Daily Mirror

GROWING UP NE

- EXCLUSIVE BY JULIE McCAFFREY

Sharp-suited underworld icons, merciless murderers, robbers and racketeers.. Ronnie and Reggie Kray ruled London’s East End for almost two decades.

Yet to Kim Peat, the twins were kindly cousins who spoiled her as a child and wrote to her every day from prison.

She grew up next door to them, celebrated family milestones with them, visited them in jails around the UK and took a front-row seat at their funerals.

Kim, 60, says: “My nan May lived at 174 Vallance Road. Nanny Lee – the twins’ granny – was 176, and their mum Violet was 178. I lived with my mum and dad in the two rooms upstairs in 176. We were all really close, in and out of each other’s houses all the time. I loved them.”

Kim, who lives near her childhood home and the Krays’ HQ in Bethnal Green, has rarely talked about her notorious relatives. But she feels now that most of her mum’s side of her family have died she can be completely honest.

“There were good times in our family,” she says. “But they also did bad things and I don’t want to sugarcoat anything.”

The retired carer remembers pivotal moments in their lives, from Reggie’s illfated marriage to Frances Shea, to her suicide, to their life sentences for murder.

Her grandmothe­r May was the sister of Ronnie and Reggie’s mum Violet, who Kim adored. But she could not bear the Krays’ father, known as Old Charlie.

“He was an awful man,” Kim says. “He was horrible to Violet – violent from day one. They married in 1926 when she was 15 but had to edit her date of birth as she was expecting her eldest son, Charlie.

“Old Charlie gave her black eyes, bloodied noses. That’s where the twins’ violent streak came from. He said if she ever left him he’d throw acid in her face and no one would look at her again.”

Ronnie punched his dad in the nose and said: ‘If you touch my mother again I’ll kill you’

KIM PEAT ON ‘OLD CHARLIE’ KRAY, THE TWINS’ VIOLENT FATHER

In 1929, while Violet was in labour, her husband refused to take her to the hospital and went to the pub instead. Violet was left to deliver her own daughter, who only lived for two hours.

She doted on her twin sons, born in 1933. Old Charlie stopped abusing Violet when Ronnie threatened his father. Kim says: “Ronnie was 16 when Old Charlie punched Violet in the nose.

“He ran downstairs, punched his dad in the nose and said, ‘If you ever touch my mother again, I will effing kill you’. Old Charlie never beat her again.”

As the twins’ criminal empire grew, they sent young Kim gifts including a rocking horse and clothes for her dolls. “My mum always laughed at the thought of Reggie shopping for Barbie outfits.”

Kim was fond of Frances Shea, who dated Reggie for eight years and married him in 1965 aged 22. “They were in our house all the time. There was always so much traffic in Violet’s house and they wanted to be alone. She’d have tea and watch telly with us because all the glitz and glamour wasn’t really her.”

Kim recalls Reggie and Frances’s wedding. “Frances’s mother walked in dressed entirely in black. She didn’t want her to marry Reggie. My nan said, ‘She looks like she’s going to a funeral’.

“David Bailey did the wedding photos but it was very staged and nan had a row with Ronnie, saying: ‘When are we going to eat? The kids are hungry.’ But we had to stand there for the pictures. Nan took us home and we didn’t stay for the meal.”

Frances was close to Kim’s mum Rita, and told her she fell out of love with

Regg not R wasn sittin said inste He’d the t

Fr whe her Regg thro

“R says at ou said, goin held head

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 ??  ?? FAMILY TIES Kim Peat, pictured with late mum Rita, had notorious relatives
TRAGIC Reggie Kray with then fiancee Frances Shea at Vallance Road in 1965 – she would go on to commit suicide
FAMILY TIES Kim Peat, pictured with late mum Rita, had notorious relatives TRAGIC Reggie Kray with then fiancee Frances Shea at Vallance Road in 1965 – she would go on to commit suicide
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