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A story of love and hope, inspired by the real-life events of World War II.
When Jack’s dog and best friend Badger finds her life on the line, he must act fast to save her.
An act of survival becomes an adventure, as they journey across war-torn London to find the one person who can help them. But when Jack is evacuated from the city, he’s alone once more until his love for Badger drives him back home to find his beloved friend.
But has he arrived too late to save her?
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Yolanda find’s out what life in Britain was like for the people who emigrated to Britain on the Empire Windrush and the later ships.
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Yolanda learns about why people from the Caribbean decided to make the journey to Britain and what it was like on ships like the Windrush.
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Yolanda learns about what life was like in Britain after the second world war and why help was so desperately needed from the people in the British Colonies.
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Yolanda looks into the history of migration in this country including the Windrush Generation arriving in Britain after the Second World War.
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Yolanda learns about the Caribbean immigrants who came to Britain’s aid, many on the iconic ship the Windrush.
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Cast iron houses were quick to build, with materials in plentiful supply...
Until the price of bricks dropped, making cast iron houses too expensive to make.
That's why there was only 4 cast iron houses built in Dudley!
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The Newcomen steam engine was a tremendous invention by Mr. Thomas Newcomen - first installed in the Black Country in 1712!
This time of engine was put to work in mines all over the country, and helped to change the world.
The power of steam had been known since the Ancient Greeks and had even been used to help toys move.
It took many centuries until people thought to put it to work in machinery.
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Roads have changed a lot, and so have vehicles!
Motor vehicles, such as motorbikes and cars, as well as trams and trains, have revolutionised the lives of everyday folk. Helping people travel more easily and farther than they ever have before.
Birmingham and Coventry are well known for manufacturing cars - the Black Country has been at the forefront of motor transport.
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The anchor and chains for the Titanic, and her sister ships Olympic and Britannic, were made in the Black Country - the anchors were some of the biggest ever made!
The anchor was over 15 tonnes and 18 feet long!
Chains and anchors came in all shapes and sizes, meaning women and children were responsible for making them in backyard forges.
Anchor makers made a good living, better than many people in the area.
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Did you know the Black Country used to be known as Birmingham-on-Sea?
The boat people never stayed in one place for long, they were responsible for moving cargo - even Cadburys chocolate!
People moved cargo along the canals until just after the Second World War!
With the development of the road network, trucks took over and the canals fell into disrepair. The families who lived on the canals had to move into houses.
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Life at home in the Black Country in the 1800's was a lot different to life nowadays.
Can you imagine having to share an outside toilet with your whole street?
Or starting work before you're old enough to finish school!
Things have come a long way since, but there's still some similarities...
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The Black Country was famous for coal mining back in the day!
But working in the mines wasn't just a pretty horrible job because it was so hard, dark, and dirty work; it was also really dangerous.
You could be crushed by falling rock, suffocate on gasses, or be caught up in an explosion if any flammable gases caught on fire.
In this episode of 'Adventures Through Time' we learn all about the famous Rounds Green Colliery Explosion that happened in 1846.
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You might take being warm and cozy in your house for granted, but the people of the Black Country definitely didn't back in the Victorian era!
Most people back then had to rely on fire in their homes to keep warm. With finding the fuel for the fire, starting it off, and keeping it burning, it was quite a job they had on their hands!
Find out all about how people of the Black Country used to keep warm in this episode of 'Adventures Through Time'.
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Staying healthy is really important, but with all those factories and mines in the Black Country, doing that was easier said than done.
People would get ill and injured a lot back then but not everyone could go to the doctors to get their health problems fixed. The NHS wouldn't be around until 1948 and doctors back in the day were expensive, far too expensive for normal factory workers like so many of the people living in the Black Country were. These people would often rely on their local chemist to give them remedies for their illnesses, and the chemist would design and create these remedies themselves!
Find out all about it in this episode of 'Adventures through Time'.
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People in the Black Country didn't just work in the factories all the time, they had to eat too!
Getting a good meal back then was a little different back then, lots of families would get a lot of food themselves. They would grow vegetables on their own vegetable patches and keep animals.
