Had a teacher like that, guy would finish work during winter , put on his skiis and race down a neighboring road (even if it was just ice there) Really interesting guy and fun to be around.
@@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 She had 2 caravans inside, and she mentioned that she was thinking about putting another one inside, and ever since her friends have called her Mary "Three Caravans" Anderson.
I checked the British Newspaper Archive and found an article in the 16 July 1967 "The People" Newspaper with some more info. Her husband's name was John Anderson, late of the Indian Army Medical Service and they lived in Dollar, Clackmannashire Scotland. He was still alive at that time. I found a grave record for Mary Agnes Anderson, died 5 Jan 1976 in Dollar, but not him. Unfortunately I can't find any more information, but maybe this will help someone.
I was born in Stirling and lived my first 3 years in dollar then Tullibody. I had no idea about this woman till I saw this video afew years ago, I hope they rest in peace ❤
@@danpanther it’s just funny. I suppose back then people tried to make anything seem optimistic even paint colour. Plus it would of been the presenters opinion, just an odd thing to say I suppose
@@NigelHyphenJones You don't have to born in a country to become a naturalised citizen of that country. Her accent sounds highland Scots which would still make her British but from birth.
Your joking. She couldn't sound more British. You obviously do not understand thats the accent in those days of an well bred English woman. @@xToniMichellex
I fear Mr. Anderson may have been telling his wife a tall tale regarding indoor campers in America. It's absolutely unheard of. But what a sweet old thing she must've been. Bless her, wherever she is.
American here, I’ve never seen, nor heard of any one building a house completely around their caravans (or trailers) before. ~ Fascinating. 🤔 Not sure why this was on my YT suggestions, yet I LOVE it; I love this lady & her lifestyle! It’s greatness! Love that the third one is in the garden for guests, or waiting on another adventure. As well as, the coziness of the other two inside the house to keep the lovely memories alive!
@ryanirwin5138 ~ Based on my experience, stable doors aren’t specifically found in garages. It’s actually a common thing in country life, to include such doors in one’s home, as a rustic look. In fact, Barndominium styled homes are quite popular in the area I live. My house, built & added onto since the 70’s, even has stable doors leading to spare rooms.
@@zaadiavaline9956stable doors are on garages from the early 1900s here in America. My house and garage was built in 1902 and there are stable doors on our garage. The original owner drove a horse and buggy.
@AMcDub0708 ~ Hmm, so it sounds like you might think I’m disputing the presence of stable doors on garages? That’s not at all what I was attempting to convey. I’m saying that stable doors aren’t *only* found in garages, in response to what @ryanirwin5138 wrote.
Well …. During the pandemic, i pitched 2 small tents in my living room for my kids to sleep and play in given that we were in lock-down. They loved it. What started out as a weekend adventure, turned into our actual living room set up for over 6 months. 😂😂
All people from her generation aged this well. It's their organic diet and vigorous livelihoods. Today we eat all chemically processed foods with various hormones and toxins, and most live relatively sedentary lives using their phones and laptops.
@@smadaf This is What i Say About Jesus , Dont WAit, except him Now , he did not Sin , he lived a Perfect life , ask him to Forgive you , and Make the Creator of the universe Your GOd ! And i will see you in heaven
I lived in a tent with my 8 year old and a baby 6 months old for 6 weeks to save up for a bond, we also had a dog and a cat . Fast fwd to age 65 and I am living in a caravan for five months on my mother’s land , now I am 71 and I am renting a studio in a retirement village, but I did enjoy camping 😁
Oh I do wish they had retained this as a museum. This is just the kind of quirky cleverness I'd like to visit. Also, the comments for this video are so lovely.
The world needs odd people like this who do what they want instead of following the norm. If it wasnt for the town and country planning act more people will have found alternative ways to live.
It's annoying I met women who had FLED a old pedo liar she shared a narrow boat with middle of no where ex concrete factory canal slip down the road from Lemington spar people on bots in sheds in cabins in half caravan sheds Dutch boats and campers all living almost fre and no council tax entire place was on lease to a young hippy dude who brought the old house turned the entire place into the coolest place to live ever
Alternative ways of living SHOULD be illegal. Where would landlords be without tennants? It's all a part of the natural order of things. Like with weapons. They SHOULD be removed from the poor, or the 99% or whatever you call them, because they simply would not do whatever they were told if they had more than just pitchforks. It's a lesson thousands of years old and still just as relevant today.
@@johnnymcblaze Wow, you guys in the States still have trolls? We don't get them so much here anymore, they don't work, people aren't ignorant anymore and this one johnnymcblaze isn't even very good, lol 😆
Wow Mrs Anderson was in fine form and walking around so well for someone who was 84 ! I wonder what happened to her beloved caravans when she passed . Such a great uplifting film x
What do you mean ? When she was alive people just died from bad hearts now we have machines that make tiny machines that are installed in your heart with a machine operated by a surgeon there's so much advancement in technology this film had to be restored to be uploaded to a website .
That she sleeps in the caravan does make sense to me, as I'm thinking of the beds that were built inside boxes with a door. You know, like Heathcliff's bed in Wuthering Heights. See, it WOULD be quiet and cozy to sleep in...in fact might help keep heating bills low during winter. It totally makes sense! What a lovely lady--and I bet her little grandson must've loved staying over
Allowing for just inflation £10k in 1972 would be £140,000. But we all know that houses have increased way way above inflation. What I want to know is why have two caravans inside your house?!?! lol
"£10,000 in 1970 is equivalent in purchasing power to about £164,825.52 today, an increase of £154,825.52 over 52 years. The pound had an average inflation rate of 5.54% per year between 1970 and today, producing a cumulative price increase of 1,548.26%."
