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boo 2 Boothen Junior School my early life.

This is a reflection of my early life of a child at Boothen Infants School followed by its continuation at Boothen All Saints Junior school until the age of eleven. It covers many areas of my early education and the important role of the teachers in shaping me and the other children to value and appreciate the world that we were born into.

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Meet The Author

Guess that I am lucky to have such a good memory of my early life and in particular where my education was learned. From the age of around ten to fourteen I attended All Saints Boothen Junior School at the junction of London Road and All Saints Road, which on the other side of the road was All Saints Church where I was baptised in 1944.  In fact, the school had been built initially with two purposes. To provide for the weekly Sunday services and during the week provide accommodation for church meetings. From Monday to Friday, it was used as a school.

The story, over three pages and including photographs is about life at the school. The building and the lack of amenities, gas lighting, coal fires in the classroom containing in many cases in excess of thirty plus pupils. Explaining the state of the playground, the surface of which was rough clinker from coke boilers compressed and surrounded by closed up former air-raid shelters. Then in those days the use of the cane as a form of punishment was still administered, and upon reflection certainly helped to produce well balanced and respectful children.

The article continues to describe school life, the type of education as a small school the impact that teachers had on our lives. Sport was like any school and Boothen was no exception having its own league playing football team and also had the privilege of learning along with others schools a huge display held at Stoke old Victoria Ground upon the visit of the new Queen Elizabeth.

The part played by our teachers in moulding us to become respectable and well-behaved children was an important part of the teachers job, especially as it was a Church School. The three pages contain some 1,500 words in a well-documented summery of the four years spent there under the headship of Mr. William Geary, the only one to wear a rather faded academic gown but a real gent with a heart of gold.

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