My 80th birthday came surrounded by ordinariness. No big events. Some eating and drinking. Staying in the Premier Inn in London’s Putney Bridge. Family, just family. The idea of staying in Putney Bridge was so that on my actual birthday, 30 January, I could wander through Fulham with my wife.
After a slum birth and a Catholic orphanage, I arrived age 10 with my fellow temporarily orphaned brothers at a block of council flats where Fulham met the more exotic Chelsea. We had three bedrooms for eight of us, a vast improvement on the orphanage and the notorious slums of Notting Hill.
I remember Fulham Public Library, the Eel Brook Common, North End Road market: none enshrined in history, other than my own. You could pass through Fulham and not give a toss for it; though once run-down and plebeian, it now resounds with the well-polished accents of the public schools and top universities. Of houses and flats measured in the millions. And an array of SUVs, now an overspill from bourgeoisified Kensington and Chelsea, the sister boroughs that in my early life were financially as mean as Fulham itself.
Get the latest news and insight into how the Big Issue magazine is made by signing up for the Inside Big Issue newsletter
We ended up on the New King’s Road. It passed through Fulham to Putney Bridge. Called ‘New’, it was an extension of the King’s Road that ran in Charles I’s and Charles II’s day from Whitehall and took the monarchs to their hunting grounds at what is now Richmond Park. Passing under what was later the window of our council flat on the third floor, kingly carriages carried the monarch to the pleasure of slaughtering deer in an artificially created wooded retreat, created by closing down Surrey villages and rewilding the farms and fields.
No sign of this royal history exists as it passes by my childhood home. Nor any sign of the civil war that led to the decapitation of Charles I at Whitehall in 1649. And only a blue plaque is now attached to the church on the other bank of the River Thames from the Premier Inn commemorating the Putney Debates in 1647, wherein the radicals among the captains and army ranks declared that all men were equal and worth as much as each other in the eyes of God. Imagine, opposite the Premier Inn all those years ago they were playing around with the concept of doing away with class. Ridding us of poverty.