PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Alberta Scrubb
  • Alberta Scrubb
rdfs:comment
  • Alberta Scrubb was the wife of Harold Scrubb, and mother to Eustace Scrubb. There's no mention how the Scrubbs are related to the Pevensie parents, so she may be the sister of Helen Pevensie or Mr. Pevensie. Alberta and Harold Scrubb were very progressive people. They were non-smokers, teetotalers (non-alcoholics), vegetarians, pacifists, republicans, and wore a special kind of underwear. In their house they had very little furniture, very few clothes on beds, and the windows were always left open. Alberta appeared to have been the true head of the family, rather than Harold.
Nation
dcterms:subject
Appearances
Affiliation
  • Republican
Name
  • Alberta Scrubb
Species
dbkwik:narnia/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Years
  • Unknown
Occupation
  • Unknown
Family
Gender
  • Female
World
abstract
  • Alberta Scrubb was the wife of Harold Scrubb, and mother to Eustace Scrubb. There's no mention how the Scrubbs are related to the Pevensie parents, so she may be the sister of Helen Pevensie or Mr. Pevensie. Alberta and Harold Scrubb were very progressive people. They were non-smokers, teetotalers (non-alcoholics), vegetarians, pacifists, republicans, and wore a special kind of underwear. In their house they had very little furniture, very few clothes on beds, and the windows were always left open. In 1933 they had a son, Eustace Clarence Scrubb, whom they raised to be as progressive as they were, and who they both referred to as Eustace Clarence. The family made their home in Cambridge. Alberta appeared to have been the true head of the family, rather than Harold. In 1942, Alberta and Harold took in their nephew and niece, Edmund and Lucy Pevensie, whilst the children's parents and their sister Susan were abroad in America, and Peter was studying for his exams. Alberta is known to dislike all the Pevensie children. Both she and her husband were easily swayed by their son, and often believed the lies he said about his cousins, which got them into trouble. She preferred being called by her first name by Eustace, instead of mother. When Eustace began to behave as his cousins did, and become a kinder and much better boy in the eyes of most, Alberta did not like the change. In fact, she referred to him as becoming very commonplace and tiresome, and that it must have been because of Edmund and Lucy's influence. In 1949, Alberta and Harold suffered the loss of their only son in a train accident. He was then 16.
is Family of