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Reading tea leaves - a family tradition
My story starts in England during World War 2 when my Great Nanny travelled through it. Her and my Mum used to read tea leaves together with a teacup. My mum had so much fun with it. She really wanted one so one day she got one (she now has lots more!). It was white with pink roses. She loved it.
Now, it is kept safely in a green closet at our house and will keep it forever in the Netherlands. W…
Contributors
- George
Subject
- Emigration from the United Kingdom
- Immigration to the Netherlands
- Grandparents
- Human migration
- Schoolchildren
- Customs and traditions
- Tea
- http://contribute.europeana.eu/contributions/26249350-c0e1-0136-3e5a-6eee0af70eca#agent-262576f0-c0e1-0136-3e5a-6eee0af70eca
- Human migration
- Family
Contributors
- George
Subject
- Emigration from the United Kingdom
- Immigration to the Netherlands
- Grandparents
- Human migration
- Schoolchildren
- Customs and traditions
- Tea
- http://contribute.europeana.eu/contributions/26249350-c0e1-0136-3e5a-6eee0af70eca#agent-262576f0-c0e1-0136-3e5a-6eee0af70eca
- Human migration
- Family
Providing institution
Aggregator
Rights statement for the media in this item (unless otherwise specified)
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
Places
- England
- United Kingdom
- Kingdom of the Netherlands
- England
- Holland
Identifier
- http://contribute.europeana.eu/contributions/26249350-c0e1-0136-3e5a-6eee0af70eca
Language
- eng
- en
Is part of
- The British School in The Netherlands, 2018-09-01–2018-09-30
Providing country
- Europe
Collection name
First time published on Europeana
- 2019-07-25T07:45:30.879Z
Last time updated from providing institution
- 2021-11-03T11:22:04.772Z