People seem keen to point out inflation to craig but let's face it, even taking inflation into account you aren't getting a decent house anywhere much for less than £250k these days. Anywhere in the more desirable parts of England more like £350-400k and in London it would be more like £500k+.
Rereading my comment and I became lighted again .I love this woman ,she built herself a cocoon 2 cocoons ,tiny and cosy ,kept the bills down especially the heating and I imagine it was like going on a holiday everyday .how marvelous ,I think she's a beautiful soul ,wish more people were like her .
Something feels homely, comfortable & just plain nice about all this, it must be reminding me of caravan holidays with my family when I was little. I loved it ❤
I love caravans as much as she does! I have two inside my bungalow too! Except mine are models that my Dad made me. One is a Gypsy wagon and the other is a replica of the caravan we had through my childhood and into adulthood. . We'd go away most weekends if the weather was nice. My most excited feeling was coming in from school on a Friday and finding my Mum packing towels and clothes and supplies into the caravan on our driveway. I'd be so thrilled to know we were off for a couple of nights. I'd go have a long fun bath for over an hour, then put on my clean nightdress ready for my Dad to get back from work. He'd get the car hitched onto the caravan and I would help letting him know if the indicator lights were working at the back, winding down the towbar connection and cranking up the four legs. Oooh I'm getting excited even remembering it! . We'd only go about an hour's drive away from our home in West Sussex, maybe drive to Kent or Hampshire, if it was just for Friday and Saturday nights. But we'd also go away for a week or more a few times a year, and go all over the UK and into Europe. I loved when we'd pull onto a ferry at Portsmouth, Newhaven or Dover and go over to France! I still remember the ports! Portsmouth to Le Havre, Newhaven to Dieppe and obviously Dover to Calais. . From going all over France, we also toured Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg and Holland. Sometimes just in France for a week or two, sometimes doing a few nights in France, 7 nights in Germany and a few nights in France before coming home. Different destinations and durations each time. We'd also sail from Portsmouth to The Isle of Wight...so following caravans, my next love is ferries and the sea. . But we also went all round England, went to Wales and Scotland too. I was born in 1970, and in 1976, which was the hottest British weather recorded at the time, we were caravanning in The New Forest when spontaneous forest fires started! That was a bit hairy getting out! . That reminds me, in total contrast, one time in France we were at a campsite beside a river. It rained and rained and the swollen river broke it's banks and whooshed across the road and flooded the whole campsite! Our outdoor caravan step was below the surface of the water, and my Dad had to move quickly that morning when we realised, before it rose too high to get out. There were people wading across the grass to catch their tents or sleeping bags, the site was full of Gendarmes, (military police officers) rowing in canoes and small dinghies. They had horses and big vans (?) to help pull or tow where necessary. . So many people lost their belongings, particularly those in tents. Luckily we were pitched right on the front entryway of the site, just tucked round by some trees near the road. We were on a patch of more gravelly ground, so my Dad had pretty firm footings for the car tyres to grip to, and we managed to get out relatively easily before the water reached inside the caravan door or flooded the car engine. . Other caravans pitched on the opposite side of the camp were not so lucky, because they were on grassy areas that just churned up mud on the spot and they were stuck. We all knew it had been raining all night, but the river bank giving way happened so suddenly, no one would have expected that. It was surreal, scary and thrilling all at once! . I have so so many caravanning memories that are still so vivid and detailed. I was gutted as a teenager, around 17, when my parents sold it! 😭 I'd love to have THAT exact model to renovate. I don't drive so I couldn't take it anywhere, but I'd put it in my garden as a kind of summer room. Actually it could be my craft and sewing room! I would so love that. I'd find it such a comfort to have it with me, as it was such an integral part of my childhood. . I TOTALLY understand this lady, needing to keep those caravans nearby. I wouldn't go so far as to put a caravan inside my house though, as I think that would take something away from enjoying it. For me, it's the fact they are a compact self-contained home, all on their own! Separate from your everyday home and location. So I would want mine outside, to get that feeling of being somewhere else. . What a lovely, memory-inducing, far-too-short video this was! Having 3 caravans seems perfectly normal to me! 🤪 I'd have a whole campsite of them if I was rich! All to myself. 😁😁😁
@@abcdefg3315 awwww how sweet! Yes....go buy one, then come and grab me and let's go explore! 😁😁😁 I'm too old to work now (52) which I know isn't a dinosaur exactly, but I have health issues and receive benefits. So I'm a "lady of leisure" .. who's lacking the leisure! Well actually lacking in the lady department too truth be told! 🤣 Not so much lady of leisure and more like a woman with nothing to do! 😁 So yeah, go grab yourself a tourer and set yourself free! And if you fancy dragging me along, I can be packed in half an hour! 😜😜😜 😘
Nothing wrong with that! She kept a beautifully clean and tidy home with the additional challenges of the caravans. I had thought of putting a caravan inside a barn and living in that once - this is an up-market version of my thought. Well, as she did it first I guess my idea is a down- market version of hers. I was hoping to see inside the caravan in the garden, too. 👍🏻
@@emmabrooker166 I recall in the film "Army of Shadows" one of the more well off resistance fighters during the war had a small glass room built inside a larger room near a window so as to allow the sun's heat to create a comfortable place for him to read/work. Very smart.
