64 to 66 i was also beaten and buggered by some of the staff the only names that i can remember are yule who made me have sex with him and that fatty thompson who canned me and made my arse bleed just wish i could remember the other names who abused me the name lomas comes to mind but i wish i could remember them b turds who did it to me.Paul.

  11. Anonymous

    The wives were just as bad. They were only kitchen staff and not what you’d call guards but they often stood watching the young boys in the shower, (with the door removed). The male staff hitting the boys was also rampant, often boy’s would be dragged out of line and given a good punching, sometimes even 2 members of staff onto 1 boy.

    • Des Coffey

      I never had any of the female staff watching me in the shower and never did any female staff watch any of the boys in the shower on willows a or b

  12. Did you get a comment from mr. Walpole?

  13. William

    I was a resident at Greystone Heath in 1967-8.
    I was common knowledge amongst the boys, that systematic sexual abuse was commonplace amongst the staff.
    I myself was groomed by Laverack, having me caddy for him on the golf course, camping etc.
    I resisted his attempts and as I was one of the senior boys,he didnt persist with his interest. Others were’nt so lucky.
    I was though, a victim of physical abuse on several occasions, the head master at the time had a particular talent with the cane. He could consistenly draw blood from the buttocks of us boys, with great relish and Pleasure (Bastard).
    Either consiously or subconsiously, I have managed to put those violent early years of my life behind me. Unfortunately the memories still surface periodically, names and faces are still there as a reminder, even after more than 40 years.
    Fortunately it wasn’t all of them, some were pretty decent, but I wonder if they knew what was happening and turned a blind eye.

  14. Leslie Williams

    Mr langshaw only got 10 year disgraceful

    • W.Murray

      I was at greystone between the age of 12-16. I saw Langshaw choose his favourites which caused a lot of jealousy amongst the other lads, who were unaware of the truth. His three main favourites, who’ll remain unnamed, but I know who you are and my heart goes out to you and would like to apologise for the name-calling towards your apparent favouritism, unknowing of the truth as at the time we were blind to the real actions of the Monster, going by the name of Alan Langshaw. I myself was a victim being a wise kid, so made it hard for them to inflict sexual abuse, causing them in their frustration to inflict physical abuse and pin down methods of control. Although we would all agree that this should never have been allowed to happen and I am mystified how clues did not appear at individual case conferences making me fear a wider conspiracy within the system, hence taking 20+ yrs for some truth to emerge and I fear atrocities that will never come to light. To all the lads who were at Greystone Heath between the years 1977-1981 when I was a ‘prisoner’ there…my heart and thoughts go out to you who suffered at the hands of these Deviants’, and still suffer with these horrific memories. God bless you.

      W.M

      • God Bless You To Young W.Murray as well as all the other POOR SOULS who were “Incarcerated” at THAT SHITHOLE HELL GREYSTONE HEATH STOCKS LANE PENKETH Nr WARRINGTON : ( I say “young Murray” because I was unfortunately “Locked Up” there from 1960 til 1965 FIVE YEARS OF THE VERY SAME TYPE OF MONSTERS WHO ABUSED YOU BOYS IN YOUR TIME !!! : ( The Old Horrible Dormitory building that was probably not be there during your House Unit System that they were only planning when I GOT OUT June 1965 days after my 15th B/Day. You sound just like Me young un : ) I WOULD NOT LET THE FUCKING MONSTERS SHAG ME ETHIER !!! : ) That lead to many many “CANINGS” : ( I got from the OBESE twat Headmaster Mr. Thompson (Fatty Arbuckler) Prize Winning Apple Grower who was a BEAST & thrased us with the cane for the least misdemeanor alongside a PRICK CALLED YULE Deputy Head A SADISTIC EVIL CHILD BEATER & I KNOW A BUGGERER OF AT LEAST ONE YOUNG LAD CALLED SUTTON : ( who I found crying & bleeding from his BURST ARSE :( in the toilets shared by Dorms 1 & 2 & took to Matron Miss Penny Coin or Cash ? to be stitched up & Sick Bayed for a week. I am in the process of FINDING THE TRUTH OF THE EXTENT OF THE ABUSE AT GREYSTONE through The Freedom Of Information Act 2000 from Liverpool City Council who “RAN” that VILE place & Woolton Vale Remand Home Menlove Ave Liverpool where the ATTACKS BEGAN by a DIRTY CUNT CALLED HORNE who later came to Greystone but stayed away from me as he remembered the bites & boots & butts the twat suffered at his first attempt !!! I am also in contact with the two INQURIES taking place ie. Anne Longfields The childrens Commissioner For England & Dame Justice Goddards Statuatory Inquiry into Sexual & Physical Abuse in places such as Greystone Plus I have had my MP Miss Rosie Cooper raise my case to The Right Hon Theresa May,Home Secretary, Home Office & asked that this matter be investigated : ) WOW : ) May be we can get some JUSTICE young Mr. Murray Will Wayne Whatever your Christian name : ) Happy New Year young un :) Regards & Best Wishes, Alan Galley

      • Paul Waldron

        I was there between 1978 to 1981

  15. christine foden

    my brother was one of the victims at one of the homes

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