Re: Summer 2015 | Page 11

Can you tell me about your childhood and early family life? I was born in Aberdeen in 1957 and I don’t remember very much about it, to be honest with you. I remember my house when I was between about four and eight years old which was a lovely granite building in Aberdeen and - most of the houses in the centre of Aberdeen are this lovely thick granite which was mined and the buildings all glisten in the sunshine after it’s been raining. So that was a quite dramatic place to be in that sense and I liked my time there. I lived opposite a park so we used to go and play there and there was another park down the road, so it was good. I didn’t like my school very much. I got sent to a, a private school while I was a junior and really it wasn’t terribly great and I learnt far more when I went to the state school and when I came down to England at the age of about ten or 11. Where did you move to? Well, my father died when I was eight, which was a reasonably traumatic experience and my mum wanted to leave Aberdeen to start afresh which I understand, so we moved down to Hornchurch - my mum wanted to move there because I think, first of all her sister was there, and secondly also because she had been stationed there during the war. There was an airfield there and she had done some work on the airfield so she knew it from that as well. So, that’s where we went, down to Hornchurch. I felt sort of stateless because I had a strong Scottish accent, which I haven’t got now, and everyone in England thought I was a foreigner and when I went back to Scotland to see my friends, they all thought I was English because I’d picked up an English accent so I was sort of stateless. I didn’t really feel at home anywhere between the ages of about 11 and, well, when I came to Lewes, which was when I was 28. What brought you to Lewes? I was with my girlfriend at the time in Reigate, briefly, and I had this idea that it’d be nice to live 50 miles from London on the basis that I didn’t want to be in London but I wanted to be somewhere near it, so we went on this self-created road trip round, followed the M25 I think, so just round 50 miles from London to look at places. It wasn’t always 50 miles, as we went to places like Saffron Walden and so on, then we found Lewes, which is almost exactly 50 miles from London. I’d never heard of it before, and thought it was a great place; I just fell in love with it. I didn’t really feel at home anywhere between the ages of about 11 and, well, when I came to Lewes, which was when I was 28. When you were younger, did you have an idea of what you wanted to be? Oh, I wanted to be a train driver, I think. I was always interested in politics and half-thought I might become involved in politics, but then I half-thought I might be involved with the railways, and as it happens it turned out to be both as I was the Transport Minister. But I didn’t have a plan