@@emmabrooker166Had that old camp stove just screaming away, I noticed that also. Running it inside a camper inside a house. How she didn't get light headed and pass out is a miracle.
👍🤩💝🙏I love her and her husband. I loved watching this. I love her outfit. I love her pride. I love the unashamed matter of fact spirit of her way of living. I love that they aren’t forgotten and have found their way here on UA-cam in the 21st Century, a time they couldn’t have ever imagined, we have a way for them to live on when so many of us will be long forgotten within 3 generations as so many others that have come before us. May she and her husband John Rest In Peace. Gone but not forgotten. 🙏💝
"..but I dont think its unusual in America". Well, it is unusual but I love these type of eccentricities. Harms no one and is an amazing converation piece. Its her home and makes it how she likes it. RIP Mr. and Mrs. Anderson
@OffGridInvestor: No they are not! Used to be common immediately after the war until more permanent housing could be rebuilt. Fairly common even into the ‘70s. For a surviving example look up the Ipswich prefab village. :)
Love it. It's a shame that there aren't more intriguing, quirky people like this around today. I find them fascinating. Could talk to them all day every day listening to their stories and sharing their memories. Never thought I'd pen these words but ..... thank you BBC!
A friend of ours has a caravan in his holiday home. He needed another bedroom and this was the easiest way. He’s a bit eccentric. In his younger days he seldom wore a shirt or shoes, whatever the weather, and went everywhere by unicycle.
The house in which I live now ( for the past 20+ years ) had a green house in the kitchen in which the previous owner spent his sitting down time. The house was so cold it made it easier to survive.
Considering the price of heating your house nowadays I can see more people trying to find a way to install a little “room within a room” to sit in with a little safe heater inside. A mini build it yourself prefab/tent/ gazebo/ . The imagination could run riot with ideas. Plus the heat wouldn’t rise up to the ceiling and come down cold!
@@ragdolly22 or even build a little hut in a room, like the plastic or metal storage kind you can buy prefabricated for your garden. Don’t think it would suit a family, though if you live alone why not? You’ll get some funny looks from any visitors mind you! They’ll think you’ve turned into one of those medieval hermits who lived in a hut in the forest!
@@ragdolly22 me too, and I even bought a faux sheepskin throw and turned it into a poncho to wear in the winter. That plus a heated throw over me when I’m sitting down keeps me toasty, though when you have to get up to do anything the rest of the house feels so cold in comparison. This winter will be even worse! Get the scarves and balaclavas and gloves on as well I think, even indoors.
They spoke so well and had such good manners back in the day. She is well dressed and sitting elegantly. Now the equivalent person would be slouched in a track suit
Wow! What an unusual but great idea! We all know about the good old British weather. So just imagine a bungalow with a glass roof and most of its internal walls removed. Keeping individual small spaces warm in winter would be easy, and it could also house a central fire place with seating all around for chilling out and entertaining guests. It would be like the great outdoors, indoors. 😄 Awww.... Pinza the Dog was very cute too. 😁
A redoubtable Scottish lady! The best holidays we had as a family was in a caravan touring Scotland This is brilliant video and we have forgotten how to be eccentric in our country.
I'm in a flat and upstairs can be noisy,so I'd love one such as these to enjoy cosy quiet sleep.Ive actually wondered about putting a shed in my bedroom but this is much better.
1. How did she get them into the house? 2. Wonder where they are now? 3. Would love to see the house now? Will probably never find out any answers to these questions.😏 What a wonderful lady😉
Only the British can be this quietly eccentric and firmly believe they are doing everyday things in a perfectly normal way, no different to anyone else.
This was soooooo cool! Tho she’s passed now and her children have prolly 2 and maybe grandchildren as well. What a very nice woman she was….clearly. Born b4 cars. Lived through WW1, the depression, WW2….saw cars come into being and TVs and phones. She didn’t see it but she made it online. What a life!
Its possible that those are Burlingham tourers (from Cabus, Lancashire) rather then Birmingham. Burlinghams used to hand build caravans many decades ago and the company still exists as a dealership now.
I think they were Monza caravans and all but I think you are right actually so keep knowing your caravans and all and good for you etc. I think they were caravans from a bygone age and all and really rather wonderful. Thank you. What do you consider to be the best touring caravan ever made and all please? I think you are worth listening to
"Why do you have two caravans inside your house?" "Well, we did have 3, but we figured that was too much and we needed the room." Lol british humour, you just got to love it😂😂😂
Why 2 caravans in the house? Why not? Love this & adore her. I googled her in hopes of finding out what became of the caravans & house after she died, but no luck. I truly hope they kept them in the family. Funnily enough, i discovered a man in the USA named Robert Anderson started a gospel group in 1947 that was named..... The Caravans. 😆
Mrs Anderson , born 1888 and made it onto You Tube .
A year older than Hitler
@@crazyforcoffee5950 But Hitler gets a lot more views!
@@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 And he had WAAAAAAAY more _subscribers_
Same year Jack the Ripper was terrorising Whitechapel
@@IrishMcScottish What a wonderful world we'd be living in if Mrs Anderson were more popular than Hitler
It warms my heart to see people who aren't afraid to be a bit different and eccentric.
