By
Polly Dunbar
Last updated at 10:40 PM on 3rd March 2012
The mantelpiece in Julie Jones’s living room is crammed with pink, sparkly birthday cards. At the centre are two with the word ‘Daughter’ written across the front. One is addressed ‘To my beautiful Emma’, the other ‘To my beautiful Chantelle’. Both are signed ‘With lots and lots of love and kisses, Julie’.
At a glance, they reveal Julie’s remarkable devotion to these two little girls who aren’t, in the strictest sense, her daughters.
Their real mother, Caroline Atkin, died of cancer two years ago, six months after their father also died suddenly.
One big happy family: Julie with Michael, 12, James, 10, Keiran, 11, Emma, eight, and Chantelle, six – the children of her late best friend Caroline Atkin who she has adopted
She had been Julie’s best friend for 30 years and it was their incredible bond that led Julie to promise Caroline she would take in not only Chantelle, who was five, and Emma, who was seven, but also their three brothers – James, eight, Keiran, nine, and Michael, ten. Overnight Julie – already single-handedly bringing up three teenage boys – became a mother of eight.
Somehow, despite her own grief, she had to find the space for all the children, and juggle working full-time as an RAF administrator with looking after them. It was an act of tremendous loyalty and kindness for which Julie, 46, has received the accolade of Tesco Compassionate Mum of the Year, which she will receive next Sunday at a ceremony in London.
The challenge might easily have daunted a lesser woman, but for Julie, who exudes an aura of calm, gentle capability, it was a simple decision.
‘I never wonder for a second if I did the right thing. There was never any question. What kind of a friend would I have been if I’d turned my back on Caroline’s children? I couldn’t have lived with myself.’
At the heart of Julie’s extraordinary situation is a friendship that began in 1979 when she was 11, and lasted through jobs, marriages and babies.
She and Caroline met on the first day at their Catholic secondary school in Grantham, Lincolnshire. Julie lived in Sleaford, 15 miles away, and turned up without knowing anyone.
‘Caroline included me in her group of friends,’ Julie recalls. ‘From that day, we shared everything – French exchange trips, trips to the youth club and, later, the disco. It was the Eighties and we’d spend hours round at her house listening to music, dressing up and plastering on make-up together.’
They were so close that, after leaving school, they both went to a local college to study the same hotel and catering management course.
Julie later began working at the RAF College at nearby Cranwell and Caroline found a job in Lincoln.
When Julie married in 1988, Caroline was her bridesmaid. Julie and her RAF husband – who divorced seven years ago – moved around the country but often invited Caroline to visit.
In 1998, Julie was maid of honour when Caroline married David Atkin, a caretaker with whom she already had two children. She went on to have three more, with Julie as godmother.
‘They were a devoted couple,’ says Julie. ‘Caroline lived for him and the children.’
At the start of 2009, Caroline began to suffer headaches. She tripped and fell on more than one occasion, so Julie encouraged her to visit the doctor. Then one morning, at Easter, Julie received a call from David to say Caroline had been suffering seizures and had been admitted to hospital.
‘They operated straight away to remove part of a brain tumour and, when I got there, she was drifting in and out of consciousness. I knew it was very serious. Dave was distraught. I told him I’d do everything I possibly could to support them.’
Over the following months, with Julie by her side, Caroline received chemotherapy, but it became clear she would not survive.
Then,
suddenly, just before Christmas 2009, David collapsed on Lincoln high
street, having suffered a massive stroke which Julie believes was
stress-related. On January 8, 2010, he died.
‘Caroline
called me and said, “It’s my husband, he’s died,” which was an odd
thing to say. She was at home and on very strong medication, so I don’t
think she quite understood what had happened. I was absolutely stunned.’
At
Easter, Julie went to Caroline’s house with eggs for the children and,
as the children played outside, Caroline broke down. Julie says: ‘She
couldn’t bear the thought of leaving the kids, so she never discussed
dying, but that day she said, “I’m so scared for my life.”
‘I told her she would be fine and she said, “What about the children?” I said they’d be fine too.
‘She said, “Will you look after them for me?” I said, “Yes. Let’s call that Plan B.”
