Letter in the Attic

Childhood correspondence between George Horrobin (1925-1998) and Violet Baker

About this contribution:

Description

Collection consists of the correspondence between GH and VB when they were approximately 10 years old in 1936.

Biographical information

GH was born on 5 November 1925 at 47 Brunswick Square, Brighton and died in Brighton on 4 August 1998. His family lived at 13 Upper Market Street in Hove, the Clayton family (his mother's family) owned numbers 12 and 13 for many years. He attended St Margaret's School, Queensbury Mews, Brighton and Senior Boys School, Connaught Road, Hove, leaving in 1939. Other than overseas service during and after the Second World War as a Leading Aircraftman in the RAF working as a radio operator GH lived his whole life in Brighton and Hove. He was employed as an apprentice printer before the war for the Brighton and Hove Herald at 2-3 Pavillion Buildings, Brighton and returned to the Herald after being demobbed in December 1947. He retrained as a teacher in 1953. GH married Irene Allan Dawes on 4 Setember 1948 in Glasgow, having met her whilst stationed in Cornwall in 1944. GH and IAD had 3 children, Patricia, Jane and Allan. Papers from GH's time in the RAF can be viewed by refering to LIA/1.

VB was born in 1925 in Devonshire Street, Hove and moved at the age of 7 to Temple Street. She is now Vera Blunden and presently (2008) lives in Swindon. She has no recollection of the letters or the other girl called Vera who is mentioned in the letters.

Name of creator(s)

Horrobin, George, 1925-1998; Baker, Violet, born 1925

Dates covered by the material

1936

Extent and form of the material

5 letters; 1 photograph

Access conditions

Open

Originals

Digital copies of the correspondence have been donated to the East Sussex Record Office and are listed here; the original correspondence remains with GH's daughter, Tricia Leonard.

Comments

Want to add a comment about this catalogue entry? Go to the related page on the My Brighton and Hove website and click on the 'Add a comment' link at the bottom of the page.

Reference

LIA/44