Had a teacher like that, guy would finish work during winter , put on his skiis and race down a neighboring road (even if it was just ice there)
Really interesting guy and fun to be around.
The sun rises in the East not the West
Yes! We're not robots. People need to disconnect from AI and start thinking for themselves.
She was sectioned 20 minutes after this interview
@@user-s1o3nr532 😂😢
What a great woman. She had the wisdom of age to know 3 caravans was too much. That’s what the garden is for. The overstock.
This is a Monty Python sketch! the voice over is clearly a young Michael Palin!
lol
@@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 She had 2 caravans inside, and she mentioned that she was thinking about putting another one inside, and ever since her friends have called her Mary "Three Caravans" Anderson.
So funny ,I love it!!
1 is too much lol
I checked the British Newspaper Archive and found an article in the 16 July 1967 "The People" Newspaper with some more info. Her husband's name was John Anderson, late of the Indian Army Medical Service and they lived in Dollar, Clackmannashire Scotland. He was still alive at that time. I found a grave record for Mary Agnes Anderson, died 5 Jan 1976 in Dollar, but not him. Unfortunately I can't find any more information, but maybe this will help someone.
Thanks for taking the time to do this. It was interesting.
Very helpful indeed. This history is precious.
Gosh The People. That takes me back to grandpa.
I was born in Stirling and lived my first 3 years in dollar then Tullibody. I had no idea about this woman till I saw this video afew years ago, I hope they rest in peace ❤
Also a Stirling born, lived on Dollar road in Tilly. Never heard about this til now lol
But Mrs Anderson, why do you have two caravans in your house?
Well you see we had to get rid of the third one.🤣🤣🤣🤣
Reminds me of Only Fools and Horses when someone asks Rodney why Grandad is watching two televisions. "Well, the other one's being repaired"
Two sheds.
Monty Python.
By get rid of she means park outside.
@@EmptyGlass99 my parents had 2 in the 70s. One for picture and the other for sound.
@@OffGridInvestor What sound did they get out of a caravan?
Watching this from the comfort of my 1974 caravan.
Cool. I love the 70s and I wasn't born until 1991
Epic
84 climbing on a lader cleaning the roof. May we all be as spritly as ms Anderson. Rip young lady, rip ❤
And dusting the light
We know she is not obese…
And still busy enough to use a sewing room.
That's it right there. Keep moving, stay active, climb, jump, have fun.
84 and still as well spoken as ever, what a lovely woman.
The caravan is the connection to her husband. Love forever and great moments❤
"A pleasant shade of battleship grey." Pleasant.
Right 😂
Nice colour. Battleship grey would be desirable if Farrow & Ball called it Grey Morning
@@danpanther it’s just funny. I suppose back then people tried to make anything seem optimistic even paint colour. Plus it would of been the presenters opinion, just an odd thing to say I suppose
Battleship grey is all the rage now and has been for a few years now. Look around you….🤔
@@NigelHyphenJones Not where I live. Not at all.
British eccentricity at its finest....hats off....
Hats orff yes
She may have lived in Britain a long time when this interview was conducted, but she wasn’t British.
@@NigelHyphenJones
You don't have to born in a country to become a naturalised citizen of that country.
Her accent sounds highland Scots which would still make her British but from birth.
@@NotesOfBoredomshe sounds absolutely nothing like a Scot, she sounds like she’s from somewhere in Europe but definitely not British
Your joking. She couldn't sound more British. You obviously do not understand thats the accent in those days of an well bred English woman. @@xToniMichellex
I’m glad UA-cam recommended me this.
Life goal.
A bungalow with space for two caravans inside is now surely worth millions
For only £10000 even
I fear Mr. Anderson may have been telling his wife a tall tale regarding indoor campers in America. It's absolutely unheard of. But what a sweet old thing she must've been. Bless her, wherever she is.
I have personally lived in my camper van in a shop and in the garage below my sister’s house so your statement is invalid
You've never seen a garage big enough for a camper??
Trailers inside structures like in Mexico, you build shade around it. Like a big barn.
You haven't watched the movie "The Accountant" yet, have you?
@@alec4672 The camper wasn’t in her garage, it was in her living room.
American here, I’ve never seen, nor heard of any one building a house completely around their caravans (or trailers) before. ~ Fascinating. 🤔
Not sure why this was on my YT suggestions, yet I LOVE it; I love this lady & her lifestyle! It’s greatness! Love that the third one is in the garden for guests, or waiting on another adventure. As well as, the coziness of the other two inside the house to keep the lovely memories alive!
This woman's husband lied his ass off to justify doing something very weird ❤️
He didn’t have the heart to tell her they live in a garage. You can see the stable doors at 1:16.
@ryanirwin5138 ~ Based on my experience, stable doors aren’t specifically found in garages. It’s actually a common thing in country life, to include such doors in one’s home, as a rustic look. In fact, Barndominium styled homes are quite popular in the area I live. My house, built & added onto since the 70’s, even has stable doors leading to spare rooms.
@@zaadiavaline9956stable doors are on garages from the early 1900s here in America. My house and garage was built in 1902 and there are stable doors on our garage. The original owner drove a horse and buggy.
@AMcDub0708 ~ Hmm, so it sounds like you might think I’m disputing the presence of stable doors on garages? That’s not at all what I was attempting to convey. I’m saying that stable doors aren’t *only* found in garages, in response to what @ryanirwin5138 wrote.