That wasn't the only option though, trains were a big deal back then which allowed food and drinks from all over the British Empire to be transported around the country. This meant that (if you had the money) you could buy lots of different and exotic food and drink like sugar from the Caribbean and tea from India!
Find out more about how the people of the Black Country kept themselves fed in this episode of Adventures Through Time...
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Queen Victoria meant a lot to the people of the Black Country.
Many pubs and houses around the Black Country would have a picture of the Queen hanging in them to honor her.
Usually, if you were expecting to see the queen you would probably have to be in London and attending a fancy party or concert. But Queen Victoria decided to visit The Black Country back to unveil a statue of her late husband.
This was a big deal to the people who lived in the Black Country, as you can hear in this episode of 'Adventures Through Time'.
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Mary Macarthur was a pretty amazing woman in the Black Country's history.
Lots of women workers back then used to be treated very unfairly, they were made to work long hours and for not very much money at all!
It was a hard and horrible life, but they didn't dare say anything as they were scared of being fired and not being able to feed their family.
Mary Macarthur saw this injustice and decided to help.
Listen to this episode of The Black Country Living Museum's 'Adventures Through Time' to hear all about what she did to help these workers.
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It’s a decade after the start of the war and Edward’s father has died. At a church memorial service, Edward contemplates the role of memorial in our society in all its aspects.
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Many of us remember the fallen from the Great Wars and other conflicts by wearing a poppy. Edward’s mother and Grandmother talk about the Poppy campaign, and Edward remembers seeing the Scottish troops in London.
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Memorials for the fallen come in many shapes and sizes. This is mainly due to there not being any rules about what form a war memorial should take but also because different people and communities want to remember and commemorate in different ways. Edward and Sid take a walk down memory lane.
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Military cemeteries were designed to be peaceful and to be a fair way to remember both rich and poor alike. Edward visits Brookwood Military Cemetery in Surrey, whilst Sid and his mother argue about John’s place in a cemetery in France.
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In the aftermath of the war, Britain needed a way to remember their fallen. The Cenotaph and The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier would become the focus for the nation to remember, particularly on the anniversary of the Armistice.
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After the war, the Government said it would look after the returning soldiers, with houses and jobs fit for the heroes they were. The reality was quite different ...
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In the early hours of 11th November 1918, an Armistice Agreement was signed between Germany and the Allies. This meant that at the 11th hour on the 11th day of the 11th month there would be a truce and an end to the fighting – but peace would be a little way off.
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The Spanish Flu was a terrible illness that spread across Europe and was brought to Britain by returning soldiers and ships bringing food to feed the starving nation. It was a pandemic that gripped the country and would end up killing more people across the world than the war itself.
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Until 1918 only some men had the right to vote in elections. Groups of women, called Suffragettes had protested for many years for women to be able to vote too – sometimes the protests were peaceful but some were violent, causing damage.
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Edward describes the difficulty of life in 1918. Shortages are making it hard to find vegetables and material for clothing, with news of more losses in battle adding to their worries.
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Dan and Bex think about working children in other parts of the world and how we can help to change things for the better.
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Dan and Bex find out that even after schools became compulsory – and free – not everyone was happy to attend.
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Dan and Bex, with the help of Lord Shaftesbury’s Journal, find out that making clothes was a common way for children to help their families earn extra pennies.
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Dan and Bex, with the help of Lord Shaftesbury’s Journal, take a trip to a Victorian pottery and find children hard at work
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Dan and Bex, with the help of Lord Shaftesbury’s Journal, find out that it’s not just coal that’s mined – clay, slate and other minerals all involved child workers.
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Dan and Bex, with the help of Lord Shaftesbury’s Journal, learn about apprenticeships – where children were sold to learn a trade.
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Dan and Bex, with the help of Lord Shaftesbury’s Journal, learn what life was like for child workers in Victorian factories.
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Dan and Bex find out about the jobs kids did on the transport networks – canals, roads and railways – with help from Lord Shaftesbury’s Journal.
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Dan and Bex explore what jobs children undertook on the grimy streets of Victorian cities as they take a trip into Lord Shaftesbury’s Journal.
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Dan and Bex, with the help of Lord Shaftesbury’s Journal, find that Victorian children frequently had work around home – once they had got home from school.
