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The House I Grew Up In
BBC Radio 4
21 episodes
9 months ago

Series revisiting the childhood neighbourhoods of influential Britons

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All content for The House I Grew Up In is the property of BBC Radio 4 and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

Series revisiting the childhood neighbourhoods of influential Britons

Show more...
Personal Journals
Society & Culture
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Sir William Atkinson
The House I Grew Up In
28 minutes
15 years ago
Sir William Atkinson

Sir William Atkinson, one of the country's best-known super-heads, first came to this country from Jamaica aged 7. His father met him, his mother and two brothers at Heathrow. This is the first memory Sir William has of his father who had worked abroad for a number of years. The other oddity of that day was seeing white people doing manual work on the drive from the airport. The only white people he'd seen as a young child, growing up in a small village, had been plantation owners.

The family settled in Battersea, South London. In the 1950s this was a white working-class neighbourhood and racism was endemic with room-to-let signs proclaiming: no blacks, no Irish. Despite a difficult educational start - Sir William must be the only person to have failed the 11+ twice - school became his saviour. Teachers, fired with a 1960s social conscience, put faith in him. He went into education to return the favour. Producer: Rosamund Jones.

The House I Grew Up In

Series revisiting the childhood neighbourhoods of influential Britons