she remembers darkness and the hunger.
She said: "Even the weeds wouldn’t grow it was that dark. And we were always hungry."
She had a dummy until she was six and slept in the same bed with two of her siblings because her family could not afford heating in the flat.
Her brother, Pete, had a hole in his heart but Shelter's intervention helped to relocate the family to Peterborough.
Claire told of how she did not think her brother would have survived in the conditions she was used to.
She added: "The new house had a garden with an apple and a pear tree. There was space. It was like someone winning the lottery nowadays."
Today she lives in Birmingham but has little interest in returning to the place in London where she grew up.
Colin Newlove was also tracked down after Shelter released the photos Credit: Colin Newlove Here, the Newlove family - Colin's mother and three of his sisters - are pictured in their Bradford home Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter Another subject of Hedges' photography is the Newlove family, from Bradford.
Colin was one of six children who all slept in the same room, the youngest in a drawer.
His father bred dogs and often puppies slept in the drawers below.
Tenement courtyard Maryhill 1971: A boy playing among rubbish in the courtyard of a tenement building Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter Liverpudlians walking past an election poster, 1969, Liverpool Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter He left home at 17 to join the army because his father had told him his dream career of becoming a chef was "only for queers", but he admits it was a mistake and he was just "trying to prove something".
But growing up in poverty has left its mark on Colin.
Michael Rump holding the baby, Peggy reflected in mirror, 1969 as his mother watches on Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter Unemployed colliery worker, Glasgow tenement 1971 Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter He said: "I’m a bit of a loner. I have friends who maybe I text once a year. I personally feel like I never fit in."
Two of Colin's sisters still live in council housing in Bradford.
Michael Rump at living room doorway Rothschild dwellings 1969 Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter A child playing in tenement courtyard Maryhill Glasgow 1971. This image was used in the Regional Scotland Exhibition Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter Kitchen in a Liverpool multi-let, 1969. A mother clutches her toddler in a dark room Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter Hedges also photographed the Pryde family at their house in Moss Side, Manchester.
Paul had been a coal miner in Scotland but the family moved south when mining went into decline.
There was no hot water and the eight children were forced to wash in the kitchen sink.
OAP in the kitchen of his house Liverpool, 1969 Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter Mrs Milne putting her children to bed, Balsall Heath, 1968 Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter Boys wandering through rubbish, delivering newspapers, Maryhill tenement back 1971 Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter His son recalled the first moment he was made to feel different - when a teacher said to him: "Go away you smelly little boy."
The starting point of the film is a retrospective look at people who lived in the slums of the 1960s.
Family living with gas cut off Liverpool, 1970: A mother cooks on the fireplace as her teenage son watches on Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter Mother and children dealing with the washing, Salford, 1971. This image was used for the Regional Manchester Exhibition Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter In parallel, the documentary takes a contemporary and sensitive look at the lives of those living through the housing crisis of today and asks whether we have truly understood the issues first brought to light nearly half a century ago.
The documentary promises an emotional and compelling insight into the impact of England's housing crisis on families and individuals over the past century.
Mother and son in Manchester kitchen, 1969. This image was used for the Regional Manchester Exhibition. Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter A young family living in one room South London 1972 Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter Teenage girls in tenement yard, Glasgow Maryhill, July 1971 Credit: Nick Hedges / Shelter Guy Davies, Channel 5’s commissioning editor factual, said: "This extraordinary project and collaboration with Shelter explores lives so often forgotten.
"The award-winning editorial team are making a definitive statement on our continuing housing crisis and its link to hardship in this important anniversary year for Shelter."