Transcript of an interview with Anne Odling-Smee, board member of the Northern Ireland Foundation, by Civic Voices Teaching Fellows for Civic Voices Memory Bank on 3 June December 2009. Odling-Smee discusses the impact of the Troubles on education, religion and community relations in Northern Ireland with particular reference to her own family's experience. Civic Voices is an international education project which seeks to highlight the significance of political and community activism to the development of peace and democracy around the world. The Memory Bank is an archive of personal testimony of those engaged in such political and community activism.
Date of Release/Broadcast: 3 December 2009
Name of First Interviewee: Anne Odling-Smee
Role at time of Interview: Board Member of the Northern Ireland Foundation
Interviewer: Civic Voices Teaching Fellows
Purpose: Research, Academic
Media: Audio, Audiovisual, Transcript
Copyright: © Civic Voices 2011
Link: Access the resource
Programme/Book/Article: Civic Voices International Democracy Memory Bank
Key Individuals: Anne Odling-Smee, Terry Spence
Key Words: Wallasey, Liverpool, Second World War, the Blitz, education, family, youth, India, class, religion, Catholic Church, housing, Church of Ireland, Alliance Party, Northern Ireland Mixed Marriages Association