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The War Years
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puddleducky | Report | 2 Mar 2008 13:39 |
nudge for later read. |
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BrendafromWales | Report | 2 Mar 2008 13:46 |
Ann, |
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Mazfromnorf | Report | 2 Mar 2008 16:29 |
I had ago at hoops and sticks at Beamish museum, not easy at all it is amazing how many children had a go but soon gave up as it was boring . i still have my french knitting although i called it a knitting nancy . i used to nit toys for my kids when they were young out of scraps of wool .I was born after the war but my parents were always very careful not to waste anything .I loved the bramble picking .and then all the lovely jam quince jelly and crabapple jelly .then gathering the chestnuts in autumn . Maz |
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Researching: |
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MacTheOldGeezer | Report | 2 Mar 2008 17:44 |
I don't remember Cod liver Oil, But the lady upstairs, as a treat used to give me Cod Liver Oil and Malt, she said it would keep me healthy |
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Deanna | Report | 2 Mar 2008 18:25 |
I always get lost on here as so many people add their lovely stories. |
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MacTheOldGeezer | Report | 2 Mar 2008 18:43 |
Can you remember any of the products you don't see anymore |
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Jean (Monmouth) | Report | 2 Mar 2008 19:36 |
My sister made a shopping bag with raffia blanket -stitched round cardboard milk bottle tops, then stitched together into a shape. Lasted quite a long time. We had colouring books for presents at Christmas and water paints. I still have a baby doll, much the worse for wear, which was in my stocking the year I was 6. It was made out of some sort of hard composition materiel and has closing eyes. My brother was given an aeroplane that our older brother-in-law had made out of a chunk of wood, cardboard wings and shoe polish tins for wheels. He loved it. Jean |
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MayBlossomEmpressofSpring | Report | 2 Mar 2008 20:25 |
With two friends I used to make wool boble using milk bottle tops joining four or five together by their cords used togther with plastic thimbles with ribbon threaded through a hole in the top punched in by adult for decoration on babies prams. Wool gollies ( not banned then) made into broaches with a small safety pin in the back. we had a little tray made out of a cardboard box with string through around our neck, turns each and went house to house on the estate where we lived selling them for the Red Cross.Friends father was an air raid warden and had a notice board in the front garden and put the receipts in for everyone to see. we felt very important!!!. Dad worked on munitions not being A1 for the forces and worked regular nights, brother and I slept in bed with Mum who read Film Fun and Radio Fun commics to us I liked stories of Goofy the Ghost best. |
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MacTheOldGeezer | Report | 2 Mar 2008 20:40 |
Film Fun |
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MayBlossomEmpressofSpring | Report | 2 Mar 2008 20:44 |
We swapped commics too Mac and loved it when one family had American comics to swap don't know where they got them from but could now hazzard a guess.. |
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val1963 | Report | 2 Mar 2008 20:50 |
What a facinating thread, thank you every one for their memories and stories |
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BrendafromWales | Report | 2 Mar 2008 21:14 |
I remember those shopping bags made from wool wrapped round milk bottle tops. |
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Harry | Report | 2 Mar 2008 22:08 |
Adventure; Rover. Champion - Rockfist Rogan and those dirty tricks the Germans used to play on him(I've still got one of those) |
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ChrisofWessex | Report | 2 Mar 2008 22:38 |
Eagle came about 1950/51 followed soon by Girl - I have a photo of me in school blazer with the 'gold' Girl emblem in lapel! |
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Mick in the Sticks | Report | 3 Mar 2008 00:56 |
There were no domestic fridges during and just after the war unless you were very wealthy. I remember in hot weather the milk bottles were stood in a bowl of water with a wet tea towel draped across them. As the water evaporated from the tea towel, it kept everything undeneath cool. |
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Mick in the Sticks | Report | 3 Mar 2008 12:31 |
The rag and bone man used to come around on a horse and cart too, rather like Steptoe. As he came down the road he would ring a bell and cry out "Old rags and lumber." After years of calling out this verbal advertisment the words became abbreviated and distorted and moulded into one continuous sound. In the end it sounded more like "Ol ags und umber.", all said in a croaky and gravely voice. |
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Mick in the Sticks | Report | 3 Mar 2008 19:33 |
I remember the trees that lined the road through Dulwich Village going towards North Dulwich Station. There was a wide grass verge between the roadway and the pavement where the trees grew. All the trees had white lines painted around them in an attempt to make them more visible during the blackout. A few years ago my sister was visiting from Australia and we made a trip back to Dulwich Village and our childhood memories. I did examine the trees and although there are no visble painted white lines around them now, if one carefully looks in the cracks in the tree bark, flecks of white paint can still be seen. It's just another of those wartime things that's long been forgotten unless you know where to look. |
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MacTheOldGeezer | Report | 3 Mar 2008 20:35 |
Not boring at all Mick |
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BrendafromWales | Report | 3 Mar 2008 21:03 |
Girls.....who remembers long black or brown thick stockings in the winter attached to the suspenders on your liberty bodice?....and the navy knickers with a pocket in for your hankie! |
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Jean (Monmouth) | Report | 4 Mar 2008 19:46 |
My mother used to stain the floorboards with a solution of potassium permanganate as proper stains were unobtainable. This loses its colour over time and has to be done again. You used Dolly Blue to keep your whites white in the wash. The sheets were laid out on the hedges on asunny day so that the sun could bleach them. A common accident was the mangle handle comig off and landing on someones foot. The mangle was a very large contraption taking up a big space in the scullery or washhouse. The washhouse was often a corrugated iron shed, freezing cold in the winter, and you had to boil all the hot water, so rinsing was often done in cold, especially if you had to carry the hot water from the kettle on the range in the kitchen! I remember the liberty bodice which no girl went without. People were much more worried about keeping children warm than they seem to be now. I did not wear boots, though some children always did, not fancy ones either. I am talking about a junior edition of the working boot. We had Blakeys on our heels and toes and made a racket if we walked on pave ments. Little boys wore their older brothers old trousers cut down into short ones. They looked so cold in the winter and often got chapped legs. Girls were luckier with their wool or rayon stockings. I still have an old knitting pattern book with patterns for knitted vests and pants, Balaclavas, stockings etc. Cant get the right wool anymore. Jean |