Margaret Hilda Roberts,
otherwise Thatcher, now drafted in to help manage the Great Organising Deity's
diary; it is very busy these days, must be having a quiet chuckle. Her boss has decided that enough is enough
for the Scottish Labour Party and it is now as dust.
If any group made it their
business to demonise her, it was them.
During the 1980's and beyond they dominated affairs in Scotland and
oblivious to the challenges and rapidity of economic and other change attempted
to create a New East Germany on Scots soil.
It is undeniable that she
was a first. The first woman to be Prime
Minister, the first research scientist to do so and there is something
else. The "posh" voice and appearance
are deceptive. Apart from Ramsay
Macdonald she is arguably the most Plebian of our Prime Ministers in origins,
although it is a close call with Jim Callaghan.
What is surprising is how
English she was. As you step back from
generation to generation and the numbers in each increase you expect to see
variations occurring in terms of origins, religion and class. Sometimes more, sometimes less, also, there
was mobility in many ways that gave rise to some variations that could be
astonishing.
Having looked at her
paternal side to discover generations engaged in the East Midland Shoe Trade
with others, I managed to track back her maternal side with the advanced
systems. There appeared the Holy Grail
of ancestry. A great grandfather listed
as Ag. Lab., or Agricultural Labourer in the first half of the 19th Century
deep in rural Lincolnshire.
But it is from this line
that the "posh" might come along with the ferocious attention to
detail that so upset both colleagues and civil servants. It is fashionable to suggest this is the
product of something going on the head that differs from ordinary mortals, but
it may come from upbringing.
Because the Ag. Lab. put
his children through elementary school before compulsory attendance, a son,
grandfather to MHR, was good enough to be taken on as a regular railway
employee, a desirable occupation at the time for many reasons, not least the
chance of advancement by performance.
From my own experience of
the old railways and working with men who joined as boys before the First World
War, I have a good idea of what this entailed in the late 19th Century. Things had to be right and you were
accountable.
Also, you had to be clean
and smart, polite and careful. You had to be able to deal with the travelling
public, be clear in speech and know what you were doing. The interesting thing about MHR's maternal
grandfather is just who he was dealing with on a regular basis.
Burgh le Marsh Station is a relic
now of a once busy Lincolnshire railway line.
But it was a short distance from Gunby Hall, now National Trust, home of
one of the leading families of the day.
So through that station would be Society and others of importance coming
and going, and their servants, horses and valuable luggage.
This is where grandfather
started and then he moved down to Grantham.
Although essentially, a modest market town with some small industrial
activity and a busy Main East Coast Line junction, when it came to the Railway
Station's customers then it was in the big time.
There were the Brownlow's
of Belton House, at Court and moving at the highest levels of society and the
Manners family, Duke's of Rutland from Belvoir Castle. For the fox hunting world Grantham was slap
in the middle of the Belvoir country, prime territory and the Meet was
sometimes in the town centre.
During the season there
would be almost a procession of the good and the great going through the
station and MHR's grandfather would be on the platforms, smart as paint, polite
and efficient to deal with them and all their kit.
So this is the way her Mum
was brought up and never forgot, and this is the way Margaret was trained not
just by her mother but perhaps her grandmother who died in 1934, grandfather
having died in 1917, aged 66 and still at work.
It wasn't only the needs
and business of her father's shop work that was instilled into her, it was
something else as well.
It might be the reason why
she could always look people in the eye and politely and succinctly tell them
where to go.
I have to disagree about who she works for now.
ReplyDeleteI really appreciate that. Passing the 11+ changed my world completely. People, including my grandchildren (despite my efforts), do not really know what high standards some had, and the respect that was held of education. Mine have come through university (provincial) and I shudder even now at their lack of knowledge of history. Bring back the Grammar Schools.
ReplyDeleteInteresting analysis. A formidable lady, I don't think we'll see her like again.
ReplyDelete