maggiethespy said:... These boys got into an awful lot of trouble, but managed to charm their way out of it ...
I can relate to that ... :whistling
maggiethespy said:... These boys got into an awful lot of trouble, but managed to charm their way out of it ...
barra063 said:My parents both grew up during the depression. Every morsel of food was used up. Scraps of meat went thru the mincer to make shepherds pie etc, bread an dripping (lard) sandwiches, stale bread in milk for breakfast with maybe a sprinkle of sugar. In fact breakfast cereals as we know of today were not common place til after the war and items like shampoo were unheard of. Hair was washed with laundry soap. Every scrap of soap went into one of those little wire baskets and was then swished around in the washing water (no such thing as dish washing detergent. Of course people mended clothes and handed them down. When my father could not afford a tube for his bike he would stuff the tire with newspapers and keep on riding. he also had a little side line business selling homing pidgeons. His supply of pidgeons was always fully stocked up (think about it)
People would collect old blanket scraps and sew them to hessian (burlap) grain sacks and these were then their blankets. Crude furniture could be made from old packing boxes or kerosene tins and fencing wire was used to keep just about everything held together a bit longer. Most houses did not have a telephone or for that matter many appliances that required electricity. Houses still used oil or fat lamps so that only the bare necessities requiring electricity were used.
Eyemo said:How I got my surname…
A story on how my Great Great Grandfather visited America…and came back a changed man!
During the gold rush years, my Welsh Great Great Grandfather was a Sailor. He sailed on cargo ships. On arriving in the US , he and his friend had heard about this amazing gold rush. They flipped a coin on whether to stay as sailors or to take their chances as prospectors. The idea of getting rich on gold was too much for them….so they jumped Ship.
Apparently they walked for weeks, sleeping in pig sheds and stealing food….all the typical clichés of life as a foreign hobo.
Just typical of our families luck, by the time they got to where they were going…there was no gold!
So back they went to the port, to catch a ship back to Wales…But, hold on, they were now know as two sailors who had jumped ship…. So he changed his name from Pugh to Pugh-Jones…and came back to Wales.
Wish I knew the finer details of this story..