Peter Adrian Grove
1943-2026
Born June 1, 1943, Peter grew up in the small village of
Send in Surrey, England. His early years were filled
with adventure as he explored the flood meadows and
waterways of the River Wey Navigation where his family
had worked for generations. With no television,
refrigerator, car, or telephone, Peter developed a
deep connection to nature that would shape his life’s
work.
Peter’s formative years included helping his uncle with
his boating business and working in greenhouses. He
went on to study horticulture at the Surrey County
Merrist Wood Farm Institute, graduating as top student
with both Royal Horticultural Society and National
Certificate of Horticulture degrees. Following his
studies, Peter joined the elite British Special Air
Services reserves, where he passed the famously
rigorous Selection Course, trained as a parachutist, and
won for his regiment the famous Devises to
Westminster 125-mile canoe race, finishing in 29
hours.
In his early twenties, inspired by the film Around the
World in Eighty Days, Peter and a friend headed off to
India by bike. Running out of money by Athens, the two
signed-up as seamen on a Norwegian oil tanker where
they worked around the world, paying off in Portland,
Maine. Peter then bicycled to New York City for a visa,
then to Montreal (Expo ’67), from there the two cycled
to Los Angeles via the Canadian National Highway and
down through the western U.S. deserts and national
parks.
Returning to Europe on a Swedish oil tanker, Peter by
himself resumed the trek to India hitchhiking overland,
where he joined a French English volunteer group
Frères des Hommes sinking wells and improving
agricultural conditions for Dalit (formerly
“untouchable”) communities in thirty villages in Bihar.
There, in the Samanveya Ashram in Bodh Gaya, he met
his future American wife, Nancy, herself coincidentally
on her own trip around the world, having been inspired
by the same film.
After India came travel to New Zealand and Australia,
where Peter worked in various construction jobs before
rejoining Nancy in America in 1972. He pursued higher
education at Montgomery County Community College
(and later was one of the 50 honored graduates in
Montco’s 50-year celebration), the University of
Pennsylvania, and Penn’s Graduate School of Education.
After marriage in England, Peter began teaching at the
Miquon School. Following that, Peter and Nancy set off
for another year backpacking around the world before
returning home to start a family.
Upon their return, Peter became the director of the
Norris Square Neighborhood Project (NSNP) in
Philadelphia, providing educational programming for
underserved kids and raising that organization’s status
to a United Way Agency, before beginning a thirty-year
career at the Friends’ Central School (FCS), as their
elementary school science teacher.
Upon his retirement from FCS in 2017, Peter focused
on projects in his local community, in particular
undertaking the restoration of the section of the East
Branch of Indian Creek that runs through Narbrook
Park on its way to Cobbs Creek and then to the
Delaware. He created another new trail for the
Bridlewild Trails Association on Township owned land in
Gladwyne and actively supported preservation of land
in Narberth and Lower Merion Township. With COVID
came a resurgence of his cancer, which he handled with
national and international travel undertaken between
weeks of chemotherapy, immunotherapy, surgery and
radiation. Unable to beat the cancer, he died peacefully
at home on May 6, 2026 just short of his 83rd birthday
and fiftieth wedding anniversary. As his legacy, he
made a gift of funds for the creation of pollinator
gardens in Narberth and Lower Merion Township to be
implemented by the Riverbend Environmental
Education Center. This project, known as the Peter
Grove Pollinator Program (or “Peter’s Pollinators” for
short) is planned to be implemented over the next ten
years with the involvement of public and private and
non-profit property owners.
Should the rest be deleted?
Peter was a gifted teacher and mentor. At Miquon,
NSNP, and FCS, Peter (trailed for many years by his
beloved dogs Mungo and Shadow) inspired generations
of students through his love of science and nature.
Anyone fortunate enough to have been in Peter’s
classroom will tell you the same thing: he made
learning joyful, engaging, and unforgettable – almost
magical! Favorite lessons at FCS involved having the
children haul his car up a hill using a pulley system;
taking part in annual invention fairs, harvest shows,
and mold symposia; orienteering with compasses to
find buried chocolate treasure; launching hot air
balloons; finding and examining creatures in a nearby
stream; making pancakes (for chemistry); building
electric cars; designing environmentally sustainable
dwellings; and constructing weight-bearing bridges
with straws and pins.
Under Peter’s guidance, his students embellished the
lower school property by creating ponds, a bird blind,
and flower and vegetable gardens, reflecting Peter’s
belief in experiential education. For several years
Peter taught prospective science teachers in the
UPenn Teach for America program and also at
Rosemont College. His contributions to teaching were
recognized by the Garden Club of America’s with its
teacher award for “Outstanding Contributions to the
Environmental Education of Youth” and by the National
Science Teacher Association with a semi-finalist place
in the Teacher of the Year award. Over the years he
immensely enjoyed encountering former students
after they had left his classroom.
Beyond the classroom, Peter was also a passionate
steward and advocate for environmental conservation,
always encouraging his students and their parents to
reduce their consumption of fossil fuels, and better
manage other natural resources. He served on the
boards of various local organizations, created
community gardens and pollinator habitats, and
maintained the trails in the Bridlewild Trails
Association 35-mile network. His efforts to preserve
open space earned recognition by the Lower Merion
Conservancy and the Borough of Narberth where
Rolling Hill and Elm Grove Park stand as testaments to
his dedication. During a sabbatical from teaching, Peter
volunteered in Costa Rica to protect leatherback turtle
eggs from poachers – a reflection of his global
commitment to environmental stewardship. He donated
regularly to national and international environmental
organizations and frequently wrote to local officials
and newspapers to highlight environmental concerns.
Peter’s other community contributions were equally
impactful. He received the Pennsylvania Horticultural
Society Green Thumb of the Year Award for helping
children and neighborhood groups start numerous
corner lot and school lot gardens in inner city
neighborhoods and was commended for creating a
fragrance and texture garden at Overbrook School for
the Blind with his fourth-grade students. He helped
raise funds for the library through garden tours and
brightened winters with luminary displays in Narbrook
Park. As a beloved storyteller, Peter entertained
thousands of children and their parents at various
schools and local events – including Riverbend’s annual
Shiverfest. His voice lives on through recordings
available online and in posthumously published
collections of short stories.
Above all else, Peter was devoted to his family. He
shared an enduring partnership with his wife Nancy and
was a wonderful father to their children Evan and
Marian. Peter and Nancy loved to travel, having hiked
several famous trails (headhunter trail in Borneo,
Milford Track in New Zealand, Pilgrim’s Way in
England, among others) and climbed to unusual heights
(including Mt. Kinabalu in Borneo and the snow line of
Mt. Kenya). Together they restored two “fixer-uppers”
and loved entertaining friends and relatives. Many
nights, Peter prepared candle-lit gourmet dinners for
his family. As a father, Peter was fun loving and
devoted, enthusiastically cheering his kids on at soccer,
baseball and field hockey practices, figure skating
competitions, choir and a cappella performances –
helping them build igloos and elaborate forts, design
complex Halloween costumes, memorize lines for
plays, and hone their writing skills. Well into their
adulthood, he stayed closely involved in their lives,
helping them fix up their homes, advising their
gardening efforts, looking after grandkids, etc. As MC,
he famously entertained Nancy’s large family at
reunions. He had a beautiful singing voice, loved music,
dancing and fishing, and told marvelous jokes.