This project focused on the ‘living memories’ of children born during and in the immediate aftermath of ‘The Great War’, those children’s stories and those of their families are forgotten.
Many families in Rotherham were touched by the War in the form of prevailing loss at a time when there was no Welfare State as such, orphans were pressed into labour at an early age, girls went into domestic service and families struggled through a forgotten depression.
The forgotten near revolutions in 1918 and 1919 reflected a depressed community decimated by loss that saw The British Empire lose much of its’ wealth, weakened at home with economic strife and social tensions, a good reflective learning note for 2013.
The heritage outcome was to teach young people 11 to 18 the true human costs of The Great War and tell the stories of the children and young people who grew up during and after it in the hope that young people will ‘learn about heritage’ from the perspective of ‘young people’ from the period of that time and what came next. This project offered a ‘Rotherham’ residents perspective on heritage drawing on strands of our industrial heritage.
Based on this focus we talked to local history groups, archivists in Rotherham Advertiser, RMBC Library Services, Clifton Park Museum, Weston Park Museum, identified families of those locally affected by the war and those who came forward through the project’s promotional activities who are ‘local people who wish to share family stories of the time’.