I'm still looking for these 60's,70's American indoor campers....
Well …. During the pandemic, i pitched 2 small tents in my living room for my kids to sleep and play in given that we were in lock-down. They loved it. What started out as a weekend adventure, turned into our actual living room set up for over 6 months. 😂😂
A woman who's lived a full + happy life, living it out in her own way in 1972. Beautiful.
For someone who was 84 she didn't half zip about like a fly. What a trooper.
Lovely perky woman
Nothing out of the ordinary, Proper generation of hardy people! Not like you see today...
Ikr? And great looking healthy legs on her!
All people from her generation aged this well. It's their organic diet and vigorous livelihoods. Today we eat all chemically processed foods with various hormones and toxins, and most live relatively sedentary lives using their phones and laptops.
@@raraszek Also, they weren't vaxxed and medicated to the hilt.
I miss that generation.They were such lovely people.
Analogue people before digital crap was invented
No they were cruel and bitter .
I disagree, you can still find nice people today you’ve only got to look in the right places.
This is the level of quirkiness i aspire to have when I'm elderly.
same!
Have it now! Don't wait to live!
Let’s face it, Rex the Sheep: sadly, none of us is a Spring lamb any more.
She was born in the 19th century
@@smadaf This is What i Say About Jesus , Dont WAit, except him Now , he did not Sin , he lived a Perfect life , ask him to Forgive you , and Make the Creator of the universe Your GOd ! And i will see you in heaven
I lived in a tent with my 8 year old and a baby 6 months old for 6 weeks to save up for a bond, we also had a dog and a cat . Fast fwd to age 65 and I am living in a caravan for five months on my mother’s land , now I am 71 and I am renting a studio in a retirement village, but I did enjoy camping 😁
"But now she is 84 and settling down." We should all be so lucky.
You’re name is very fitting.
@@rowan7658 Your
You're = you are
She and her husband were way ahead of the times!! Absolutely love it 🥰
Hello 👋 how’re you doing?
Oh I do wish they had retained this as a museum. This is just the kind of quirky cleverness I'd like to visit. Also, the comments for this video are so lovely.
What happend to it
@@josephcarrington8834Probably a block of flats, the british way 😂
Oh my goodness she is such a sweetheart.
She was brilliant. Glad they managed to put this on UA-cam.
So nice to hear "bored with" instead of "bored of".
Come visit America! It’s still the norm over here. (And of course there’s many other reasons to visit too!) :)
Wonderful Wonderful women, she lives as she pleases ,not how other people think she should!!!!!!!😁🇬🇧
What a lovely old dear. A free thinker. Great comments below. She is a well loved and respected woman even
so many years after her death.
I was shocked to see nice comments
People are so negative
The world needs odd people like this who do what they want instead of following the norm. If it wasnt for the town and country planning act more people will have found alternative ways to live.
It's annoying I met women who had FLED a old pedo liar she shared a narrow boat with middle of no where ex concrete factory canal slip down the road from Lemington spar people on bots in sheds in cabins in half caravan sheds Dutch boats and campers all living almost fre and no council tax entire place was on lease to a young hippy dude who brought the old house turned the entire place into the coolest place to live ever
Yes, could've been good
Alternative ways of living SHOULD be illegal. Where would landlords be without tennants? It's all a part of the natural order of things. Like with weapons. They SHOULD be removed from the poor, or the 99% or whatever you call them, because they simply would not do whatever they were told if they had more than just pitchforks. It's a lesson thousands of years old and still just as relevant today.
@@johnnymcblaze Wow, you guys in the States still have trolls? We don't get them so much here anymore, they don't work, people aren't ignorant anymore and this one johnnymcblaze isn't even very good, lol 😆
@@Addwater4444it doesn’t look like trolling to me. More like sarcastic social criticism. Trolling is personal I thought
Wow Mrs Anderson was in fine form and walking around so well for someone who was 84 !
I wonder what happened to her beloved caravans when she passed .
Such a great uplifting film x
Nacy polosi age
She would be 134 now. I was two when this came out. Great clip and shows society and the way things look didn’t become as futuristic as we imagined.
Sorry if this makes u feel old but my dad want even born 😂😂😂
I was 2 as well 😆
@@eyeballpaul1792 It makes you young, not us old.
Yes, forget about 'Tomorrow's World"!!!
What do you mean ? When she was alive people just died from bad hearts now we have machines that make tiny machines that are installed in your heart with a machine operated by a surgeon there's so much advancement in technology this film had to be restored to be uploaded to a website .
I like this, she's feisty and cool.
Why have 2 caravans in the house?
Because 3 is too many!
😂😂
That she sleeps in the caravan does make sense to me, as I'm thinking of the beds that were built inside boxes with a door. You know, like Heathcliff's bed in Wuthering Heights. See, it WOULD be quiet and cozy to sleep in...in fact might help keep heating bills low during winter. It totally makes sense! What a lovely lady--and I bet her little grandson must've loved staying over
A Murphy bed.
When he said “£10 thousand pound bungalow” it hit me with a wave of depression. I bet it costs 3.4 million now
Allowing for just inflation £10k in 1972 would be £140,000. But we all know that houses have increased way way above inflation. What I want to know is why have two caravans inside your house?!?! lol
That struck me as a really high price for 1971. My Mum and Dad moved to the Isle of Wight in 1976, and the tiny bungalow they bought was £14,000.
