Pupils Born 1910s-40s Textbooks
Pupils Born 1910s-40s Textbooks
Pupils Born 1910s-40s Textbooks
1910s/20s pupils
MP/P24/HiE2 born 1924. PS & County High (GS) Ilford. Also did Teacher form.
“In Junior School 2 periods a week dedicated to History – Piers Plowman histories were the books I
remember using.”
Secondary school - “Books used – FC Happold’s ‘Adventure of Man’ in form I, when we were
encouraged to make our own picture/diagram notes. I think the book was original, with a broad
sweeping survey, unusual for its time. Followed by Happold on 55BC onwards – then Mowat on
Stuarts (Tudors missed out) in 3rd year. School Certificate Course (1815-1914) based on GW
Southgate’s solid unillustrated textbooks with useful summaries.”
MH/P29/HiE12 born 1929. “During my time at Primary School I can only recall reading text books
(Piers Plowman springs to mind)”. And at secondary school it was just “Chalk – Talk – text books –
writing essays”
How was she taught? “Very largely from out-of-date text books and lectures from teachers. This was
during the war, when few or no new books were available...”
1930s pupils
JT/P32/HiE188 born 1932. PS, Hounslow + Direct Grant, Hammersmith, London. Evacuated GS,
Dorset.
I still have some school books (we had to pay for our own books, which could be sold to the next
class, the next September).”
“ ‘Stories from Modern History’ CH Jarvis (George Harrap 1937)
‘Sketch Map History of Britain 1688-1914 Richards, Taylor, Morris (George Harrap 1940)
‘Britain & Europe 1485-1783’ Taylor & Morris (George Harrap 1939)
“These were used in the VI form, as I have written 1950 inside the book – (I still refer to them!!)”.
DG/P39/HiE37 born 1939. PS + GS, Kingsbury, Middx (few months in Wiltshire elementary village
school ?evacuated). NB Also completed Teacher form.
““No memory of Junior textbooks; pretty sure I’d remember eg Peter Hill’s books if used. ..At A Level
– just Oxford Hists (Ensor, Woodward) + for Europe? Denis Richards + Seaman’s ‘Vienna to Versailles’
(regarded as innovative).”
GS: “We had textbooks often very old ones with at least 6 names in them of previous users...I can
remember the ‘thrill’ of a new textbook when we began ‘O’ level studies as we were some of the
first students to do that particular course”.
PA/P44/HiE70 born 1944. PS + GS, Woodford Green, East London. Retired English teacher.
“I think we had at least one text book each year, perhaps more. None was memorable until A level...
“At A level, we had solid, heavy text books: the Watson, Woodward (my favourite..I don’t know why
now!) and Ensor volumes of the Oxford Series for English history; their equivalent for European and I
feel guilty that I cannot remember the names of those authors. These were the staples: know these
inside out (or try!) and the basics were there. I loved the heftiness and detail of these books; they
didn’t seem patronising in the way that some (not by any means all) of the books that my son had
for A level looked with their pictures and cartoons, extracts from quotable ‘authorities’ and ‘schooly’
lay out.