A House Through Time: Two Cities At War

David Olusoga returns with his popular BBC history series, this time with a difference. By tracing the lives of the residents of two apartment blocks – one in London, and one in Berlin – he tells the story of the world’s deadliest conflict – the Second World War.

Close up of David Olusoga smiling to cameraDavid Olusoga (Image: BBC/Twenty Twenty/Steven Bell)
Close up of David Olusoga smiling to camera
David Olusoga (Image: BBC/Twenty Twenty/Steven Bell)

I shall be glued to my TV on Thursday 17 October 2024 when the House Through Time series returns to our screens in Britain. These programmes allow us a glimpse at how our recent ancestors lived and so are fascinating for family historians like me.

In the first episode, David starts his journey back in the 1920s, examining how the events of an earlier war changed the lives of our residents, and sowed the seeds of an even greater conflict two decades later.

Montagu Mansions is a Victorian block in Marylebone and it’s the home of former soldier John Murray-Smith and his family. David discovers the devastating impact that World War One had on John – leaving him physically and mentally shattered. The trauma of war prompts thousands of Britons to look for someone to blame for their losses, and many seek revenge on their former enemy Germany. The mood of the nation is summed up by Prime Minister Lloyd George who promises that he will ‘Make Germany Pay’.

Germany too has experienced devastating losses in the war, as David reveals when he travels 600 miles to our Berlin apartment building. 72 Pfalzburger Strasse is a turn-of-the-century block in Wilmersdorf where David discovers another veteran of the conflict. Albert Henninger is a talented artist, living here with his wife and two young sons and making his mark in the world of filmmaking. But his wartime experience in the German air force has left lasting damage on Albert’s body and mind.

The Henningers are just one of millions of German families who have experienced the bitter defeat of World War One. The billions in reparations payments that Germany is forced to pay to the Allies and the subsequent economic chaos that devastates the country drive some to support a nascent political party, the Nazis. Although their leader Adolf Hitler is still a fringe figure in the Twenties, his extravagant promises to rebuild German society resonate with many people and grow increasingly seductive as the decade goes on.

Hitler blames Germany’s ills on an international Jewish conspiracy, and the Nazis encourage the growth of a violent antisemitism. Another of our resident families are the Sallisohns, who are Jewish, and in 1921 they witness a riot in the neighbourhood where a group of students, carrying swastikas, violently attack Jewish people and their businesses. It is a sign of worse to come.

By the early 1930s, some of our Berlin residents are fully committed to the Nazi Party. Albert Henninger’s wife Lisi becomes an early supporter. So does her neighbour, the school teacher Hildegard Fromm. As David discovers, Hildegard Fromm is linked to the highest levels of the regime – she is the sister of a high-ranking general in the German army. She is also a member of the Nazi Teachers’ League. German journalist Sophie von der Tann examines some of the school textbooks from the era and sees how Nazi political propaganda is drip-fed by teachers like Hildegard into classrooms all across Germany.

Back in London, cinema entrepreneur Cecil Bernstein moves into Montagu Mansions. He is head of a fast-expanding chain of luxury cinemas providing entertainment to the masses. But the newsreels which play in his cinemas report growing support for Hitler and the Nazis. They make troubling viewing for Cecil and his family, who are Jewish.

In 1933, the Nazis gain total control of the Government and Hitler’s rhetoric is now transformed into law. For Herbert Rosenfeld, a Jewish doctor living in Pfalzburger Strasse, it means the loss of his livelihood. His contract is abruptly terminated as a result of new policies preventing Jews from working in the professions. He is stripped of his job as a dermatologist because he is ‘not of Aryan descent’.

And Hitler’s racial policies are also affecting another of the building’s residents; Bonifatius Folli, a chef and language teacher from Togo, one of Germany’s former African colonies. As laws come into force banning mixed marriages, Bonifatius comes under increasing pressure to divorce his white wife Auguste. And when Bonifatius attempts to leave Berlin and return to Africa, he is prevented from doing so.

With the Nazi regime growing in strength, and war on the horizon, the danger to Bonifatius and Auguste Folli, and to the Jewish families in our building will only increase.

Confirmed for BBC Two on Thursday 17 October 2024 at 9pm to 10pm.

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A House Through Time returned this week to TV

 

NEWS

This week it was so good to see the return to BBC TV of the popular house history programme A House Through Time for its third series.

I remember walking that street (Guinea Street) a few years back while I was attending a training session for the company I once worked for at the nearby Hotel Mercure Bristol Holland House.  From watching the first programme in the series it looks like it will be compulsive viewing for me over the next few weeks as David Olusoga takes us through the various eras and the occupants that made it their home.

On a slight tangent… If you are interested in house history then one of the speakers at the forthcoming online Family History Show on June 20th is Gill Blanchard the House Historian and Genealogist whose talk is on Tracing Your House History. Well worth getting a ticket for if you are interested in the subject here.

A House Through Time Series 3

Here, however, is the announcement about the BBC TV programme that aired the first episode this week and can still be seen in catch up in the UK on the iPlayer…

Twenty Twenty’s award-winning history format A House Through Time is returning to BBC Two for a third series in 2020, this time in Bristol.

Using painstaking detective work – genealogical records, contemporary documents, and the help of expert witnesses – David Olusoga will trace the lives of the occupants of a single house, getting to know individual characters and following their stories wherever they lead.

