Christmas in early times | Christmas | Edwardian Christmas | Days gone by | Good Afternoon | 1973

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  • Опубліковано 22 гру 2019
  • Presenter Mary Parkinson looks back at Christmas in days gone by with three ladies who grew up at the turn of the century:
    Edna Brannon
    Florence Edwards
    Emily Holde
    First shown: 05/12/1973
    If you would like to license a clip from this video please email:
    archive@fremantle.com
    Quote: VT8639
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 2 тис.

  • @donjohn8835
    @donjohn8835 4 роки тому +1959

    Notice how nobody butts in, or starts over talking each other. Very polite and in plain English with manners. Very enjoyable stuff

    • @M_SC
      @M_SC 4 роки тому +61

      Don John it’s because there are no men present

    • @snugbug5067
      @snugbug5067 4 роки тому +93

      I agree. I find it almost repulsive to watch interviews today by celebrities or worse yet news personnel who talk over the people their interviewing. If we could harness the ego energy and convert to electricity we could light a whole city.
      The lady interviewing could be a voice stand in for Julie Andrews.

    • @Learnamericanenglishonline
      @Learnamericanenglishonline 4 роки тому +35

      I agree. It's a huge problem but few people complain about it. I had to deal with rude interruptions today during a meeting. Nice video.

    • @merncat75
      @merncat75 4 роки тому +81

      @Eagle1 I agree 100%
      I was born in 1975 but my parents were immigrants from Europe and raised me with a very old school mentality.
      They both lived through the Depression and taught me to appreciate every single meal, appreciate the luxuries of today like having indoor plumbing and hot-water to shower, the luxury of sleeping in a comfortable bed, all of the things that most people take for granted now.
      I also feel as though I was born an " old soul" and never felt comfortable with the way people act, I was drawn to movies and shows from the 40s and 50s always wishing I had grown up at that time.
      I'm embarrassed by my generation but I'm even more disappointed and heartbroken for the younger generations growing up now.
      Nobody seems to understand respect and appreciate life!
      I am grateful to have a vehicle that runs yet everyone my age is looking for the next bigger, better, more expensive car, television, phone, etc.. 😣
      None of those things matter to me. I don't even have a TV
      What I care about is love, respect, connections, human spirit, all of the things that actually matter at the end. Idk, it's been very difficult getting through life when you feel like you were born in the wrong era.

    • @ellobo4211
      @ellobo4211 4 роки тому +30

      I grew up in a spanish household and we had seafood and turron on Christmas day..we all slept in because of midnight mass then feast ..

  • @katieoreilly7846
    @katieoreilly7846 4 роки тому +2318

    How lovely to interview ordinary ppl who have wonderful stories to tell ,, We don’t always NEED celebs ,,,, I could listen to these ladies for hours & not get bored 😐

    • @0patience4flz
      @0patience4flz 4 роки тому +27

      Good point...celebs...😝😝

    • @katieoreilly7846
      @katieoreilly7846 4 роки тому +42

      christopher carrier Thank you kind sir ... At least these ladies aren’t boring ,, well as far as I’m concerned they’re not ,,,,

    • @0patience4flz
      @0patience4flz 4 роки тому +19

      @@katieoreilly7846 They are lovely..as you are.

    • @katieoreilly7846
      @katieoreilly7846 4 роки тому +14

      christopher carrier aww thank you , you’ve made my day , that’s so nice of you to say that ,, I have a smile on my face now ,,, 🎅☘️

    • @0patience4flz
      @0patience4flz 4 роки тому +10

      @@katieoreilly7846😊 goodnight..from the states..'cross the pond

  • @mehranjamil1026
    @mehranjamil1026 3 роки тому +939

    These ladies are pure gold. No glamour, no egos, no show off, no fakeness and terible makeups just pure honesty and telling the way it was. I could listen to them for hours.

    • @tedoneilclark4710
      @tedoneilclark4710 Рік тому +8

      Me as well 😀

    • @stevenalderley9036
      @stevenalderley9036 Рік тому +15

      Yes I agree. The best storytellers for me are those who lived through times that we didn't and enjoy telling you all about it. A lot more people seemed to be in the same boat back then.

