Richard Ryan, or Ricko to friends, passed away in hospital on the morning of 20 September.
For many years Ricko was actively involved in the Sheffield & District CAMRA branch holding various committee roles including chairman, however I think most people remember him as social secretary, organising some excellent minibus trips to various pubs and breweries, Christmas dinner parties and an annual day out at the Thornbridge Hall charity garden party – which was one of our branch’s few family orientated events.
Ricko was involved in brewery related socials well before my drinking career began and Chris Pearce, who now volunteers as cellar manager at our beer festival, recalls first meeting him on a coach trip from the Cocked Hat Attercliffe to Marstons Brewery in the late 1980s. “The coach stopped on the way back for more beer (as if we needed more!) and then on joining the M1 for one junction, we hit a jam. An eternity later we left at junction 29 and stopped at the first lay-by for us to empty aching bladders. The whole coach was lined up against the hedge and we all roared with laughter. We next met when I did my first festival circa 2002 and amazingly he remembered me. Since then we’ve always had a good chat at festivals. And that coach trip was remembered in our last conversation in the Northern General”.
Ricko was also clubs officer, championing the traditional working mens clubs and keen to find ones with real ale, an interest that was down to growing up in a family that had been involved with running clubs.
He was also involved in our beer festival organising committee and for a number of years was responsible for booking the bands. This was generally a huge success although one year a rock covers band was asked to turn the volume down due to the venue having a wedding party booked in next door to the festival with the result being the band stormed off stage and left! Ricko had to be consoled on the night as he felt he had let everyone down, however since has laughed about it with the rest of us!
For a number of years Ricko also organised an awards night for the beers that had been judged the best of the festival. He was keen to make it a special – but affordable – occasion and managed to persuade Thornbridge to provide us with a high class venue free of charge and the winning brewers to provide free beer – so we were able to sell affordable tickets that just had to cover the cost of a coach to Thornbridge Hall and a buffet! Whilst the support of those businesses was something we were most grateful for, it was really Ricko’s warm and easy going character and personality that helped make the organisation of such events possible.
Ricko loved his real ale – and also stronger Belgian beers (I wonder thinking back now if that is why bottles often appeared at our beer festival!) He was also a fan of Laurel & Hardy and was a member of Sons of the Desert, an appreciation society, which did see some cross over with his CAMRA membership with film screenings in pubs and joint brewery trips organised!
In more recent years Ricko’s health and mobility wasn’t so great, however he did still make the effort to come and help at the beer festival doing a desk job in the cashiers office (aka “counting house”), a volunteer role he’d held for quite a few years. Dr Tim Stillman recalls them working together in some strange places – An artiste’s dressing room with lights around the mirrors, behind a curtain at the back of a stage and even a dingy broom cupboard with no ventilation. At an outdoor festival in Cemetery Park, the counting house was our friends caravan parked behind the marquee. It rained constantly and as the festival went on the mud got deeper and deeper in and out of the caravan. As we were counting one afternoon I noticed Richard’s neat piles of ten pence’s were taking on the appearance of the leaning tower of Pisa. Also our pens seemed to be rolling across the table towards us. He looked at me and said “I think we best sit on the other side of the table”
Meanwhile in Handsworth, where he lived most of his life, he did continue to make the occasional appearance at the Chantry Inn, which is where a get-together was held following his well attended funeral.
For those that couldn’t make the funeral or wake another chance to raise a toast to Ricko was provided at this years beer festival with a special beer on the bar brewed in tribute by Bradfield Brewery called Counting House Stout.
Miss the big fella we had some good chats about MOTO GP one of the nicest blokes I’ve met to me known as big rich coz at wraggs we had a little rich R.I.P MY FRIEND