Going to school in Tenby was a pretty
big culture shock at first for an 8 year old American but by
then I was getting a knack for being "the new kid in class"
- I had done it so many times before! Still, Tenby County Primary
School was different in some unexpected ways.
Tenby County Primary
School
On the first day of school during
recess, the local boys surrounded me on the playground. Because
I was an American they began asking me, "Do you have your
own gun?" and "How many Indians have you killed?"
So I had to explain the reality to them. But they liked us Yanks,
as we were called. And I made many very good friends during the
two years I was there.
That's me, in the center, wearing glasses
with an odd expression - perhaps because my Dad was there taking
pictures. I don't remember exactly who took the picture. In any
case, seated next to me was my very good friend Ian Davies. |
Click on this article from the Tenby
newspaper dated Sept. 1963, about us Americans in Tenby. |
One of the other funny things that
made it clear we weren't in California anymore was that instead
of playing "Cowboys and Indians" during the school
lunch hour, my classmates were playing "Greeks and Persians".
Right around that time there were a number of movies that played
in Tenby like "The 300 Spartans" and "Jason and
the Argonauts". That was probably the reason! It was great
how they improvised chariot driving by having one kid hold onto
the shirt-backs of two others as they would race into "battle".
During the 2 years we lived there,
I couldn't help but absorb vast amounts of knowledge about English
history, the growth of the British Empire and, most impressive
of all, how Britain resisted Nazi Germany. Even little Tenby
had endured at least one German air raid and in 1962 there were
still large areas of war-damaged London that hadn't been rebuilt
yet. I'll always have the greatest admiration for what the British
did, more or less on their own, until the United States finally
got involved. But even though they won the war, it seemed to
have taken quite a toll economically. Or perhaps I was just a
spoiled Yank from California.
Royal Air Force Spitfire: one of the
victorious survivors from the ferocious Battle of Britain From
left: Steve, Jamie, Shawn and me. |
My brother Steve and I were
also introduced to the playground game called "Conkers" which involved a smashing contest between
horse
chestnuts on the end of a string. Never
heard of it? Neither had we until living in Tenby.
Welsh schoolboys Jamie Waste
and friend Mark Fawcett
On the left: my younger brother Jamie
in front of his school. He and his friend Mark Fawcett are eating
popsicles (or as they called them over there "ice lollies").
Jamie got the part of "Father Christmas" in his school
play. He always seemed to make the best of wherever we were living,
whether it was Hawaii, Idaho or Tenby, Wales. |
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