
This humorous account of a family growing up in the rural environs of London in the 1920s and 1930s is a sequel to Molly Hughes's autobiographical trilogy, "A London Child of the 1870s", "A London Girl of the 1880s" and "A London Home in the 1890s". The book takes up the story of Molly as a widow, with very little money and three sons to educate. On the strength of her teaching experience, she becomes a schools inspector and examiner - a job which provides a rich source for anecdote. She moves her family to Cuffley, then an unspoilt rural village 15 miles from Kings Cross. Born and bred a Londoner, she is elated to find that, incredibly, the garden of their first house affords a view of St Paul's. The amenities of Cuffley are few, but hold charm for the modern reader. "The Times" arrives by bicycle; necessities, from sugar to doormats, can be bought from a hawker with a pony-cart; and telephone calls are made from a local farmhouse. The story that unfolds is an undramatic one about ordinary people. There are adventures, but of the homely kind - an evening at the "talkies", the move to a new house, the excitement of the first grandchild.
This memoir investigates the daily realities and domestic challenges of a widowed mother raising three sons in the rural outskirts of London during the interwar period. M. V. Hughes, an experienced educator and schools inspector, utilizes her personal history to document the transition from urban life to the semi-rural environment of Cuffley. The text serves as a primary source account of the socio-economic conditions, domestic logistics, and cultural shifts characterizing the 1920s and 1930s in England.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians and readers frequently cite this work as a valuable, intimate record of middle-class life in interwar Britain. The prose is noted for its observational clarity and its ability to capture the mundane details of a bygone era with precision.
Page Count:
180
Publication Date:
1979-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192812777
ISBN-13:
9780192812773
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