Mothers, unless they were very poor, didn’t work. Both of my parents had to leave education. My mother had to work in a cotton mill until 18 or 19, when she took some training in domestic science.
Meaning of the quote
In this quote, Roger Bannister explains how things were different in the past. Back then, most mothers stayed at home and didn't have jobs, unless they were very poor. Both of Bannister's parents had to stop going to school early. His mother had to work in a cotton factory until she was 18 or 19 years old, and then she took some classes to learn domestic skills like cooking and cleaning.
About Roger Bannister
Sir Roger Bannister was an English neurologist and middle-distance athlete who became the first person to run a sub-4-minute mile. He accomplished this feat in 1954 and went on to have a successful career in academic medicine, serving as the Master of Pembroke College, Oxford, until his retirement in 1993.
More quotes from Roger Bannister
My introduction to track racing was through the background of cross country running, which is not a sport perhaps as popular in America as it is in England.
English physician and athlete
I wanted to be a neurologist. That seemed to be the most difficult, most intriguing, and the most important aspect of medicine, which had links with psychology, aggression, behavior, and human affairs.
English physician and athlete
I came from such a simple origin, without any great privilege, and I would say I also wanted to make a mark. It wasn’t until I was about 15 that I appeared in a race.
English physician and athlete
I’ve always been very impatient. At age 10 I frankly found life boring, and I can remember age 9 having the awful thought, as it seems now looking back on it, A war! That should liven things up a bit!
English physician and athlete
Life was very simple. My parents had come from the North of England, which is a fairly rugged, bleak, hard-working part of England, and so there was not the expectation of luxury.
English physician and athlete
I enjoy singing, and the instruments which truly move me are the horn, the trumpet and the cello.
English physician and athlete
You get very tired, and there was a certain amount of pain and you slow up. Your legs are so tired that you are in fact slowing. If you don’t keep running, keep your blood circulating, the muscles stop pumping the blood back and you get dizzy.
English physician and athlete
When I was about to break a world record and become well known, my mother used to say that for her the important thing was for me to become a doctor – a career which had not been possible in her generation and in her society. Sport was something to be set aside.
English physician and athlete
Mothers, unless they were very poor, didn’t work. Both of my parents had to leave education. My mother had to work in a cotton mill until 18 or 19, when she took some training in domestic science.
English physician and athlete
The man who can drive himself further once the effort gets painful is the man who will win.
English physician and athlete
If there was the opportunity to climb a mountain, or to go ballooning, or some adventurous activity, I would always be keen to do it. I loved the countryside.
English physician and athlete
I couldn’t disappoint people. I did not want to fail and exhaust myself, because I was the kind of runner who trained so little that I couldn’t race again within another 10 days.
English physician and athlete
I found longer races boring. I found the mile just perfect.
English physician and athlete
The reason sport is attractive to many of the general public is that it’s filled with reversals. What you think may happen doesn’t happen. A champion is beaten, an unknown becomes a champion.
English physician and athlete
My concentration was really on getting to university and becoming a doctor. My parents let me know that school marks were important. Achievement was something which came by hard work.
English physician and athlete
I raced supremely well. I felt I was as well fitted to do it as I had ever been, and as perhaps I might ever be. I went climbing three weeks before, because I was feeling fed up with running.
English physician and athlete
I was always a great bundle of energy. As a child, instead of walking, I would run. And so running, which is a pain to a lot of people, was always a pleasure to me because it was so easy.
English physician and athlete
I lived on the top of one hill and the school was at the top of another hill. Nobody ever went to school by car – we didn’t have any cars during the war. So that to and from school was itself a training.
English physician and athlete
My athleticism was really the core to social acceptance, because in those days the overwhelming number of students came from more of a public school background than I did.
English physician and athlete
Athletics is a luxury.
English physician and athlete
It had always been a British preoccupation to hold this mile record.
English physician and athlete
I think that is a universal adolescent feeling, trying to find your place. The adolescent who is perfectly adjusted to his environment, I’ve yet to meet.
English physician and athlete
May is a very early time in the year and the weather is usually bad. You cannot run a fast mile race if there is a strong wind, because it makes your running uneven.
English physician and athlete
It’s a question of spreading the available energy, aerobic and anaerobic, evenly over four minutes. If you run one part too fast, you pay a price. If you run another part more slowly your overall time is slower.
English physician and athlete
Our house was bombed, and the roof fell in. We were sitting under the stairs of the basement, and we were quite safe, but it brought home the realization. In two nights 400 people were killed in small town.
English physician and athlete
Your spikes, which were really quite long then, would catch the material of the track and your shoe would get heavier. I was simply filing them down and rubbing some graphite on the spikes. I thought I would run more effectively.
English physician and athlete
My family actually lived in the same village for about 400 years. They had great stability until the last century. People lived and intermarried in small villages.
English physician and athlete
I was playing rugby and the other games English school children do, and there was an event in which races were run, and I won these by a considerable margin.
English physician and athlete
I was involved in music, acting, and some running, but my firm wish was to become a doctor. That was the formative age when I had decided on the pattern of my career.
English physician and athlete
The Athletic Association competed against the University. So there was an event. You cannot break world records unless it is an established event, and you have three timekeepers, and the whole thing is organized.
English physician and athlete