‘I
wanted her to have that hope because I knew that was how she was
coping. I wasn’t surprised she had asked, and I didn’t even have to
think about it. I knew she would do the same for me.’
Caroline
had no other relatives aside from her elderly mother, Irene, who gave
Julie her blessing that afternoon. Caroline and Julie visited a
solicitor to make arrangements for Julie to be the children’s legal
guardian in the event of Caroline’s death.
The
following month, Julie invited the whole family to stay at her new
four-bedroom house in Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, for a week.
While Caroline rested, Julie organised picnics and barbecues and a birthday party for Keiran, who had just turned ten.
During
the week, Julie noticed that Caroline had started to direct her
children’s requests for drinks or to play outside to her. ‘I think she
was handing me her children,’ says Julie. ‘She seemed at peace with it.
I’m so glad we had that week, so she could see life would be OK for the
kids.’
Tragic: The children were left orphaned after both their parents died within six months in 2010
Caroline died the following Monday, on June 7. A family friend was looking after her children at home. Julie arrived at the hospital ten minutes after her friend died. ‘She would have laughed and said, “You’re always late,” ’ she says.
‘The children had no idea that their mummy was dying, so I had to tell them she was gone and that she was with the angels in heaven.
‘I said, “Who wants to come home with me?” and they all said, “I do.” ’
During the first few days, Julie’s mother helped to take care of the children while she organised Caroline’s funeral and underwent checks by social services.
When she got the children home, Julie was faced with immediate practical difficulties. With two double and two single bedrooms, fitting everyone in was a struggle.
‘I moved the table out of the living room and set up camp beds for the girls. Then someone arrived with a tent. It was summer, so I let the boys sleep in it in the garden,’ she says.
‘Adam, my eldest, went to university a bit early so we could use his room. I put bunk beds and a single bed in there for the boys, and the girls have bunks in the dining room. Adam has to sleep on the sofa when he comes home for the holidays.’
The maturity with which Julie’s three children, Adam, now 21, Peter, 19, and Christian, 14, have coped with the upheaval is a credit to them and her. When she told them Caroline was dying, they needed no prompting to suggest the children come to live with them.
‘They’ve been brilliant,’ says Julie. ‘Christian has moaned every now and then, saying, “The little weasels have been in my room,” but they’ve been very tolerant. They’re older but I make sure nothing’s been taken from them apart from space.’
Although Caroline’s children felt comfortable with Julie from the start, the loss of their mother had inevitable consequences.
‘Michael was being sick a lot for the first three months, I think because of the shock. Emma had temper tantrums. The younger boys had trouble sleeping and Chantelle was very clingy.
‘I noticed that every reading book they brought home from school seemed to be about Mummy and Daddy. There were a lot of difficult moments. But gradually, with a lot of love and care, they settled down.
‘I try to keep things simple,’ she says. ‘I say to them, “This is a calm house. We’ve only got each other so we have to get along.” I insist on good manners and respect.
‘The girls are in bed by seven and the boys by eight. We read together and they aren’t allowed to watch TV during the week. At first they were quite behind at school, but they’ve done really well. They work hard to make me proud.’
Julie talks about Caroline and David with the children often to ensure they will never be forgotten. She marks Caroline’s birthday by taking them all on a trip to the seaside and, during the holidays, the children, now aged seven, nine, ten 11 and 12, visit Irene.
‘I’ve made memory boxes for all of them with the few bits and pieces I salvaged from Caroline’s house – a few pictures and pieces of jewellery. I’m also filling them with new, happy memories, like pictures from our trips together, trying to make their lives as normal as possible.’
Memories: Caroline Atkin sits left, with her five children and Julie, standing. Caroline died from a brain tumor shortly after this picture was taken
She receives child benefit, but nothing else, and works 40 hours a week to make ends meet, with the children going to an after-school club. She says she has been advised to move into a council house and claim benefits, but has refused.
‘A lot of days I’m exhausted because I work a full day and then I come home and have to start again with cooking, cleaning and washing. I have to keep a diary to remember everything all the kids are supposed to be doing every day.