The search for a new house in Bristol has already begun, and with the city’s rich maritime history, connections to the slave trade and industrial and technological heritage, the team expect to find no shortage of drama for series 3.

Commissioning Editor, Simon Young, says: “This series has swiftly become a treasured part of the schedule on BBC Two. It’s a vitally important returning series for us, perfectly reflecting our ambition for history programmes that connect the bigger sweeps of our nation’s story to individual lives lived all over the country. Having visited houses in Liverpool and Newcastle in the first two series, I’m thrilled that David will delve into Bristol’s rich history next.”

Director of Programmes and Executive Producer, Maxine Watson, says: “The series is hugely popular with viewers and shows just how much we want to know what happened to people just like us in the past. It’s truly a series about and for the people and we are absolutely delighted to be coming back with a new series next year.”

A House Through Time is a 4×60’ part series by Twenty Twenty (part of Warner Bros. International TV Production) for BBC Two. The series has been commissioned by Patrick Holland, Controller BBC Two and Tom McDonald, Head of Commissioning, Natural History and Specialist Factual and the BBC Commissioning Editor is Simon Young.

It was created by Twenty Twenty Managing Director Emma Willis, the Executive Producer is Maxine Watson and the Series Producer is Mary Crisp.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/latestnews/2019/house-through-time-s3

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Looking forward to BBC’s

 

I am really looking forward to Monday’s new series of A House Through Time on BBC 2 here in the UK, IOM and Channel Isles (Monday 6 April 2019 at 9 pm).

 

 

As a family historian I am fascinated by the homes of my ancestors as well as those similar to theirs that have a story to tell. Where a house has stood for a couple of centuries or more, then many people will have lived out their lives within its walls. Relating the stories of these people can often help us to understand the times that the occupants and our own ancestors lived through. Sometimes we may even recognise parallels to our forebears lives in the stories told.

The first series of A House Through Time, based around a Grade II-listed Georgian town-house in Liverpool, captured the public imagination early last year. Local archives reported an increase in footfall in the wake of the series as people wanted to research the history of their own houses.

It is very welcome that, built on the success of the first, a second series is now to be broadcast. This time it is centred on 5 Ravensworth Terrace in Newcastle upon Tyne and the format remains the same even if the location has moved.

Historian David Olusoga (of Black and British: A Forgotten History and Civilisations) returns as the series’ presenter and the home, which has grand fireplaces and generous proportions for a house in the city centre, dates back to the Georgian era.

As with the ever popular Who Do You Think You Are? show, the programme required a great deal of research – not on a celebrity’s ancestors but concentrating on the house’s history traced through deeds and land registry documents, maps, newspaper archives and wills. There in input into the show from experts such as Professor Deborah Sugg Ryan of the University of Portsmouth, who specialises in historical interiors.

Of course it is going to be the personal stories of the inhabitants that will make this show gripping and the BBC publicity tells us that we are set to meet such figures as a lawyer bent on vengeance, a doctor caught up in a workhouse scandal and a noted marine biologist.

As with so many inner-city addresses, the desirability of Ravensworth Terrace has seen it move up and down the social scale over the years, with one time period seeing it as a street of lodging houses rather than a place for the professional classes of lawyers and doctors.

 

If you don’t live in the UK, IOM or the Channel Isles then to be able to watch on iPlayer if you will need a VPN. Google how to watch iPlayer from abroad to find out more.

 

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A House Through Time

 

60_&_62_Falkner_Street
62 Falkner Street. Image by Rodhullandemu (Own work) [CC BY-SA 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
This week on BBC television, here in Britain, there has been the first episode in a fascinating series following the history of the occupiers of one particular house in Liverpool.

A House Through Time is a 2018 four-part BBC documentary about the history of a house at 62 Falkner Street, Edge Hill, Liverpool, England, presented by David Olusoga 

Using some of the tools that are familiar to family historians Olusoga is able to discover the story of the first three occupants of the house built on green fields in around 1840.

Watching him use some of my favourite resources – historic newspapers, street and trade directories from the time and the staple records of  the census collections – proved to be a case study in doing family history research. It was also good to see contributions from the TV genealogist Laura Berry, whom I once interviewed for my YouTube Channel and who, apart form working on Who Do You Think You Are? series, is also a house historian.

 

The characters that this episode uncovered were fascinating subjects. From the young customs clerk, living beyond his means with the help of a wealthy father, to the striving servant who managed to climb into middle-class and leave his wife a substantial sum on hisdeath. Perhaps the most interesting, however, was the Cotton Dealer whose life at the house gave way to a spell in debtors prison, before he then acquired a wife and two step-daughters – only to abandon them to the workhouse as he set forth for a new life in the United States.

This former occupier of the house, David Olusoga was able to deduce from the records, was an unsympathetic character. Having lived as a Cotton Dealer in Liverpool and making a living from cotton, picked by slaves, he then became a Coton Dealer again, in America, before joining as a mercenary fighting for the Union Army against the Confederates. Olusoga was seen to be very surprised by this turn of events as he had assumed that a cotton dealer would have had more sympathy with the Southern States and their ownership of slaves.

This TV series promises to be compulsive viewing and I am already looking forward to the next episode. I can’t wait to see how it will use more of the records, that we also work with when looking for our own family stories, to deduce the life tales of the next set of owners of the house in Liverpool.

 

The most recent episode is available for a short time to viewers in the U.K. here:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episodes/b09l64y9?suggid=b09l64y9

 

 

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