"£10,000 in 1970 is equivalent in purchasing power to about £164,825.52 today, an increase of £154,825.52 over 52 years. The pound had an average inflation rate of 5.54% per year between 1970 and today, producing a cumulative price increase of 1,548.26%."
People seem keen to point out inflation to craig but let's face it, even taking inflation into account you aren't getting a decent house anywhere much for less than £250k these days. Anywhere in the more desirable parts of England more like £350-400k and in London it would be more like £500k+.
@@TheJohnRowley Someone said the average price in London is over a million
Rereading my comment and I became lighted again .I love this woman ,she built herself a cocoon 2 cocoons ,tiny and cosy ,kept the bills down especially the heating and I imagine it was like going on a holiday everyday .how marvelous ,I think she's a beautiful soul ,wish more people were like her .
Why do we never hear about eccentric people like this on TV nowadays? Fed up with the same bunch of celebs over and over again.
Real personalities, and real characters existed back then. Everyone and everything is petty, pathetic, and fake these days.
@@geraldinegregory.1803 and negative, defeatist and bitter apparently too, judging by your post.
Random larry spotting. Hope you're well.
@@tentringer4065😂
Who isn't 'eccentric' these days? The unusual part, by modern standards, is the fact she seems like a decent human being.
This is why I love being BRITISH 👍!!!!
She kept the caravan her husband and her traveled in.. put it into her house like a room….. I LOVE it. 🌹
She looks like a habitual smiler. 🙂
What an elegant personality 🏆
what a dear person!
Brilliant! Both Mrs Anderson and the interviewer in the end, in yet another caravan! Charming.
Proud to see a traditional level of British eccentricity, I must say 👍
This is normal. Two bungalows inside a caravan would be eccentric.
She's a legend 👏
God bless her... she's on holiday every day of the week!.😎💕🇬🇧
If I make it to my 80s I hope I move like this lady I was born in 72 this video makes me happy and I don't really know why ,peace and love
Something feels homely, comfortable & just plain nice about all this, it must be reminding me of caravan holidays with my family when I was little. I loved it ❤
That woman was bonkers and I love her.
This lady is my hero. She had me at sewing room.
She's in fabulous shape for her age, climbing up on ladders. The 3rd caravan was beautiful
What a charming lady. She looked very happy with her life. Plenty of room for family to stay. Marvellous
I love caravans as much as she does! I have two inside my bungalow too! Except mine are models that my Dad made me. One is a Gypsy wagon and the other is a replica of the caravan we had through my childhood and into adulthood.
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We'd go away most weekends if the weather was nice. My most excited feeling was coming in from school on a Friday and finding my Mum packing towels and clothes and supplies into the caravan on our driveway. I'd be so thrilled to know we were off for a couple of nights. I'd go have a long fun bath for over an hour, then put on my clean nightdress ready for my Dad to get back from work. He'd get the car hitched onto the caravan and I would help letting him know if the indicator lights were working at the back, winding down the towbar connection and cranking up the four legs. Oooh I'm getting excited even remembering it!
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We'd only go about an hour's drive away from our home in West Sussex, maybe drive to Kent or Hampshire, if it was just for Friday and Saturday nights. But we'd also go away for a week or more a few times a year, and go all over the UK and into Europe. I loved when we'd pull onto a ferry at Portsmouth, Newhaven or Dover and go over to France! I still remember the ports! Portsmouth to Le Havre, Newhaven to Dieppe and obviously Dover to Calais.
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From going all over France, we also toured Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg and Holland. Sometimes just in France for a week or two, sometimes doing a few nights in France, 7 nights in Germany and a few nights in France before coming home. Different destinations and durations each time. We'd also sail from Portsmouth to The Isle of Wight...so following caravans, my next love is ferries and the sea.
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But we also went all round England, went to Wales and Scotland too. I was born in 1970, and in 1976, which was the hottest British weather recorded at the time, we were caravanning in The New Forest when spontaneous forest fires started! That was a bit hairy getting out!
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That reminds me, in total contrast, one time in France we were at a campsite beside a river. It rained and rained and the swollen river broke it's banks and whooshed across the road and flooded the whole campsite! Our outdoor caravan step was below the surface of the water, and my Dad had to move quickly that morning when we realised, before it rose too high to get out. There were people wading across the grass to catch their tents or sleeping bags, the site was full of Gendarmes, (military police officers) rowing in canoes and small dinghies. They had horses and big vans (?) to help pull or tow where necessary.
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So many people lost their belongings, particularly those in tents. Luckily we were pitched right on the front entryway of the site, just tucked round by some trees near the road. We were on a patch of more gravelly ground, so my Dad had pretty firm footings for the car tyres to grip to, and we managed to get out relatively easily before the water reached inside the caravan door or flooded the car engine.
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Other caravans pitched on the opposite side of the camp were not so lucky, because they were on grassy areas that just churned up mud on the spot and they were stuck. We all knew it had been raining all night, but the river bank giving way happened so suddenly, no one would have expected that. It was surreal, scary and thrilling all at once!
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I have so so many caravanning memories that are still so vivid and detailed. I was gutted as a teenager, around 17, when my parents sold it! 😭 I'd love to have THAT exact model to renovate. I don't drive so I couldn't take it anywhere, but I'd put it in my garden as a kind of summer room. Actually it could be my craft and sewing room! I would so love that. I'd find it such a comfort to have it with me, as it was such an integral part of my childhood.
