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Grandad - William Alfred Gregory, c 1906


My Grandad - William Alfred Gregory. Apprenticed as a printer at the age of fourteen or younger and was a printer in London until he retired.
This is a portrait from a locket.
Is he the young man on the right in paws22 's print shop picture?
My Children's Great Grandfather.
Boys-Me>Hazel>William Alfred Gregory
If I had to choose one word to describe my Grandad it would be scrupulous. He dressed fastidiously, his words were carefully chosen and his ethics were impeccable - although he seldom spoke of them. He was not a Quaker -probably an agnostic - my mother remembers him saying to her as a young child "If you wish to attend church you may and if you don't want to, that is also fine" .
He was a working class man and largely self educated. G.B. Shaw was a favorite and perhaps that was an influence on his unwillingness to fight. He was a strong advocate of working men's right - he was an involved union man at the print shop (Waterlows) and a firm believer in equalizing education for all. He was a private man but had a Victorian man's power in the family - although never violent or loud his word - often unspoken - was law, until his adult children started pushing back!
I think his strong ethical sense and moral high tone was probably off-putting and intimidating for people - I'm sure he was regarded as humorless by some but like all people he was paradoxical. When my very loud, funny, charismatic piano playing father came on the scene roaring at him to get out of his chair and go down to the pub for a pint - my grandfather would smile and go leaving slack jawed relatives behind him.
When I visited him in the 1970's, after my Nana had died, he told me that if he had to do it again he would have been vegetarian and I think that even then,in his late eighties, he was thinking through the ethics of his life. As for me, I'm a vegetarian since my twenties, attended Quaker Meeting for several years and take part in a weekly peace vigil so looks like the genes are living on! (But I do spend a lot more time laughing.)
This is a portrait from a locket.
Is he the young man on the right in paws22 's print shop picture?
My Children's Great Grandfather.
Boys-Me>Hazel>William Alfred Gregory
If I had to choose one word to describe my Grandad it would be scrupulous. He dressed fastidiously, his words were carefully chosen and his ethics were impeccable - although he seldom spoke of them. He was not a Quaker -probably an agnostic - my mother remembers him saying to her as a young child "If you wish to attend church you may and if you don't want to, that is also fine" .
He was a working class man and largely self educated. G.B. Shaw was a favorite and perhaps that was an influence on his unwillingness to fight. He was a strong advocate of working men's right - he was an involved union man at the print shop (Waterlows) and a firm believer in equalizing education for all. He was a private man but had a Victorian man's power in the family - although never violent or loud his word - often unspoken - was law, until his adult children started pushing back!
I think his strong ethical sense and moral high tone was probably off-putting and intimidating for people - I'm sure he was regarded as humorless by some but like all people he was paradoxical. When my very loud, funny, charismatic piano playing father came on the scene roaring at him to get out of his chair and go down to the pub for a pint - my grandfather would smile and go leaving slack jawed relatives behind him.
When I visited him in the 1970's, after my Nana had died, he told me that if he had to do it again he would have been vegetarian and I think that even then,in his late eighties, he was thinking through the ethics of his life. As for me, I'm a vegetarian since my twenties, attended Quaker Meeting for several years and take part in a weekly peace vigil so looks like the genes are living on! (But I do spend a lot more time laughing.)
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