Published Date:
06 June 2009
JEMIMA Reid, 79, of Firrhill, grew up in the Christie children's home in Haddington. Far from the
harsh image many people have of life in a children's home, she has some fond memories.
She recalls: "The staff were nice – they kept you in order. We stayed in the dormitories – it was good, we used to have pillow fights and the staff just took it all in their stride.
"We used to go to North Berwick for the holidays. They had a house there that they took us to and we used to go into the water, and we built castles and things with the sand, and made pies – you'd kid on you had a shop.
"There would be quite a lot of us, and my sister was with me.
"We played a lot of skipping rope games and played at shops and mums and dads – well, not dads, because it was an all-girls place!"
She went to Knox Academy, where life was a little different from that experienced by pupils today: "I think the teachers were a lot stricter then than they are nowadays because you respected your elders."
In many ways, however, life was not too different: "We learned spelling and arithmetic when we were younger and when you went to the secondary you got science and languages and cooking – you got a choice and I took cooking. We used to cook wee cakes, mostly.
It was after she left the home that life became tougher, however: "I left when I was 15 and went home to my mum and then I lost her. I went into private service for a dentist and I used to do housework and I served there, dinners and things.
"He was quite nice. I stayed in private service until I got married."
The full article contains 314 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
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Last Updated:
06 June 2009 12:13 PM
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Source:
Edinburgh Evening News
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Location:
Edinburgh
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Related Topics:
nostalgia
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Evening News nostalgia