‘Family and friends help out with childcare and shopping, and bring round clothes for the children, and people at work have been brilliant.’
Julie is thrilled to be receiving her award from Fiona Phillips at the Waldorf Hilton Hotel next weekend, after being nominated by a friend. The entire family are travelling with her to London.
‘It’s lovely to be rewarded for what I’ve done for the kids, and the weekend will be a real treat because I don’t get much time for pampering any more,’ she says.
‘To me, I did what anybody would do in my place. I’ve gained so much from it because the children are wonderful. I love them, and as far as I’m concerned they’re mine.
‘I miss Caroline so much. I can hear her voice crystal-clear in my memory. But she lives on through them, so I’ll always have a part of her.’
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Hope some of the millionaires who read this will willingly give this lady and the children some of their money so that they can have a holiday or whatever as they so deserve it. She is saving the state thousands as if the poor children had to go into foster homes that would have been a disaste. Good luck you are doing a wonderful job.
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Get onto Cowboy builders …He will help moutI’m sure…I know it’s not a buoild job gone wrong…..But think of the Mileage he would get ……..Being a good samaritan….Or may be the council can help……By providing an extension roof loft…..
I say good one her…She should become a dame………
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@ janet, uk, 04/3/2012 10:41….”This was first reported about two months ago; why is it here again???” Because its well worth reading again. Julie is a great woman who should be recognised and rewarded for being so selfless.
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‘TORY PROPAGANDA, CAMERONS BIG SOCIETY DO FOR NOTHING – MAN ON A SOAP BOX, KENT’ As opposed to the Labour alternative of an alternative lifestyle funded or subsidised by benefits and indexed annually for doing nothing? Why exactly is assuming responsibility for not only your own life but that of others a matter of propaganda?
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She is one in a million AND for every one like HER there are at least ONE Million that are pure scroungers and LAYABOUTS .— And Cameron says he will stop this WHAT A JOKE he loves the lot as long as HE gives THEM money they will VOTE for HIM and that is all he cares about.—- This spouting about stopping it is ALL Hot AIR again
– Alan Hammond, Egham Suirrey, 4/3/2012 11:17….. seek help!!!!
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She is one in a million AND for every one like HER there are at least ONE Million that are pure scroungers and LAYABOUTS .— And Cameron says he will stop this WHAT A JOKE he loves the lot as long as HE gives THEM money they will VOTE for HIM and that is all he cares about.—- This spouting about stopping it is ALL Hot AIR again
– Alan Hammond, Egham Suirrey, 4/3/2012 11:17….. seek help!!!!
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This women is the first person on my list to benefit, should I win the Lottery. I would gladly assist her financially out as she an outstanding brave person. It’s a pity there is not a fund set up for the benefit of the children. The carer needs assistance and all the help she deserves, as it gets harder and more expensive in years to come.
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Some mothers need the help of benefits, she is obviously a brilliant woman and if she can cope without them then good on her! But when my dad’s boss ran away from his business 5 weeks before Christmas and left him jobless owing him hundreds of pounds, job seekers allowance is what we basically lived off until he found a job; which isn’t as easy as some may think! We had no choice as unfortunately money doesn’t fall out of our rear ends. It is brilliant that she doesn’t need benefits and I really do praise her for that, but let’s not say ‘shame on mothers on benefits’ eh, because some people really do need them at times.
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She is one in a million AND for every one like HER there are at least ONE Million that are pure scroungers and LAYABOUTS .— And Cameron says he will stop this WHAT A JOKE he loves the lot as long as HE gives THEM money they will VOTE for HIM and that is all he cares about.—- This spouting about stopping it is ALL Hot AIR again
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Why is it so often the case that people like Julie – people who have every moral and legitimate right to benefit from the welfare state that was created specifically to care for them – people whom I (as a tax payer) sincerely want to live a comfortable and secure life – are the sort of people that, at all costs, try to avoid being a burden to anyone but themselves? Julie, you are devoting your life to these kids (whom I have no doubt will grow up – thanks entirely to you – as model citizens) so please let society help.you financially and in any other way it can.
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