    • @malcolmcooper4430
      @malcolmcooper4430 Рік тому +3

      A song and dance from the ladies would have brightened it up a bit.

    • @kina18
      @kina18 Рік тому

      @@WhiteStripesStripiestFan Today these grandmothers would have Botox, nose jobs, lip fillers, garish make-up, fake boobs and ink from shoulders to ankles. And of course the plastic claws. They'd be talking about their plans to spend holidays at some exotic, expensive location and the ridiculous priced bag they got as a gift.

    • @spmoran4703
      @spmoran4703 Рік тому +3

      Yes they are great.

  • @edwardhudson9851
    @edwardhudson9851 6 місяців тому +7

    November 2023 calling in ,im 60 but in my heart atm im having tea and battenburg cake with me old Nan and uncle charlie so thanks for this its gold

  • @albinosquirlz
    @albinosquirlz Рік тому +26

    I remember this generation as a child. They are all gone and we are poorer for it.

    • @desertrose1226
      @desertrose1226 Рік тому +4

      Me too. My great aunt and uncle were part of that generation and I think my grandparents were. I miss them all so much. I’m sorry but today’s generations just don’t feel the same.

  • @haywardgarner4850
    @haywardgarner4850 Рік тому +147

    These sweet people are examples of how much having family and friends
    who are present is better than being materially spoiled.

    • @AaronTheGreat________
      @AaronTheGreat________ Рік тому

      Calm down u edgy weirdo 😂😂😂 u wouldn’t survive back then

    • @haywardgarner4850
      @haywardgarner4850 Рік тому

      @@AaronTheGreat________ at all…not for more than an hour 🤣

    • @leeriches8841
      @leeriches8841 Рік тому +5

      Exactly. One thing said that really stuck out was when she said her parents were never too busy to play with them. Rare these days.

  • @wagherbert
    @wagherbert 4 роки тому +870

    God. When she said her brother, whom she clearly loved, died in the war my heart skipped a beat. The strong Yorkshire woman is just the salt of the Earth and and the lovely lady in the blue cardi is so humble. What remarkable women. What remarkable footage.

    • @YouTubeSpareTime
      @YouTubeSpareTime 3 роки тому +15

      Wendy Herbert I think the Yorkshire lady was also featured in a video about mining.

    • @gordontaylor5373
      @gordontaylor5373 3 роки тому +12

      @@UA-camSpareTime They are such wonderful ladies.

    • @booth2710
      @booth2710 3 роки тому +24

      My grandad was Yorkshire and very old school but a wonderful gentleman. He would help or do for anyone. He grew up with what he used say was 'nowt' .... and when things were bad or had to do something that was hard or tough or didn't want to do he just used to get on with it and say 'well, you have it to do, don't you?'

    • @YouTubeSpareTime
      @YouTubeSpareTime 3 роки тому +15

      Gordon Taylor I agree. They were a totally different breed back then. I think what I've noticed is that no matter the class, life was difficult for everyone to some extent. I mean, can you imagine having no running water or inside toilet. I mentioned the Yorkshire lady being featured in a mining video on this same UA-cam and the sheer disregard for health and safety was astounding. A guy who was on with her said there was an accident down the mine and the operators just ignored the accident, resulting in the miners carting the dead miners home.

    • @michaelcollins3524
      @michaelcollins3524 3 роки тому +13

      Yes it was a breath of fresh air to hear these wonderful 'ordinary' people tell their stories.

  • @saturdayplayer2492
    @saturdayplayer2492 9 місяців тому +9

    These memories should be kept as part of our national identity. So priceless. Christmas memories are so very special.

  • @jokerz7936
    @jokerz7936 4 роки тому +428

    These women also probably watched husbands go off to the Great War and Sons WWII while they kept the home front going, nothing but respect.

    • @VictoriaWonders
      @VictoriaWonders 4 роки тому +5

      yes they had nothing, but the hars humbling true life.

