My countryside CHIILDHOOD
Woman & Home|March 2022
Brought up in Devon, Louisa Adjoa Parker was aware that she was the first black person someone met, but explains how things are changing
KIM WILLIS
My countryside CHIILDHOOD

Louisa Adjoa Parker, 49, is a writer of EnglishGhanaian heritage who lives in Somerset with her husband Peter Fry.

There's a photo of me giggling in the surf, smiling in the sunshine, yet bracing myself as the cold water laps my legs. I remember the moment so well. I was seven years old and visiting my maternal grandparents, who had recently moved to Devon. I was happy there, yet never felt I belonged in rural Britain.

My dad is from Ghana, my mum is from Reading, Berkshire. They met when a friend of my mum's set up a dating agency and Mum agreed to go on a few dates. My dad proposed on the fourth one and, after my siblings and I were born, we moved from Yorkshire to East Anglia. Their marriage didn't last and they broke up when I was 12. We then moved to Devon and rarely saw Dad.

As a child, I never felt completely equal to my white friends. White children didn't understand why I looked different and asked why my skin was darker than theirs. After we moved to Devon, I never met any other black or mixed heritage kids, and I longed for a friend who looked like me because I wanted to feel normal.

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