"School Days" is the theme of this month's Sepia Saturday prompt photographs, so I take a look first at my primary school days in Blackpool , Lancashire.
I come from a family of teachers (two uncles and an aunt), married a
teacher and both my brother, daughter and myself have been trainers in
our particularly fields. So teaching is in the blood somewhere. My husband taught physics, and quickly found that to admit
to this fact brought to an end any social conversation.
Here is my first school photograph from the 1950's.
I
attended primary school in Blackpool, Lancashire. I am on the
second front row, second from the right, next to the boy in the striped
pullover. You can come across 1950s school photos from across the country, yet the girls always had the same look - hair in plaits, pudding basin hair cuts, side slides or fancy top ribbons. Skirts had straps and Peter Pan collars were all the rage. (no idea how they got that name). Whatever the weather in winter, it was unthinkable for girls to wear trouser, let alone for school - just not acceptable until some decades much later. The only concession to the cold was to wear dark knee length socks instead of white ankle socks.
I
counted a class of 46 then - more than double today's standard for infants class size!
Playing the triangle in my infant school percussion group is one of my
earliest school memo.ries. I was not too pleased at being given this
instrument. Like everyone else, I wanted the favourite choice - the
sleigh bells.
My proudest (and scariest) moment was being chosen to read at the school carol concert held in a nearby church in front of an audience of parents and grandparents. I had to be provided with a box to stand on in order to reach the lectern and read the few lines typed out for me.
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Moved up into junior school, we sat
in serried rows of battered individual wooden desks with inkwells, and I
remember chanting our times tables, copying handwriting, the hated
mental arithmetic sessions which I dreaded, and of course reading which
I loved.
Every Wednesday afternoon we gathered in the hall for community singing and I learnt such patriotic songs as The British Grenadiers, Hearts of Oak, The Bonnie Bonnie Banks of Loch Lomond, Bluebells of Scotland and my favourite Men of Harlech, sung with much gusto. Sea shanties were also popular as we swung from side to side to sing What Shall We Do with the Drunken Sailor? Are these now all forgotten, as I doubt that children are familiar with them today?
Every Wednesday afternoon we gathered in the hall for community singing and I learnt such patriotic songs as The British Grenadiers, Hearts of Oak, The Bonnie Bonnie Banks of Loch Lomond, Bluebells of Scotland and my favourite Men of Harlech, sung with much gusto. Sea shanties were also popular as we swung from side to side to sing What Shall We Do with the Drunken Sailor? Are these now all forgotten, as I doubt that children are familiar with them today?
It was in primary school around nine years old that I first wore glasses. My
mother was emphatic that I was not going to wear the hideous national
health service wire glasses with pale pink frames and was prepared to
pay for a slightly more flattering pair. But I always took them off whenever I had my photograph taken.
There
was not a strict uniform at my primary school, but I was desperate to
wear a gymslip and tie. My mother did not like them, but eventually I
got one handed down from my cousin and wore the school red and navy
striped tie and the red girdle round my waist, feeling I had stepped out
of one of the school stories I loved to read.
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Click HERE to read more schoolday memories from other bloggers.
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I love your school photos.
ReplyDeleteI picked you out of the classroom photo right away! No problem. :) And a good thing to take glasses off for photographs back then because the lenses didn't have special non-glare finishes on them back then which would have had them reflecting the light & make it hard for anyone to see the face of a person wearing glasses. The thing that always tickles me about children's school pix is the similarity of them. The faces may be different, but the way the children are lined up and the way they pose is almost universal. :))
ReplyDeleteYou look so cute in the photo, and such a smile! I also played the triangle.
ReplyDeleteI played the triangle out of time memorably in one school music competition :( The adjudacator commented on my poor rhythm.
ReplyDeleteWe had a school uniform all through my educational career - when I started we had to wear a blazer, hat in summer and beret in winter, and gloves when coming to and from school. Our gym slip which we had to change into for sports lessons had a red girdle.
You are indeed from a family of teachers! I only ever had one in my immediate family besides myself. What a sweet smile you had...I think I was frowning in most of my school photos- I hated getting my picture taken and still do to this day, although I do try to smile in them nowadays.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing memories and photos of your school days. I'm also pleased to say that I picked you out in your class photo too. I'm intrigued that almost all the boys and girls are focused on something or someone to the left of the camera. I'd bet it was your teacher who knew how to get everyone's attention and with good humor and big smiles too.
ReplyDeleteMy goodness, these are wonderful photos of you! I also have one of those group shots from grade school -- only mine was taken in the school cafeteria due to cold weather in upstate New York. Love the gymslip and tie. I can see why you liked it so much -- the outfit lends a professional air to your school photo.
ReplyDeleteThank you all for your lovely comments. This was an enjoyable nostalgic post to write.
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