Family Life in the Newly Independent Ukraine by Jordan G. Teicher

Adam Hinton was a 26-year-old recent graduate of England’s Trent Polytechnic (now Nottingham Trent University) at the time, and he wanted to see what life in a new nation was like, particularly in industrial areas whose working class had been romanticized during Soviet rule. He’d never been to the country before and he knew he’d have trouble communicating there, but he’d studied Soviet politics in school and was eager to witness history.

Hinton got in touch with Ukraine’s independence movement and a local coal mining union, which arranged for him to stay with a miner, Victor Sklai, and his family in the city of Donetsk, the center of the eastern Donbass region. He arrived four months after independence, in December 1991, and the mood then, he said, was optimistic.

“People were saying they were going to develop and be the Germany of Eastern Europe. They thought in a few years they’d be driving around in Mercedes or Volkswagens, and they’d have a much higher standard of living,” he said.

Though many of his photos depict parties, dinners, and other happy occasions, the people Hinton met became increasingly frustrated by the lagging economy and the perceived ineffectiveness of the new government.

“Over the three years I was there, nothing much changed. It was almost like Ukraine stayed Soviet. So really, I got a look into Soviet life. It felt more like the end of the Soviet era than the beginning of a new Ukranian one,” he said.