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Len Goodman Investigates Workhouse Life | Who Do You Think You Are 2 года назад


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Len Goodman Investigates Workhouse Life | Who Do You Think You Are

▶ SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE 🔔 : http://bit.ly/WDYTYAyt Known to millions as former head judge on the BBC's Strictly Come Dancing, Len Goodman nearly became a welder until a friend told him to try out ballroom dancing because it is 'full of girls and virtually no boys'. Now Len feels it is time to find out about his ancestors. He spent much of his childhood with his mother's parents in Bethnal Green, and it is this side of the family that Len wants to investigate. Len discovers how the shadow of the workhouse loomed large over his family and led to tragic consequences. He also uncovers a connection to silk weaving and sets out to solve the mystery of an ancestor's descent into poverty. Len also follows the trail of his Polish great-great-grandfather, Joseph Sosnowski. He wants to know how Joseph ended up in Portsmouth in 1834. As Len follows in his footsteps, he discovers the dramatic part Joseph played in the struggle for Polish independence. ▶ WATCH MORE WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE: http://bit.ly/WDYTYAClips In each episode one of Britain's best-loved celebrities traces their family tree to reveal the surprising, extraordinary and often moving stories of their ancestors. We publish new videos twice a week with the most memorable moments from the show. Subscribe now and click on the bell 🔔 to get notifications every time we upload a new video! FOLLOW US ON TWITTER ⇨   / wdytya_uk   CHECK OUT THE WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE WEBSITE ⇨ http://bit.ly/WdytyaBBC When he was 20, says Strictly Come Dancing judge Len Goodman, he couldn’t have given a “monkey’s armpit” about his genealogy. The former welder, who took up ballroom dancing because it was a way to meet girls, has changed his mind. Now 66, he wants to learn more about his forebears. His first stop is Bethnal Green in London’s East End, where Len was brought up. “Doors were never locked, it was lovely, it was a true community,” he remembers. On a visit to his stepmother, Irene, where he’s joined by son James, Len sees family pictures and his grandparents’ wedding certificate. It’s enough information for Len to start to follow his maternal grandfather’s family line through census records. These reveal that his great-grandfather, Thomas, was a bricklayer who had at least eight children. “This is what you got when there was no TV or radio,” quips Len. Going back another generation, the census shows Thomas’s parents, James Eldridge and his wife Sarah, living with 11 children. But what was life like for them? Tough, suggests a meeting with Sue Donnelly, an archivist who looks after the Charles Booth collection. Booth was a Victorian social researcher and philanthropist who mapped London according to the living conditions of its inhabitants. In the middle of the 19th century, Bethnal Green was an area of huge poverty. It was also overcrowded, in part because so much housing was knocked down in the 1840s to make way for the railways. A story of one of Len’s forebears brings the conditions all too vividly alive. In 1889, as a newspaper report reveals, James committed suicide rather than be sent to Bethnal Green’s notorious workhouse. Even when Len was a child, he remembers, the family had a “morbid fear” of the workhouse. Further research suggests the fear may have been well founded. John Cecil, James Eldridge’s father-in-law, ended his days in Bethnal’s workhouse, dying of asthma in 1866. It’s a story given added poignancy by the fact that John was once a prosperous man, a silk weaver whose father, Daniel, left him property. Sadly, the decline of the silk industry in the 19th century meant that John lost both his livelihood and his inheritance. Next, Len wants to research the life of his great-great grandfather, Josef Sosnowski, who came to Britain in February 1834. In a Portsmouth cemetery, he sees a memorial to Josef as one of a group of 212 Polish soldiers who fetched up in the city aboard a ship called Marianne. But what were the circumstances around the men coming to the UK? In Poland, Len discovers more. Josef was a member of a crack cavalry unit that fought in an uprising against Russia, which controlled much of modern Poland in the early 19th century. Honoured for his bravery on the battlefield during the November Uprising of 1830-31, Josef was eventually forced to flee his homeland for Prussia when the rebellion was crushed. Expelled from Prussia after being “cruelly beaten up” and enduring more than a year of imprisonment in terrible conditions, Josef was on his way to North America when a storm forced the Marianne to take shelter on the south coast. In Paris, where many records relating to Polish exiles from this era are kept, Len learns that Josef was active in politics. Later in life, Josef knew Karl Marx. “I thought that I was truly an Anglo-Saxon, English through and through.” Despite the struggles endured by his forebears, he’s delighted with what he’s learnt.

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