by Don Featherstone
From WARGAMER'S NEWSLETTER #163, October 1975 With great sadness I record that Steve Curtis of Skirmish Wargames died on 18th August 1975. Because wargaming is a young hobby it lacks heroes, there are very few characters whose larger-than-life exploits are avidlypassed on by word of mouth when the battle has ended and the table-top generals sit nursinga pint. It is the manner of things for colourful patterns to be moulded of such characters as their lives unfold but for their image only to achieve its true dimension when they have departed from Earth. This was not quite the case with Steve Curtis who, in his short lifetime, made an unforgetable impact upon all who knew him. But truly in Steve Curtis the hobby of wargaming has acquired a hero through the courage and enthusiasm he displayed towards our hobby and to life itself during his short twentyeight years span of life. Grievously and painfully suffering from Muscular Dystrophy and confined to a wheelchair for most of his life, Steve's enthusiasm, ingenuity and imagination - all tempered with an incredible cheerfulness and courage, served as an example to all and no one left his presence without acquiring a feeling of intense warmth and humility. To all who knew him it was quite apparent that Steve possessed all the qualities, everything - except good health. He gave a great deal to the hobby and the hobby gave a lot back to him, providing such an overwhelming interest as to prolong his life for some years beyond its anticipated length. Steve and his chair were highly mobile but, unaided, he was sadly handicapped. Perhaps for this reason he was obsessed with the drama, colour and movement of the Old West and in his semi-fantasy American worhy of one hundred years ago he delighted in his self bestowed name of "Old Long Hair Hisself" - this photograph [unreproducible - ED.] depicts him in that role and is probably how he would like to be remembered. Owing more than can ever be estimated to his collaborators, Mike Blake , and Ian Colwill, Steve played a big part in introducing a new dimension to our hobby - a fresh facet and horizon which probably brought a greater sense of reality to the wargames table than any other method of wargaming. The stories, so colourfully drawn up, breathed the very characters of their three authors who displayed so much skill and ingenuity in converting 54mm figures into dance hall girls, Wild West gunmen, native warriors, British Colonial soldiers and the like that to be invited to participate in an engagement with their highly realistic terrains was a memorable event. Quite understandably, Skirmish Wargames do not know quite where they go from here as their plans did not extend beyond operating as a trio. It is to be hoped for the sake of the hobby that they decide to carry on and, in putting out more rules and stimulating more wargamers, they provide a perpetual memorial to their friend In Steve Curtis' departure wargaming has suffered a great loss. It cannot be better expressed than in the immortal words of John Donne
It would be most fitting for a public-spirited organisation, such as those who advertise in WARGAMER'S NEWSLETTER, to present a tropy - the STEVE CURTIS MEMORIAL TROPHY, to be held each year - to the winner of a National Individual Skirmish Wargames Championship. 10th Anniversary Game Armageddon 1986 Back to Table of Contents -- Courier Vol. VII #6 To Courier List of Issues To MagWeb Master Magazine List © Copyright 1987 by The Courier Publishing Company. This article appears in MagWeb (Magazine Web) on the Internet World Wide Web. Other military history articles and gaming articles are available at http://www.magweb.com |