SeanOk Coventry All posts by this member | 1 of 18 Thu 2nd Apr 2020 6:05pm Member: Joined Apr 2020 Total posts:2 Hello All.
Having stumbled across this forum I knew I had to join. I am an avid history fan and am currently nearing the end of my second year with the Open University studying for a BA Honours degree in, of course, History. All being well, when I have completed my third year, I intend to go on to study for an MA in History.
That being said, I have taken it upon myself to begin my own sort of research project (in the hope this will prepare me for work expected when studying at Masters level). Being Coventry born and bred, it was obvious my choice of topic was going to be about my home town and as it stands the title of the research I am running with is:
Life in Coventry, Before, During and After The Blitz (subject to change)
I am posting this message to see if any of you could suggest any help with my research. In particular I am struggling to find much information on Coventry in the 1930's. I am looking to begin my research from around 1937 and ending it around 1942/3. Any ideas would be greatly appreciated - books, newspaper articles, videos, leaflets, pictures - anything!
As I say, the 1930's is what I am struggling with, but I would appreciate ideas for any of the years I want to study!
Thank you in advance and I look forward to hearing from all of you! I must say its great to be a part of a forum full of Coventry history fans like myself!
Sean. Sean |
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Helen F Warrington All posts by this member | 2 of 18 Thu 2nd Apr 2020 11:36pm Moderator: Joined Mar 2013 Total posts:2619 Hi Sean, welcome to Rob's fantastic site. ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Rob Orland Historic Coventry All posts by this member | 3 of 18 Fri 3rd Apr 2020 11:26am Webmaster: Joined Jan 2010 Total posts:1656 Some years ago I "OCR" transcribed a certain book by a certain JB. I'd completely forgotten about it until you mentioned it Helen, but see if you can spot the new article at the bottom of the list on the Forum Members' articles page! Our new member, Sean, might be especially interested. ![]() ![]() |
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Helen F Warrington All posts by this member | 4 of 18 Fri 3rd Apr 2020 1:08pm Moderator: Joined Mar 2013 Total posts:2619 A sobering account that puts our current situation into perspective.
I wish I'd met him. |
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Annewiggy Tamworth All posts by this member | 5 of 18 Fri 3rd Apr 2020 2:18pm Member: Joined Jan 2013 Total posts:1840 Sean. Have you looked at The British Newspaper Archive site? It is a subscription site but it includes a lot of Coventry newspapers from the years you are interested in. |
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Kaga simpson Peacehaven, East Sussex All posts by this member | 6 of 18 Fri 3rd Apr 2020 3:16pm Member: Joined Sep 2014 Total posts:3791 SeanOk. How long do you have?
We had three kings reign within a year, and we had Wimbledon champions, ladies and gents - will never happen again.
We had half a pint of milk a day for a halfpenny, a football team that scored five goals regularly, we had yo-yos and five stones, a little box that brought moving people into the house (television).
At night time we scurried underground like rabbits, told what we could or could not eat, wear or where we could work.
Somehow, every six months, we lost an hour or gained an hour.
We had a blitz, and a war, that curtailed my schooling - try doing lessons in a gas-mask!
In Coventry, to me the 1926/27 strike and the expansion of the city changed a lot of old ways and customs and even the 'lingo'.
Most of the districts you now know, were urban fields, heaths and woods.
But do ask how I can help.
Kaga
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Helen F Warrington All posts by this member | 7 of 18 Fri 3rd Apr 2020 4:37pm Moderator: Joined Mar 2013 Total posts:2619 Lots of good advice, I think that your problem is going to be choosing what to research. |
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Rob Orland Historic Coventry All posts by this member | 8 of 18 Fri 3rd Apr 2020 6:19pm Webmaster: Joined Jan 2010 Total posts:1656 On 3rd Apr 2020 1:08pm, Helen F said:
A sobering account that puts our current situation into perspective.
I wish I'd met him.
