Where to start, considering I was lucky enough to know all of my Grandparents right up until the mid 1970s.
What do I remember most? My 'little Gran' I suppose. She was a tiny thing (hence the nickname), knee-high to a smurf reaching about 4'11" in thick socks, and weighed about 6 stone fully clothed.
The youngest of 5, she had to leave school at the age of 8 (after her Mother died), to look after her father and brothers. The youngest brother was 15!!!!!
I later discovered she was at the same school with my
other Grandmother, although they subsequently finished up at opposite ends of the county before my parents met at a dance in London in 1945.
What made me smile though was at how fiesty she must have been. She looked after these 5 men from the age of 8 until she was 12 when, to use her word, she "
decided" she didn't get on with her Father. So, she did no more than pack her bags and went to live with her Aunt 10 miles away. She spoke to her Father once after that - he turned up at her wedding, arrived just after the ceremony, stayed long enough to have his picture taken, handed her a 'present' (a letter telling her how much he loved her

) then left! My Mother remembers my Grandfather pointing out a complete stranger in the street once and saying 'That man's your Grandfather'!!!
But I digress, between the age of 12 and her marriage on her 21st birthday, she'd been down a coalmine (just visiting), queued "
for hours" to go on 5 minute plane ride, nearly died by getting sucked into some quicksand and taught herself enough maths to subsequently get a job as a book-keeper. Later on she got "
a little job", proof-reading manuscripts for a scientific publication. And not a SATs, GCSE or A level in sight!!!