And I still say Hugh Gaitskell or Tony Benn would have knocked spots off them all

Sep 22, 2008 19:25

Thanks to loganberrybunny for drawing to my attention this BBC poll in which we are invited to rank Britain's twelve post World War II prime ministers in order of their ability -- but in order for your vote to be counted you must score all twelve.

This is the sort of debate I could engage in till the cows come home, so I'm reposting my answer ( below this cut )

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paka September 22 2008, 18:35:15 UTC
I'm probably old enough, but I'm definitely not British enough to remember the Winter of Discontent. May I trouble you for an explanation, please?

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klepsydra September 22 2008, 18:51:08 UTC
A good place to start would be the Wikipedia page on it:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winter_of_discontent

The things most people seem to remember are "Rubbish piling up in the streets" and "you couldn't even bury the dead", though I recall most the power cuts because they always seemed to come when Dr Who was about to be shown on TV...

(And reading that page: dear lord, was inflation really 26.9% in 1975? You kids today don't know you're born.)

(You may also recognise the source of a Supertramp album title in there...)

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dingotush September 22 2008, 21:31:36 UTC
I think I remember Heath's Three day week more than the Winter of Discontent, which didn't seem nearly as bad (oh, lookee, it all started with poor government, a spike in the oil price, and a war in the Middle East - joy). Of course, I rather enjoyed using candles, cooking toast in front of the coal fire 'cause there was no electricity, and seeing more of my dad. We had coal fired heating, but I don't remember us ever running out of coal. It was also the time that I discovered Heath Robinson's illustrations in the newspaper. For a while I thought we had a cartoonist running the country since he only signed them "Heath".

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klepsydra September 22 2008, 23:07:47 UTC
This seems very strange, since as far as I knew Heath Robinson's period of activity was many years before that. *checks* Yes, apparently he died in 1944. I wonder which 1970s paper was rerunning them?

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loganberrybunny September 23 2008, 01:15:44 UTC
Could this cartoonist have been Michael Heath, perhaps? He was active by the 1970s, and used only his surname as a signature.

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dingotush September 23 2008, 08:58:17 UTC
It certainly wasn't in that Heath's style (one I'm not fond of). I suppose it could have been him, but then again if the style was copied it could have been anyone.

Probably should place too much store in 30+ year old memories of childhood.

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hrrunka September 23 2008, 10:26:46 UTC
The cartoonist I remember from that time, who did draw somewhat from Heath Robinson's view of things, was Tim Hunkin.

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dingotush September 23 2008, 08:37:10 UTC
Curious. Well, the since its was my parents' paper, there's a high likelihood of it being the Torygraph. Since I vaguely remember them being pertinent, I can only assume it was someone repurposing old cartoons, or drawing in Heath Robinson's style. The latter isn't hard, I learnt to do it myself as a kid.

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