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Living in the slums


melthebell

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An article (in the form of an interview arranged via the Forum in 2010) gives a glimpse of Sheffield life in poor-quality housing - here it is: http://www.24dash.com/news/housing/2010-03-09-reform-and-revolution-3-1950s-slum-clearance...
A very interesting article. Growing up in post-war Sheffield my own childhood was similar (but we were posh - we had our own outside loo!) It certainly helps us appreciate the modern comforts that people often take for granted.
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A very interesting article. Growing up in post-war Sheffield my own childhood was similar (but we were posh - we had our own outside loo!) It certainly helps us appreciate the modern comforts that people often take for granted.

 

Don't tell me you actually had IZAL toilet paper ! Snob ! Lol

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I was chatting to one of my cousins this morning and he remembers staying at our house and having a bath in front of the fire in our tin bath, he tells me I walked in and wanted to know what 'that' was, apparently my Mom ordered me out of the room :)

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Don't tell me you actually had IZAL toilet paper ! Snob ! Lol
Come off it, bantycock - we weren't that posh! ;) No, it was squares of the Daily Herald as Hillsbro recalled, on a rusty nail on the back of the toilet door. The more up-market outside loos had the Sheffield (or even the Daily) Telegraph. :)
... a bath in front of the fire in our tin bath...
Yep - sounds familiar. I would have thought that by the 1960s tin (or rather galvanised) baths were no longer in production, but I remember on a trainspotting trip to South Wales in 1965 I saw a shiny new bath displayed outside a traditional ironmonger's shop in Cardiff.
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Yep - sounds familiar. I would have thought that by the 1960s tin (or rather galvanised) baths were no longer in production, but I remember on a trainspotting trip to South Wales in 1965 I saw a shiny new bath displayed outside a traditional ironmonger's shop in Cardiff.

 

Ours was in full use throughout the 30s to 50s, until I, the youngest, was old enough to go to the Attercliffe slipperbaths, I absolutely hated those baths but there was no alternative except what my Mom called a 'strip wash' :o

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We lived in a two up two down house on Aizlewood Road until 1979, with the toilet at the top of the yard and a tin bath that resided at the top of the cellar steps.

No central heating but a gas fire and gas geyser in the kitchen..... needless to say moving from there to a new build at Intake was like moving from a cardboard box into Buckingham Palace.

The thing I did miss was the people who lived in the other five houses in that yard, we all knew each other and noticed whether anyone was missing or not been seen around.

We were lucky I suppose, people have lived in worse.

 

you just described my childhood upto the age of 13. at crookesmoor though.......tin bath, toilet at top of yard etc. 2 up 2 down with a geyser in kitchen

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you just described my childhood upto the age of 13. at crookesmoor though.......tin bath, toilet at top of yard etc. 2 up 2 down with a geyser in kitchen

 

No geyser but a 30 gallon boiler belching steam stuck at the end of the bath,gas fire at the side,sometimes a bacon sandwich and a pot of tea .Last one in was the dog.

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