Dark blue tree with deep roots without leaves. Almost full circle around the above ground tree in mustard yellow

Author Helen Parker -Drabble Who Do I Think You Were?®

  • Books
    • A Victorian’s Inheritance
    • Victorian Family Recipe Book
    • Yet A Childs Triumph
  • About
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    • Mary: The woman behind a personal Victorian recipe book
  • Factual talesMy factual tales are a tapestry of fact, researched speculation and fiction which are inspired by and embellish my family history. However, the plots are driven by the historical records.
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  • An Hour a Month: Children’s Hospital Visiting Rules Before the Platt Report

    An Hour a Month: Children’s Hospital Visiting Rules Before the Platt Report

    ‘Yet’: A Story of Triumph over Childhood Separation, Trauma, and Disability Article Community History Family History From Helen Parker-Drabble Social history

    One hour, once a month: how British hospitals kept sick children apart from their parents before the Platt Report, and the boy who watched the clock.

  • The Directory and the Child: what a survey of Britain’s orthopaedic institutions kept, and what it left out

    The Directory and the Child: what a survey of Britain’s orthopaedic institutions kept, and what it left out

    ‘Yet’: A Story of Triumph over Childhood Separation, Trauma, and Disability Disability History Family History From Helen Parker-Drabble Social history

    A 1935 directory of Britain’s institutions for ‘crippled’ children, and the boy it would send to King Edward VII Hospital, Sheffield: what the records kept, and what they left out.

  • What the Victorians didn’t say

    What the Victorians didn’t say

    Article Family History From Helen Parker-Drabble

    A family historian and former counsellor traces her Victorian grandfather’s emotional distance back through three generations of unspoken loss, poverty, and depression.

  • The Voyage of the Shalimar, 1859: The Man Who Sailed Away and the Wife He Left Behind

    The Voyage of the Shalimar, 1859: The Man Who Sailed Away and the Wife He Left Behind

    Article Family History From Helen Parker-Drabble Genealogy The Recipe Book That Sustained a Life: Mary Allott’s Victorian Story of Abandonment Women’s History

    On 12 September 1859, Thomas Alexander Kidd stood on Liverpool’s bustling docks with his family, ready to leave everything behind. The former merchant, magistrate and police commissioner had sold his comfortable life for steerage tickets to New Zealand. Beside him waited his wife, Mary Agnes, and their six children—Eliza, Georgina, Mary, Helen, Frances and young…

  • When Your Mother-in-Law Testifies Against You: Mary Allott’s 1875 Victorian Divorce Trial

    When Your Mother-in-Law Testifies Against You: Mary Allott’s 1875 Victorian Divorce Trial

    Article Family History From Helen Parker-Drabble Genealogy Scandal Women’s History

    Imagine finally fighting for freedom from the husband who abandoned you sixteen years ago and petitioning a court for a divorce. You’ve hired a solicitor. Gathered evidence. Risked public scandal. You’re testifying about adultery, disease, and desertion—intimate details that will be published in the local newspaper for all Sheffield and Chesterfield to read. Then your…

  • LGBTQ+ Family History: Researching Hidden Estrangement and Reclaiming Erased Ancestors

    LGBTQ+ Family History: Researching Hidden Estrangement and Reclaiming Erased Ancestors

    Article Family History Genealogy LGBTQ+

    Content Warning: This article discusses LGBTQ+ discrimination, forced family separation, institutionalisation, and historical persecution. Content includes: Criminalisation of homosexuality and forced institutionalisation Conversion therapy and medical ‘treatments’ now recognised as torture Family rejection and estrangement due to sexual orientation or gender identity Suicide (Alan Turing) Historical violence and discrimination against LGBTQ+ people If you’re currently…

  • The Recipe Book That Sustained a Life: Mary Allott’s Victorian Story of Abandonment, Scandal, and Survival

    The Recipe Book That Sustained a Life: Mary Allott’s Victorian Story of Abandonment, Scandal, and Survival

    A Victorian Recipe Book Article Family History From Helen Parker-Drabble Women’s History

    In 1860, a young woman with a newborn opened a blank notebook with an A-Z index and began to write. Mary Allott, née Hopkinson, was about twenty-four years old, a mother of two. A few days before she gave birth, her husband Charles had sailed for New Zealand, leaving their two-year-old son with his mother…

  • Attachment Theory and Family History: A Quick Introduction

    Attachment Theory and Family History: A Quick Introduction

    Article Family History Genealogy

    Our earliest bonds with caregivers create blueprints for lifelong relationships, passed down through generations like emotional DNA. By viewing family history through attachment theory, we uncover patterns of connection and disconnection, trauma and resilience. Understanding these invisible inheritances transforms genealogy from collecting names into mapping the emotional currents that shaped—and continue to shape—our families.

  • Unlocking Ancestors’ Psychology with Attachment Theory and Adverse Childhood Experiences

    Unlocking Ancestors’ Psychology with Attachment Theory and Adverse Childhood Experiences

    Article Family History From Helen Parker-Drabble Genealogy Psychology

    Family history goes beyond names and dates to explore ancestors’ inner worlds, enriched by psychological insights. Attachment theory and Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) reveal how early bonds and traumas shaped personalities, behaviors, and intergenerational patterns, deepening empathy and understanding of family legacies of trauma and resilience.

  • Separation and Strength

    Separation and Strength

    Article Family History From Helen Parker-Drabble Genealogy

    In July 1937, young Harry Drabble was hospitalised for tuberculosis, facing isolation and trauma. His experience epitomizes the emotional struggles of many children in 20th-century Britain separated from families during long treatments. Despite these challenges, Harry developed resilience, ultimately shaping his life positively and highlighting the importance of understanding and acknowledging such hidden histories.

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