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Born
in 1910 in the City of Worcester, Annie Jones, later to become Annie
Hancock, was only 5 years old when her father was killed in The Great
War. The death of her father affected her profoundly for the rest of
her life. Her school days were her happiest days spent in the blissful
ignorance of an innocent, impressionable child. She left these days
behind her at age 14 and entered both the working world with all its
harsh reality and adolescence with all its confusing emotions. An early
romantic attachment ended painfully and abruptly. Eventually she did
marry and raised three daughters. As they began to grow up an unexpected
tragedy overtook the family, changing all their lives forever.
Annie writes her memoirs in her old age and tells a tale of triumph
over adversity. This is a story of an indomitable spirit; a personal
account of hardship and suffering. It is a social document of poverty
and deprivation spanning The Great War, The Depression and World War
II.
Shortly before her death, at age 79, she writes of her "skeleton
in the cupboard", a harrowing tale of the consequences of unrequited
love, a weighty secret that she kept hidden for over fifty years.
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