Politics is the topic for Week 46 in Amy Coffin’s and Geneablogger’s 52 Weeks of Personal Genealogy and History series. What are your childhood memories of politics? Were your parents active in politics? What political events and elections do you remember from your youth?
Politically informed but no activist - that sums up my attitude. My father had a strong interest in current affairs and politics and this rubbed off on me from a relatively early age. He also involved himself in community affairs wherever he lived.
We were a family who always listened to the news (radio in the morning and TV in the evening), and watched major events ranging from the Queen's Coronation, Royal Weddings, and Sir Winston Churchill's funeral, to the building of the Berlin Wall, Cuban crisis, space missions returning to earth and the shooting of President Kennedy - this had a particularly strong impact on me. During Kennedy's election campaign I was still at school and JFK was someone we admired and we poured over the photographs of Jackie's fashions. We saw on TV his powerful inauguration speech, his meeting with Kruschev, his speech at the Berlin Wall and my father got up during the night to hear his statement on the Cuban crisis. We felt part of a new era. Young and energetic-looking for a world leader, he made such a contrast with our own Prime Minister Harold Macmillan who seemed to epitomise the Edwardian period of 50 years past. I had never lost anyone close to me, yet President Kennedy's death hit me hard. I stayed off university lectures to watch the funeral on TV and wept at the sight of Jackie and her two young children.
We were a family who always listened to the news (radio in the morning and TV in the evening), and watched major events ranging from the Queen's Coronation, Royal Weddings, and Sir Winston Churchill's funeral, to the building of the Berlin Wall, Cuban crisis, space missions returning to earth and the shooting of President Kennedy - this had a particularly strong impact on me. During Kennedy's election campaign I was still at school and JFK was someone we admired and we poured over the photographs of Jackie's fashions. We saw on TV his powerful inauguration speech, his meeting with Kruschev, his speech at the Berlin Wall and my father got up during the night to hear his statement on the Cuban crisis. We felt part of a new era. Young and energetic-looking for a world leader, he made such a contrast with our own Prime Minister Harold Macmillan who seemed to epitomise the Edwardian period of 50 years past. I had never lost anyone close to me, yet President Kennedy's death hit me hard. I stayed off university lectures to watch the funeral on TV and wept at the sight of Jackie and her two young children.
Dad had left school at 14 years old and since then was a self-taught man. He was unashamedly Conservative, reader of "The Daily Telegraph", admired the Queen, Winston Churchhill and Margaret Thatcher and was a member of the local constituency party helping at fund raising events, delivering election leaflets etc. He often wrote letters to the local newspaper on political issues - much to the concern of my mother who did not like the verbal brickbats that he could receive.
I have recollections of the Suez Crisis of 1956. Through one of those quirks of fate, an international event had an impact on the family, as my father was transferred work-wise from Lancashire (my mother's home all her life) to York to replace his predecessor who was in the territorial army and called up to serve.
I have recollections of the Suez Crisis of 1956. Through one of those quirks of fate, an international event had an impact on the family, as my father was transferred work-wise from Lancashire (my mother's home all her life) to York to replace his predecessor who was in the territorial army and called up to serve.
At school I was hopeless at creative imaginative writing and in exams etc. I always opted for the report style topic. The General Election of 1959 gave me inspiration for an essay at school where I won a prize - so it stuck in my mind. I began with "Here is the six o' clock new - A General Election has been called for..........the rest I can't remember at all, but I ended with "Here is the 6 o'clock news - all election results are in and the Conservatives have been returned with a majority" - at the time I thought this linking of the start and the finish was a neat essay writing technique! In both French and German exams, one essay choice was to write on a famous person - and I chose Sir Winston Churchill.
With Dad, I followed the course of General Election campaigns and results and remember one year marking up with coloured pencils an election map in red and blue (Labour & Conservative) with occasional yellow for Liberals.
At university I studied Modern History and Politics at a time of both a British general election and American presidential election, when we were given a very informative little booklet by the American Consulate in Edinburgh explaining the procedures of primaries etc.
Dad and I also shared an interest in journalism and I always fancied working as a newspaper librarian, or as a BBC researcher, though jobs are few and far between. However my second professional post was to set up a modern studies information unit at Edinburgh's College of Education. This was long before the internet, and it involved project files of ephemera - mainly press cuttings, so I got to look though all the quality daily papers - a great job.
Frustratingly I had to wait quite a time to exercise my own vote - I was 21 just after one election and had to go another 4-5 years before having the next opportunity. I did attend some hustings in the days when candidates actually tried to meet the public and once went late at night to hear the results announced from the Town Hall balcony - and that sums up my poliical activities. Wearing a duffel coat was the closest I came to student rebellion!
Dad and I also shared an interest in journalism and I always fancied working as a newspaper librarian, or as a BBC researcher, though jobs are few and far between. However my second professional post was to set up a modern studies information unit at Edinburgh's College of Education. This was long before the internet, and it involved project files of ephemera - mainly press cuttings, so I got to look though all the quality daily papers - a great job.
Frustratingly I had to wait quite a time to exercise my own vote - I was 21 just after one election and had to go another 4-5 years before having the next opportunity. I did attend some hustings in the days when candidates actually tried to meet the public and once went late at night to hear the results announced from the Town Hall balcony - and that sums up my poliical activities. Wearing a duffel coat was the closest I came to student rebellion!
The suffragette cause is one I have always followed, and I have always advocated that women should exercise their right to vote, when the battle to achieve it was so hard. I must have passed this view onto my daughter, as she was shocked to hear me say that I might not vote in the last election for members of the European Parliament, as the whole process seemed so meaningless. I did end up voting!
I was secretary of my local community council for three years. I was asked to stand as a councillor, but I knew it was not for me - I am no good at thinking on my feet and in no way could I cope with the hurly burly cut and thrust of modern day politics, even at a local level.
But the influence of my father (below) in being concerned about his community remains with me, and, like him, I am an avid reader of newspapers. IBut I do not quite follow the same political line!
Great post Susan. I enjoyed reading about your family's engagement with politics. I also loved the school essay! I used to read the paper daily but too many years of the NT News (local paper...ugh!) has cured me of that.
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