Oh, me too, definitely. John Bailey Shelton must've been one of the most interesting locals we could've ever hoped to chat with, especially after all his 1930s "unofficial" archaeology. |
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Kaga simpson Peacehaven, East Sussex All posts by this member | 9 of 18 Sat 4th Apr 2020 9:59am Member: Joined Sep 2014 Total posts:3791 Rob,
A couple of weeks ago I said can we trust old books, looks good in 21st century but Shelton isn't how everyone looked at it back in back in 1940. I would like to have met him, I have a missing story. |
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Kaga simpson Peacehaven, East Sussex All posts by this member | 10 of 18 Sun 5th Apr 2020 9:53am Member: Joined Sep 2014 Total posts:3791 SeanOk
Can I suggest you look at 'Dad's Army' - not the army side but the class system in 39. He’s a bank manager and that puts him a class above everyone, even if he knows little about the army. Porters at the railway station used to carry a single case, that's all over now. Everyone knew where they stood in social standing, and the clergy stood above everyone else, even the aristocrats, and little boys were told to keep quiet in front of grown-ups, and do as they were told. |
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Kaga simpson Peacehaven, East Sussex All posts by this member | 11 of 18 Mon 6th Apr 2020 10:19am Member: Joined Sep 2014 Total posts:3791 SeanOk,
The thirties was one of the most advanced decades in our history, there is a ton of stuff out there. The television is bringing this tragedy to the world's notice, and television's first play was 1930, and Don Bradman made the highest score of the year. Mrs Pankhurst was arrested, we just missed the elections of '29, but women's first ever vote, partly started by a Coventry women (George Eliot and her friends), I believe Coventry was floodlit. Sunday cinemas were made legal, the Bank of England transferred all its cash to America, Belisha beacons, and Beryl Markham flew to USA solo. And in '34 Coventry bought water from carts. We were flying higher and farther than any bird, made our first transatlantic call to the USA and to Australia. Children got school milk, women joined Coventry Fire Brigade, and men still wore a full bathing costume. X-rays, aircraft and motor cars improved. There is a mass of stuff out there. |
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pixrobin Canley All posts by this member | 12 of 18 Mon 6th Apr 2020 11:33am Member: Joined Mar 2014 Total posts:1103 SeanOk
There was a massive social housing programme in Coventry between the wars - dubbed as homes for heroes. I haven't seen much about that on here or on the internet either. |
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Kaga simpson Peacehaven, East Sussex All posts by this member | 13 of 18 Mon 6th Apr 2020 12:52pm Member: Joined Sep 2014 Total posts:3791 Pixrobin
Yes in Coventry 1934/6 although The Prince of Wales visited the slums in 1929 he visited the Durham area - the prince that abdicated. |
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Kaga simpson Peacehaven, East Sussex All posts by this member | 14 of 18 Mon 6th Apr 2020 2:07pm Member: Joined Sep 2014 Total posts:3791 pixrobin (sorry, called to lunch)
My granddad bought two joint houses before the turn of the century, it had front and rear gardens toilet down rear garden, both houses fed by a well and hand pump.
In 1936 the council built a new Tusses Bridge and road, taking our gardens, the pavement only two feet away, but my dad had planted an apple tree in the garden, in memory of his mates that didn't come back from WWI. My granddad had violent rows with the council not to remove the tree, they built the pavement round it. But all the old bucket toilets had to be replaced, so they built a toilet on the side of the house wall, its door six inches from the kitchen door, and then ran a cold water tap into each house to replace the well. Now I don't know who paid for what was a private house, but it solved the slums as they called it, and the apple tree grew in the middle of the pavement until the seventies when the new highway swallowed it. |
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Kaga simpson Peacehaven, East Sussex All posts by this member | 15 of 18 Tue 7th Apr 2020 12:07pm Member: Joined Sep 2014 Total posts:3791 Around 1937 we watched cinema newsreels of the Spanish civil war. Some Coventry kids even went out there, but we quickly saw the nature of modern warfare, the bombing by German planes. I had about ten uncles and about ten cousins that would have to go to war. Watching the newsreels, even in Coventry it would be destruction on an epic scale. By 1938 Chamberlain could have taken us to war, instead he went to Germany, gave us a little time to prepare. It also gave the French Army time to prepare, now in 1939 but no, as far as I'm aware they didn't move one division, and Churchill was furious. Dunkirk, and we stood alone. And the planes bombed Coventry - after a few raids, people saw the defence was poor, but nothing was done and Coventry suffered (my own view). |
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