In 1997 Gwyn was appointed as the supervisor of the Mechanical Workshop, at a time when staffing numbers were falling. He persuaded the School to invest in new equipment for the workshop, particularly lathes and milling machines with control facilities that led to increased productivity, thereby providing a workshop resource fit for the modern era.
He was also a strong supporter of training. I learned to use workshop machinery myself as a postdoc in Canada. I was pleased that the Mechanical Workshop staff ran a training course for postgraduate students (as did the Glass Workshop) and maintained a student workshop for use by non-Workshop staff. This had the dual benefit that they (and I) were able to modify or fabricate small pieces of equipment, thereby lightening the load for the Workshop staff. But it also gave an appreciation of how to ensure that an intended job for the Workshop staff was feasible.
Gwyn played a major role in the trade union, a lifelong dedication. This led to his holding various offices including that of Chairman of the UoB branch of ASTMS at a time when the universities/government and Trade Unions were tackling each other head on. This brought two of Gwyn’s other strengths to the fore, negotiating and problem solving, which he used very effectively at local and national levels.
Gwyn loved to help others both as a skilled workshop technician and as a trade unionist – understanding, empathetic, but realistic and firm when the situation demanded it. As the Union’s Training Officer he was deeply committed to training and supporting the next generation, and in the craft tradition it was his job to pass on the skills and knowledge.
Gwyn was diagnosed a year ago with a particularly virulent form of bone cancer, and retired on grounds of ill health in July 2009. For most of this last year he maintained a very positive attitude to life, determined to get the most from whatever he could, and he died peacefully in his own home on 23 February 2010.
I was responsible for appointing Gwyn all those years ago, and I appreciate fully, as do all of my colleagues, the many contributions that Gwyn Jones made to the University, to the School of Chemistry, and to me personally.