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Dan and Bex find out about the jobs kids did in domestic service – with help from Lord Shaftesbury’s Journal.
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Dan and Bex, with the help of Lord Shaftesbury’s Journal, find out that there’s more to mining than digging out coal.
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Dan and Bex find out what life was like as trapper in a coal mine when they take a trip into Lord Shaftesbury’s Journal.
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Dan and Bex find out what life was like as a farm worker they take a trip into Lord Shaftesbury’s Journal.
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Dan and Bex find out what life was like to be a chimney sweep as they take a trip into Lord Shaftesbury’s Journal.
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Dan and Bex find a book that transports them back to Victorian Britain to explore why children worked.
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Edward and his mother are queuing for flour. They talk about rationing and the causes of the shortages. German ships have attacked the supply ships, whilst farms have been neglected as the men go to war.
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Edward talks to Mrs Parry and Sid about how transport has changed since the start of the war, with more and more motorised vehicles such as buses and trams. Horses and bicycles through are still a regular sight.
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Edward watches the Zeppelins bomb South London from the attic window, and talks about how it felt to have the war so close to home.
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Children were certainly kept busy in 1916. Many would be caring for smaller children or had jobs. Even those still at school would help with the war effort, perhaps through the Scouts and Guides.
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Edward experiences the wounded returning from the Front Line, coming back on ambulance trains. He talks to Sid about seeing injured tommies in the city.
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People are desperate for news about the war – but not every report can be trusted. Government needs more and more men to join up and Edward notices an increase in the use of propaganda to encourage men to join up.
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Edward talks with Mother about how many homes and schools have become military hospitals – even his rich grandmother has agreed to take in the wounded.
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Father is back home on leave, and explains to Edward why the Government has had to introduce conscription.
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Edward and Sid talk about how things have changed – anything with a German name is treated with suspicion, there are many new laws and women increasingly are filling the roles left by the men.
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London 1916 and the war shows no sign of ending - the Battle of The Somme has shocked the nation, Londoners are experiencing changes and Edward’s father may be in the thick of it…
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It’s Christmas time and Edward and Sidney are excited about the parcels they are sending to their menfolk in France. The shops are busy as Londoners enjoy getting in the Christmas spirit. Edward and his mother decorate the house and talk about the food they will be eating on Christmas day. There is sad news however from the front…
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In this episode Edward talks about the sorts of things he and his friends write in the letters to their family members in the services, and what is in the letters they get back. Food is often a popular topic! Things continue to change for Edward, with the housekeeper leaving for better paid work in a factory, and Edward’s father posted to France – this means he won’t be home for Christmas.
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In this episode Edward talks about the different ways people communicate with soliders on the front and how they write back – field service postcards, honour envelopes and letters – but do any of them tell the whole story? With mother now working as a censor Edward realises she may know more about the war than she is able to say…
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In this episode Edward talks about the different ways people communicated in 1914. With rumours abounding, news clips at the cinematograph, and newspapers are becoming more popular, and letters and postcads vital as a way for soldiers at War and their families to keep in touch. Very few people have telephones although Edward’s rich grandmother has one.
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In this episode Edward describes the clothes he wears and how they compare to other boys and girls. He talks about uniforms – the army’s, and his new Scouting Uniform. He has a uniform for school too, although not all children do.
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In this episode Edward’s father has joined up and life is changing for those left behind – there are fewer men around and everyday supplies are running short. Even children like Sidney Parry, the housekeeper’s son, are caught up in war work – whether they like it or not…
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In this episode Edward talks how things are changing since the start of the war. The City Exchange has closed which means father hasn’t as much work to do, and mother is knitting for the troops. The daily trips to school and work are affected by the war effort and everyone seems to be doing their part…
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In this episode Edward describes the toys and games he enjoys. On his way to go fishing with his father he sees some other children playing in the street.
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In this episode Edward talks about the rooms and décor in his home. He compares this with his rich grandmother’s house and the much smaller and poorer type of house in which the housekeeper Mrs Parry lives.
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In this episode Edward talks about all the ways he and his family enjoy themselves – including fairs, trips to the seaside, the cinema and comics. Housekeeper Mrs Parry tells him about the music hall.
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