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Wanted: the pupils who penned their dreams

In 1920, a class of mainly Jewish boys from Stepney were asked to write down their aspirations. One woman is trying to find out what really became of them

May 23, 2019 14:44
A photo of the East End class —the blanked faces are of the 16 children whose fate is still unknown

By

Ben Weich,

ben weich

3 min read

One wanted to live in the countryside; another dreamed of entering the “glamorous” jewellery trade.

The hopes of a class of East London pupils 100 years ago have a power that cannot be replicated, as an exhibition at the London Metropolitan Archives (LMA) has shown.

But even more poignant is the question of whether those children ever achieved what they dreamed of — and one curator is determined to find out.

“What Ever Happened to the Blakesley School Lads?” is a detailed study of the lives of 27 schoolchildren — at least 22 of whom were Jewish — originating from nothing more than a collection of essays they wrote between the ages of 11 and 14.

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