By : Susan Moorcroft
Queen Elizabeth II was crowned on 2nd
June 1953 in Westminster Abbey,
London, upon the death of her father, George VI. While those at home in England
were clustered around their TV sets (or the TV sets of neighbours if they
couldn’t afford their own), the army personnel of a
barracks in Nee Soon, Singapore were given a day off… and my mum, then Connie
Holmes, met my dad, Walter (Wally) Moorcroft. They became engaged in six weeks
and married five months later.
Until then, Dad hadn’t focused too
readily on his army career and had been busted down (reduced in rank) several
times for a variety of misdemeanours. Mum had no patience with ‘that kind of nonsense’
and when he received a reprimand for talking to a senior rank with his hands in
his pockets (the senior rank being Mum), he reset his attitude.
My mother was a strong woman. She left a
small Yorkshire village to join the British Army when seventeen and was the
Women's Royal Army Corp’s youngest corporal in the Far East by age nineteen.
However, in those days, if a woman
wanted to marry and be posted along with her husband, she had to leave the army.
Mum became an army wife. Dad had got back his stripe and was a corporal again,
but that wasn’t sufficient rank to gain them a married quarter for some time.
Mum began her life as a mother to my brother Kevan alone in basic accommodation
in the south of England while Dad was posted in the north. Still, my parents
were soulmates and made it work. My brother Trevor was born less than two years
after Kev. Life grew easier as Dad rose through the ranks. It’s almost strange
now to think of a woman being almost entirely dependent on her husband’s
fortunes, but Mum was a stay-at-home mother and that was the way of the world.
Dad was posted to Germany and Mum and my
brothers soon followed. I was born right at the end of the tour and as a family
we went on to Cyprus for the first part of a three-year tour. From there we
travelled on Royal Air Force troop transport via El Alamein, Benghazi and
Tripoli, to the Mediterranean island of Malta for the second part. A posting to
the UK followed, then we returned to Malta.
We moved around the world with six
shipping boxes and three suitcases for a family of five, and it was mainly left
to Mum to pack, get us our inoculations and medicals, and, at the new posting,
find us schools, sort out new uniforms, school buses etc at the same time as
discovering the local shops and unpacking again. It was a glorious childhood, which
instilled in me an abiding love for Malta and for travel – in fact, I gave much
of my childhood to the character of Dory in Summer on a Sunny Island.
Life was good, my parents’ teasing, joking relationship was solid.
Dad’s final posting was in the Ministry
of Defence, Whitehall, London, Warrant Office Class I Staff Sergeant Major (a
senior non-commissioned officer), and we lived in a barracks in north London. Rather
than lose him at the end of his time, the army offered a commission, but it
would have gone with an unaccompanied posting (no family) and Mum had had
enough of being an army wife. Back in the UK, she could work again and had
begun to accrue her own household items and furniture instead of army issue. She
wanted her own home for the first time.
'Civvy Street’, for us, proved to be in
Northamptonshire, in the middle of England. I was horrified that we were so far
from the sea. I didn’t settle for some time, struggling with new schoolmates
who thought I’d invented my army childhood. I remember Mum saying, ‘We’re not
in Malta now so get used to it,’ and that was pragmatism rather than lack of
sympathy. I had to fit in in England, just as she fit jobs in admin and
accounts around the family.
Dad died young, in 1984 when he was 51,
leaving Mum a widow at barely 50. She never really recovered, and never had
another romantic relationship.
Her spirit, however, remained uncrushed.
She continued to work as head of a busy accounting section for several years
after Dad died. Equality
at work was law… but glass ceilings and walls were fashionable. Of the five
accounting sections in her company, four were led by managers (men) and one by
a supervisor (a woman – Mum). Their duties were the same, but managers received
company cars and higher salaries than supervisors. Mum pointed out this
inequality to her (male) line manager and was waved away. It was a busy,
demanding job, and Mum wasn’t enjoying the double-standards of her line
manager, so gave in her notice.
It was one week’s notice.
Her line
manager was aghast. He said she must give a month’s notice. ‘Sorry,’ she said.
‘Managers have to give a month’s notice, but supervisors only a week. My last
day’s Friday.’ I was with her at her home one evening when her boss rang to
coax her towards a solution that wouldn’t leave him in a mess. She politely
refused, and she left on Friday. It was typical of her to decide on a stance
and stick to it. She called it having the courage of her convictions… though if
I displayed a similar trait, she was less enthusiastic.
Mum’s
fighting spirit is summed up for me by her final afternoon with us in 2016,
when she was 82. Kev, Trev and I were grouped around her hospital bed and the
news wasn’t good. My cousin texted her best wishes to us all and I read the
text aloud to Mum, and suggested a reply. She removed her oxygen mask and gasped,
‘Tell her I’m not dead yet!’ So, I did.
A few
hours later, she left us – but we still laugh about that final demonstration of
her strength.
Sue Moorcroft is a Sunday Times bestselling author. Her books have reached the #1 spot on Kindle UK and top 100 on Kindle US. She’s won the Goldsboro Books Contemporary Romantic Novel Award, Readers’ Best Romantic Novel award and the Katie Fforde Bursary. Published by HarperCollins in the UK, US and Canada and by other publishers around the world. Her next book will be Summer at the French Café (Avon, HarperCollins) published on 12th May in paperback, ebook and audio.
5 comments:
Sue, Thank you for being a special guest at Romancing The Genres this month and sharing your mum's story. I think your mum and mine would have been kindred spirits in the "courage of your convictions" ... the opposite in our house was "stubborn" or other less complimentary labels.
Lovely tribute to you mother, Sue. Sher was certainly a strong woman, and I bet you are, too.
Thank you, Judith. Our mothers definitely sound kindred spirits. She had the courage of her convictions but I was ‘bolshy’. 😊
Lovely post and what a tribute to your mother. I love strong women.
Lovely tribute to a special lady. Laughed and cried at the end. Miss her. Xx
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