Dedicated to the memory of Jim

Jim was the definition of a family man.  He was a loyal and loving husband to Helene, devoted father to Kate and Laura, doting grandfather to Sophia, Evie, Lila and Chloe, and loving brother to Sharon.  Jim’s easy manner and quick wit meant he could strike up a conversation with anyone and many are proud to call him a friend.

Jim was a voracious reader, loved music and an avid follower of sport, especially cricket and had been referred to as a walking Wisden.

Jim loved nature and we were so lucky to spend time as a family in the African bush where he would be just as enthralled by the beauty of a Lilac  breasted roller as a glimpse of one of the Big 5.

Jim has battled with ill health for many years but his strength of character ensured he never let it define him.  He was brave and stoic to the end.

Jim will be missed by everyone who was fortunate to have him in their lives.

If you would like you can leave a thought at the bottom of this page or you can make a donation in Jim’s name. We have chosen the charity Versus Arthritis, who provide support to arthritis sufferers, as well as campaigning and developing treatments. 

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What a gentle loving cousin. I am so glad I gave Jimmy the best memory of being in a wild west movie scene in Uddingston Glasgow. I have some photos I will forward on from time in Scotland. Love. Elizabeth, Paul and Sarah-Bernadette, Jennafer and Luke. Xx 😇🥰
Elizabeth
11th June 2020
Dearest Jimmy. What a wonderful man and special cousin. A real family man a quick wit as well as a font of all knowledge. You will be terribly missed by many people. Much love from your Carroll cousins, Maria, Bernadette, Josephine and Elizabeth (Frankie and Sadie postumously) xx
jo
11th June 2020
I have known Jim for 50 years this December when he joined Standard Bank, Bramley, Johannesburg where I was based having joined the bank from Scotland in October 1970 on a two year contract. Both being Scottish, we hit it off from day one and he introduced me to his family shortly thereafter.  I was like an adopted son and was included in most of the family activities to the extent that my son, born in 1990, regarded Jim's mother as "Granny MacAllister". Everything about Jim as a person has already been said but he also had a mischievous side to him which was evident as we socialised, travelled and partied through the early years of the 1970s. In June 1971 we were both chosen to represent Standard Bank S.A. on a football tour of Mozambique.  We didn't fare too well at the football but the night life in Lorenzo Marques more than made up for it. We arrived back in Johannesburg on a weekday morning and told to report directly to work at the bank.  On arriving at the office in Bramley we were both Boet home and told to recuperate! This infamous trip was followed in January 1972 by the most adventurous trip/holiday of my entire life. In December 1971 I asked Jim if he fancied a trip to Rhodesia in January - I had four week's leave due and Jim almost three weeks. He agreed to join me and so we planned our journey - hitchhiking 1000 miles from Johannesburg to Kariba Dam.  It was agreed that I would set off on Saturday 2nd January 1972 and Jim would set off the following week. You must remember that neither of us had ever been there before and there were no mobile phones, no way of making contact, in those days.  We arranged to meet on Saturday 9th January at the "No. 13 Bar" at the Meikle Hotel in the centre of Salisbury (now Harare). I set off as planned and had my own adventures for a week arriving at the "No. 13 Bar" about 4.30 as arranged.  You can imagine my surprise to find Jim holding court at the bar with several locals and that's when our adventures together began. The trip is a chapter on its own and I'm sure Jim, the raconteur that he was, would have retold the stories at many a social gathering. Although three years younger than myself, it was his resourcefulness and level-headed thinking that brought us back safely, three weeks later, to Johannesburg. Although our lives went off in different directions and to different parts of the world we kept in touch and met up several times in Scotland. I will continue to tell the stories and you will never be forgotten, a true gentleman, Cheers Boet
Murdoch
10th June 2020
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