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=== Childhood === Burton was born Richard Walter Jenkins Jr. on 10 November 1925 in a house at 2 Dan-y-bont in [[Pontrhydyfen]]<!--Neath Port Talbot did not exist in 1925, Glamorgan is correct-->, [[Glamorgan]], Wales.{{Sfn|Bragg|1988|pp=6β8}}<ref name="Pontrhydyfen">{{cite web | url=http://richardburtonmuseum.weebly.com/pontrhydyfen.html | title=Pontrhydyfen | publisher=The Richard Burton Museum | access-date=14 April 2016 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160414100404/http://richardburtonmuseum.weebly.com/pontrhydyfen.html | archive-date=14 April 2016 | url-status=dead | df=dmy-all }}</ref> He was the twelfth of thirteen children born into the [[Welsh-speaking]] family of Richard Walter Jenkins Sr. (5 March 1876 β 25 March 1957),<ref name="richardburtonmuseum.weebly.com">https://richardburtonmuseum.weebly.com/richard-burton-people.html</ref> and Edith Maude Jenkins (nΓ©e Thomas; 28 January 1883 β 31 October 1927).<ref name="richardburtonmuseum.weebly.com"/>{{Sfnm|1a1=Bragg|1y=1988|1pp=6β7|2a1=Parish|2y=2011|2p=26|3a1=Jedlicka|3y=2011|3p=83}} Jenkins Sr., called Daddy Ni by the family, was a coal miner, while his mother worked as a barmaid at a pub called the Miners Arms in the village where she met her husband.{{Sfnm|1a1=Alpert|1y=1986|1p=23|2a1=Bragg|2y=1988|2p=5}} They married, without approval of her parents, at [[Neath]] Register Office on 24 December 1900.<ref>{{cite web |title=Richard Burton People |url=https://richardburtonmuseum.weebly.com/richard-burton-people.html |website=richardburtonmuseum.weebly.com |publisher=The Richard Burton Online Museum |access-date=31 March 2025}}</ref> According to biographer [[Melvyn Bragg]], Richard is quoted saying that Daddy Ni was a "twelve-pints-a-day man" who sometimes went off on drinking and gambling sprees for weeks, and that "he looked very much like me".{{Sfn|Bragg|1988|p=3}} Jenkins Sr. was badly burned in a mining explosion and his father Thomas had been confined to a wheelchair after a mining accident.<ref>{{cite book |title=Rogue Males: Richard Burton, Howard Marks and Sir Richard Burton |last=Walters |first=Rob |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2A8jMbBb81oC |year=2006 |publisher=Satin |page=59}}</ref> [[File:Miners Arms, Pontrhydyfen - geograph.org.uk - 3798450.jpg|thumb|right|The Miners Arms in the village of Pontrhydyfen. Here Burton's mother worked before marriage and where Burton's father regularly drank.]] He remembered his mother to be "a very strong woman" and "a religious soul with fair hair and a beautiful face".{{Sfnm|1a1=Bragg|1y=1988|1p=3|2a1=Munn|2y=2014|2p=12}} Richard was barely two years old when his mother died on 31 October, six days after the birth of Graham, the family's thirteenth child.<ref name="Pontrhydyfen"/> Edith's death was a result of [[postpartum infections]]; Richard believed it occurred because of "hygiene neglect".{{Sfn|Bragg|1988|p=7}} According to biographer [[Michael Munn]], Edith "was fastidiously clean", but her exposure to the dust from the coal mines resulted in her death.{{Sfn|Munn|2014|p=15}} Following Edith's death, Richard's elder sister Cecilia, whom he affectionately addressed as "Cis", and her husband Elfed James, also a miner, took him under their care. Richard lived with Cis, Elfed and their two daughters, Marian and Rhianon, in their three-bedroom terraced cottage on 73 Caradoc Street, [[Taibach]], a suburban district in [[Port Talbot]], which Bragg describes as "a tough steel town, [[English language|English-speaking]], grind and grime".{{Sfnm|1a1=Bragg|1y=1988|1pp=7, 10, 11|2a1=Munn|2y=2014|2p=15}}<ref>{{cite web | url=http://richardburtonmuseum.weebly.com/personal.html | title=A Selection Of Richard Burton Personal Items | publisher=The Richard Burton Museum | access-date=15 April 2016 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160415014048/http://richardburtonmuseum.weebly.com/personal.html | archive-date=15 April 2016 | url-status=dead | df=dmy-all }}</ref> [[File:73 Caradoc Street, Port Talbot SA13 1UD.jpg|right|thumb|Childhood home with sister Cis]] Richard remained grateful and loving to Cis throughout his life, later going on to say: "When my mother died she, my sister, had become my mother, and more mother to me than any mother could ever have been ... I was immensely proud of her ... she felt all tragedies except her own". Daddy Ni would occasionally visit the homes of his grown daughters but was otherwise absent.{{Sfn|Bragg|1988|pp=7, 10}} Another important figure in Richard's early life was Ifor, his brother, 19 years his senior. A miner and [[rugby union]] player, Ifor "ruled the household with the proverbial firm hand". He was also responsible for nurturing a passion for rugby in young Richard.{{Sfnm|1a1=Bragg|1y=1988|1pp=12β13, 17|2a1=Jenkins|2a2=Rogers|2y=1993|2p=7}} Although Richard also played cricket, tennis, and table tennis, biographer Bragg notes rugby union football to be his greatest interest. On rugby, Richard said he "would rather have played for Wales at [[Cardiff Arms Park]] than Hamlet at [[The Old Vic]]".{{Sfn|Bragg|1988|p=17}} The Welsh rugby union centre, [[Bleddyn Williams]], believed Richard "had distinct possibilities as a player".{{Sfn|Bragg|1988|p=18}} From the age of five to eight, Richard was educated at the [[List of schools in Neath Port Talbot#Primary schools|Eastern Primary School]] while he attended the Boys' segment of the same school from eight to twelve years old.{{Sfn|Alpert|1986|p=26}}<ref name="visitnpt">{{cite web | url=http://www.visitnpt.co.uk/pdf/RB_TrailsLeafletPrinted.pdf | title=Richard Burton Trails | publisher=visitnpt.co.uk | access-date=15 April 2016 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160415024251/http://www.visitnpt.co.uk/pdf/RB_TrailsLeafletPrinted.pdf | archive-date=15 April 2016 | url-status=dead | df=dmy-all }}</ref> He took a scholarship exam for admission into [[Port Talbot Secondary School]]{{efn|later known as the [[Dyffryn School]].<ref name="visitnpt"/>}} in March 1937 and passed it.{{Sfnm|1a1=Alpert|1y=1986|1p=26|2a1=Bragg|2y=1988|2p=17β18}} Biographer [[Hollis Alpert]] notes that both Daddy Ni and Ifor considered Richard's education to be "of paramount importance" and planned to send him to the [[University of Oxford]].{{Sfn|Alpert|1986|pp=24β25}} Richard became the first member of his family to go to secondary school.{{Sfn|Alpert|1986|pp=24β26}} He displayed an excellent speaking and singing voice since childhood, even winning an [[eisteddfod]] prize as a [[boy soprano]].{{Sfn|Alpert|1986|p=26}} Whilst a pupil at Port Talbot Secondary School, Richard also showed immense interest in reading poetry as well as English and [[Welsh-language literature|Welsh literature]].<ref name="visitnpt"/>{{Sfn|Bragg|1988|p=21}} He earned pocket money by running messages, hauling horse manure, and delivering newspapers.{{Sfn|Alpert|1986|p=25}}
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