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I TOTALLY understand this lady, needing to keep those caravans nearby. I wouldn't go so far as to put a caravan inside my house though, as I think that would take something away from enjoying it. For me, it's the fact they are a compact self-contained home, all on their own! Separate from your everyday home and location. So I would want mine outside, to get that feeling of being somewhere else.
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What a lovely, memory-inducing, far-too-short video this was! Having 3 caravans seems perfectly normal to me! 🤪
I'd have a whole campsite of them if I was rich!
All to myself. 😁😁😁
What lovely memories.💖
@@kerrystevens3683 thank you! ☺️☺️☺️ xxx
I mean this completely seriously - have you considered being a caravan salesperson? You make me want to rush out and get one 😂
@@abcdefg3315 awwww how sweet! Yes....go buy one, then come and grab me and let's go explore! 😁😁😁
I'm too old to work now (52) which I know isn't a dinosaur exactly, but I have health issues and receive benefits. So I'm a "lady of leisure" .. who's lacking the leisure! Well actually lacking in the lady department too truth be told! 🤣 Not so much lady of leisure and more like a woman with nothing to do! 😁 So yeah, go grab yourself a tourer and set yourself free! And if you fancy dragging me along, I can be packed in half an hour! 😜😜😜 😘
This was so captivating to read! You may not be rich today, financially, but your childhood was certainly rich. Hope you're doing well
Nothing wrong with that! She kept a beautifully clean and tidy home with the additional challenges of the caravans. I had thought of putting a caravan inside a barn and living in that once - this is an up-market version of my thought. Well, as she did it first I guess my idea is a down- market version of hers. I was hoping to see inside the caravan in the garden, too. 👍🏻
I thought about it to go around THOW laws. Tiny Houses on Wheels.
I *love* people who are just living their life, happy with who they are and what they have. We need more people like this in the world 😊
Me 😊
@@cottage_pie Your profile picture gave me terminal bone marrow cancer but Hey, live love laugh (or whatever the hell its said)
What a wonderfully eccentric woman she must have been,.. The Granny we all wished we had.
She was actually my granny & I often stayed there
@@pgstorey Hold on to those memories my friend.
@@pgstoreysure 😂😂
Well played that girl. Top notch Britishness 👌🏻
She said she got the idea from crazy Americans
This is how we'll need to live to keep warm soon
It actually seems quite practical. A tiny home within a home, giving heat and sound insulation, plus privacy.
The gas camping stove was a death trap though, lucky she didn’t die of carbon monoxide poisoning 😱
@@emmabrooker166 I recall in the film "Army of Shadows" one of the more well off resistance fighters during the war had a small glass room built inside a larger room near a window so as to allow the sun's heat to create a comfortable place for him to read/work. Very smart.
@@emmabrooker166Had that old camp stove just screaming away, I noticed that also. Running it inside a camper inside a house. How she didn't get light headed and pass out is a miracle.
The entire interview was extremely well done.
The reporter was entertaining as well.
Now that made me smile from start to finish 🇬🇧
She said she got the idea from crazy Americans
👍🤩💝🙏I love her and her husband. I loved watching this. I love her outfit. I love her pride. I love the unashamed matter of fact spirit of her way of living. I love that they aren’t forgotten and have found their way here on UA-cam in the 21st Century, a time they couldn’t have ever imagined, we have a way for them to live on when so many of us will be long forgotten within 3 generations as so many others that have come before us. May she and her husband John Rest In Peace. Gone but not forgotten. 🙏💝
"..but I dont think its unusual in America". Well, it is unusual but I love these type of eccentricities. Harms no one and is an amazing converation piece. Its her home and makes it how she likes it. RIP Mr. and Mrs. Anderson
Meanwhile DOUBLE WIDES are STILL an American thing. Which is 2 TRANSPORTABLE buildings stuck together....
@OffGridInvestor: No they are not! Used to be common immediately after the war until more permanent housing could be rebuilt. Fairly common even into the ‘70s. For a surviving example look up the Ipswich prefab village. :)
Love it. It's a shame that there aren't more intriguing, quirky people like this around today. I find them fascinating. Could talk to them all day every day listening to their stories and sharing their memories. Never thought I'd pen these words but ..... thank you BBC!
A friend of ours has a caravan in his holiday home. He needed another bedroom and this was the easiest way. He’s a bit eccentric. In his younger days he seldom wore a shirt or shoes, whatever the weather, and went everywhere by unicycle.
That is the sweetest thing I've seen all day
It would be a good way to stay warm this winter.
Thank you, BBC, for posting these gems.
The house in which I live now ( for the past 20+ years ) had a green house in the kitchen in which the previous owner spent his sitting down time. The house was so cold it made it easier to survive.
I loved this video! The beautiful eccentricity of this lady and her husband.
She preserved those amazing antique caravans. Lucky persons who got to buy them!
“We decided 3 caravans was too much for inside the house as we wanted the room to live in” 🤣 - fair play to her at least she was happy
LOVE this interview, and Mrs. Anderson. Started like a Monty Python skit-- All hail the lovingly rediculous and the eccentric!
🌿💚🌿
Hi 👋 how’re you doing?
What a precious heart. I hope that she finished life well and went without pain.
