A Sussex farm during the 1950'S

Ian Everest


Region:
South East
Notice Period:
Emergency (maybe less than one week's notice)
Type:
Sussex Local Historian with an interest in Farming, the Countryside and the First World War
Fee:
Paid: £75 plus travel (for charitable and voluntary groups up to 100 people) and locations in Sussex.
Category:
History
Updated:
13th August 2024

To ‘make hay’ and ‘bring in the harvest’ sound like idyllic past times, but this talk shows just how tough life was on a South Down farm during the 1950’s. The war was over, but the battle was still being fought to feed the nation. The talk includes original cine film.

Views: 1039 | Enquiries: 5

About Ian Everest

I was bought up in a farm on the South Downs and after attending Agricultural College in the late 1960's, I worked on farms before joining the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food at an animal disease research centre.

My growing interest in family and military history led to a career change in 1987 when I was appointed manager of Newhaven Fort in Sussex, a scheduled monument which I prepared for public opening the following year and continued to manage for fifteen years.

Since retiring in 2011, I have developed a range of talks which I give to a wide variety of groups and organisations, including Family /Local History Groups, U3A, Royal British Legion, National Trust Associations, Horticultural Clubs, Probus Clubs, CPRE, National Farmer’s Union, Women's Institutes (accredited speaker for East and West Sussex) and Natural History groups.

My talks are regarded as being both informative and entertaining.


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