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John
Parker was born in the small district of Toll End in the heart of the
Black Country in 1921, the son of a clay miner and grandson of a coal
miner and a boatman.
For more than ten years he lived with his parents and three sisters
in a small back to back house at the side of Toll End Canal. In 1931
the family moved to a new council house in Toll End and one year later
they moved to a small terraced house in Tame Road, Great Bridge which
became the family home for twenty two years.
He was educated for five years at Great Bridge School and for a further
five years at Wednesbury Boys High School. In 1936 at fifteen years
of age he joined the nearby Horseley Bridge Company as an Engineering
Trainee, the beginning of a career in Engineering. Later he worked for
seven years at London Airport Heathrow, and after studying Geology at
the University of London he became an Engineering Geologist.
After forty years living and working in and around London, with his
wife Dorothy and two children, David and Christine, he retired age sixty
and moved with Dorothy to Stratford upon Avon.
It is the best account of life in a deprived part of the Black
Country, and a career which enabled the victim to escape
from it, which I have encountered in 30 years handling such material.
Stan
Hill The Black Country Society
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