This makes a lot of sense. It's a home inside a home.
Considering the price of heating your house nowadays I can see more people trying to find a way to install a little “room within a room” to sit in with a little safe heater inside. A mini build it yourself prefab/tent/ gazebo/ . The imagination could run riot with ideas. Plus the heat wouldn’t rise up to the ceiling and come down cold!
@@ragdolly22 or even build a little hut in a room, like the plastic or metal storage kind you can buy prefabricated for your garden. Don’t think it would suit a family, though if you live alone why not? You’ll get some funny looks from any visitors mind you! They’ll think you’ve turned into one of those medieval hermits who lived in a hut in the forest!
@@ragdolly22 me too, and I even bought a faux sheepskin throw and turned it into a poncho to wear in the winter. That plus a heated throw over me when I’m sitting down keeps me toasty, though when you have to get up to do anything the rest of the house feels so cold in comparison. This winter will be even worse! Get the scarves and balaclavas and gloves on as well I think, even indoors.
God love her. Eccentric but with her wits about her. I hope she lived for many years after this.
I agree. Everyone knows that 3 is too many. God bless her.
And then she walked outside to the third one
They spoke so well and had such good manners back in the day. She is well dressed and sitting elegantly. Now the equivalent person would be slouched in a track suit
1:05 okay but like
CAN WE TALK ABOUT THAT DOG AND THAT COLORING OF A PERFECT HALF FACE?!
Wow! What an unusual but great idea! We all know about the good old British weather. So just imagine a bungalow with a glass roof and most of its internal walls removed. Keeping individual small spaces warm in winter would be easy, and it could also house a central fire place with seating all around for chilling out and entertaining guests. It would be like the great outdoors, indoors. 😄
Awww.... Pinza the Dog was very cute too. 😁
A redoubtable Scottish lady!
The best holidays we had as a family was in a caravan touring Scotland
This is brilliant video and we have forgotten how to be eccentric in our country.
She doesn't sound Scottish. She's English.
@@norah3810 i think she's what i call 'posh scottish'
ENGLISH.....
@@basilbrush9075 sounds more like upper class British. NOT AT ALL Scottish
Na mate, Your all wrong.
That sweet old dear has a Jewish accent.
A cockney bird would have spoken very differently to her.
'A pleasant shade of battleship grey' 😂❤
Brilliantly eccentric and didn't care what anyone thought. 🧡
Good luck to the lady. She’s still doing what she and her husband did when they were younger. And happy.
What a cutie! Good for her!
The bit where she was dusting the caravan finished me off entirely.
Glorious.
I'm in a flat and upstairs can be noisy,so I'd love one such as these to enjoy cosy quiet sleep.Ive actually wondered about putting a shed in my bedroom but this is much better.
1. How did she get them into the house? 2. Wonder where they are now? 3. Would love to see the house now?
Will probably never find out any answers to these questions.😏 What a wonderful lady😉
Excellent questions
1. There's doors right in front of each. See 1:13 and 1:22.
I can answer all those questions for you. She was my granny
@@pgstorey You just didn't feel like it though?
She must have had a crane lower them in through the roof.
Only the British can be this quietly eccentric and firmly believe they are doing everyday things in a perfectly normal way, no different to anyone else.
She said she got the idea from crazy Americans
@@electrictroy2010 I think she heard we had garages in America and got a bit confused
... like any country
"Doesn't everyone do this?", whether it comes to diet, traditions and culture...
And JUSTIFIES it by saying "the AMERICANS do it"....
@@AnalogPipeDream NO. She was talking about you guys doing it during the war. The precursor to OWNING A DOUBLE WIDE....
This was soooooo cool! Tho she’s passed now and her children have prolly 2 and maybe grandchildren as well.
What a very nice woman she was….clearly.
Born b4 cars. Lived through WW1, the depression, WW2….saw cars come into being and TVs and phones. She didn’t see it but she made it online.
What a life!
Wonderful lady and wise too.
What a sweet elderly lady.❤
She was an amazing lady
Lovely speaking voices, including the presenter.
Its possible that those are Burlingham tourers (from Cabus, Lancashire) rather then Birmingham. Burlinghams used to hand build caravans many decades ago and the company still exists as a dealership now.
I think they were Monza caravans and all but I think you are right actually so keep knowing your caravans and all and good for you etc. I think they were caravans from a bygone age and all and really rather wonderful. Thank you. What do you consider to be the best touring caravan ever made and all please? I think you are worth listening to
She was probably born in 1887. Amazing to think how much she'd lived through and seen by the time Jack Pizzey called round. Remarkable piece of film.
Live through both world wars as an adult. I wonder when she died?
"Why do you have two caravans inside your house?"
"Well, we did have 3, but we figured that was too much and we needed the room."
Lol british humour, you just got to love it😂😂😂
She was being deadly serious
Things like this make me proud to be British :)
Right.......me too 😂 no one does eccentricity like us
@@pem... :) this and queuing
The world badly needs characters, and what a wonderfully kind and lady-like character she was.
Why 2 caravans in the house? Why not? Love this & adore her. I googled her in hopes of finding out what became of the caravans & house after she died, but no luck. I truly hope they kept them in the family. Funnily enough, i discovered a man in the USA named Robert Anderson started a gospel group in 1947 that was named..... The Caravans. 😆
Can confirm.. in America we do park our RVs in the house. Currently in an old airstream parked where other people put couches