Harold was born on 23 October 1893 at St Margarets, Middlesex. His father was Joshua Watson, (born 18 April 1863) and his mother was Annie Margaret Boyes, (born 23 May 1860) who combined their names to Boyes-Watson. His parents were school master and mistress at Swillington School on the edge of Leeds, where Harold went to school before going to Leeds Grammar School. Harold was a keen sportsman winning first prizes in the 100 yards race and broad jump in 1912, when the prize money was donated to the Lord Mayors Relief Fund for the coal strike. In 1912, he took up a place to study classics at Trinity College, Oxford. When the First World War broke out in 1914, he volunteered for the territorial force most closely associated with his school, the Leeds Rifles Prince of Wales' Own West Yorkshire Regiment.
He was commissioned on the 29 August 1914 as a second lieutenant with the 7th and 8th Battalions.[1] He was second with the 26th Provisional Battalion in August 1915,[2] and upon its disbandment prior to the Military Service Act 1916, he became liable for overseas service.[3] He was injured in fighting in the Battle of the Somme in July 1916 and was repatriated to Kings College Hospital, Denmark Hill. After recovering he became a Bombing Instructor at Clipstone Camp, where he was mentioned in dispatches on 18 February 1917 for his bravery in dealing with a bomb dropped by a corporal under his instruction. He was promoted to the rank of lieutenant in November 1916, precedence from July 1916.[4]
After graduating from Oxford, Harold embarked on a career in education starting as Assistant Master at his old school, Leeds Grammar School. He then worked as Technical Officer for Leeds Educational Authority from 1920 to 1924. On 31 March 1920 he married Hilda Cooper in West Bridgford, Nottingham. He moved to Nottingham as assistant director of the Education Authority 1924–27. He then worked as Assistant Education Officer in Birmingham 1927–31, before becoming Director of Education. He was appointed Director of Education for Southend in May 1931 and managed the evacuation of Southend's schools to Derbyshire during World War II. He continued as Director in Southend until his retirement on ill-health grounds in 1951.[14] Harold died at the age of 78 in March 1972 at Thorpe Bay, Essex.