    • @jokerz7936
      @jokerz7936 4 роки тому +10

      @@katycheeseburger Those women didn't make those decisions only lived with the consequence. By the way please try to not be an idiot for your entire life.

    • @LR-sf7te
      @LR-sf7te 4 роки тому +4

      @@katycheeseburger how old are you with that "triggered" silliness?

    • @ianofliverpool7701
      @ianofliverpool7701 4 роки тому +3

      I don`t think they was old enough to have a son in ww1 maybe a brother

    • @anastasia10017
      @anastasia10017 3 роки тому

      ??? if they were all born around 1903-ish they would have been about 11 years old when WW1 started. Do the math.

  • @jameswhipple5658
    @jameswhipple5658 Рік тому +86

    I just stumbled on to this broadcast ( Dec 15, 2022 ). I'm so happy to listen to these ladie's Christmas stories. The simplicity & happiness in their childhood Christmases was so heart warming. ♥️👌🎄❄️☃️🎅

  • @lauriel.86
    @lauriel.86 4 роки тому +438

    When she said her brother was killed in the first war my heart broke 💔
    Then she said she nursed the wounded during the first war and “those were lovely Christmases.” Bless her

    • @poling1990
      @poling1990 2 роки тому +34

      Its such a devastating detail which almost feels glossed over. In an age where large families were the norm this family had only two children. Only to lose one to the devastation of world war 1. It must have been utterly devastating and all she says about it is that the Christmases were "quiet". Our modern world is a blessing and so few appreciate how far we have come.

    • @madgemuso7314
      @madgemuso7314 Рік тому +14

      @@poling1990 when she said her mother wasn’t well it made me think that she was probably devastated by grief 😢

    • @chimerat8012
      @chimerat8012 Рік тому +2

      Indeed.

  • @Dinadino994
    @Dinadino994 6 місяців тому +4

    I count myself fortunate to have a childhood listening to my elders of stories like these .
    I could listen to these ladies all night :)

  • @Waxadisc
    @Waxadisc 4 роки тому +1655

    Who would have thought that I would be sat here on Christmas eve 2019 watching an interview from 1973 with women talking about their Christmas childhoods in 1903. Thames tv is truly one of my favourite channels.

    • @thewatcher2570
      @thewatcher2570 4 роки тому +12

      Same!! Haha

    • @trolleydolley7still172
      @trolleydolley7still172 4 роки тому +12

      You and me both 😁

    • @taniaearle4457
      @taniaearle4457 4 роки тому +23

      Same, these people are so interesting 🤗

    • @tessanderson2431
      @tessanderson2431 4 роки тому +16

      Amazing. Great insight into times long gone.

    • @bethrobb3684
      @bethrobb3684 4 роки тому +29

      Waxadisc Music I was 1 of 6 kids when Xmas came, we were lucky to get an Apple Or Orange!! That was in Aberdeen. Scot. WW2. On rations!!
      Think how lucky everyone is today, especially the children!! 🎄👍🏻

  • @alisonlee3314
    @alisonlee3314 4 роки тому +202

    Thank you Florence, Edna and Emily.

  • @rabbit64sj91
    @rabbit64sj91 3 роки тому +421

    I will always remember being introduced to a lady celebrating her 100th birthday in 1977. I was thirteen years old at the time, and was absolutely fascinated by her, listening intently to everything she had to say. I cherish this memory and feel very privileged to have experienced it all those years ago. 💕

    • @MVEProducties
      @MVEProducties 3 роки тому +24

      Wow, it’s a privilege indeed to have met someone born in the 19th century!

    • @PlayerWellKnown
      @PlayerWellKnown Рік тому +5

      I wonder what she’s up to nowadays? In all seriousness, we’ll done you for having such curiosity at such a young age. Looking back, I wish I had.

    • @chrissjoy
      @chrissjoy Рік тому +14

      I always thought it would be the most interesting thing to be born in the mid 1800s and live to be a hundred through the mid-1900s. Think about all of the things you would have seen change so astronomically. Going from covered wagons to space shuttles. I love all these old videos that are popping up on UA-cam of 100-year-old people talking in the '40s about growing up during the civil war, or seeing Lincoln get assassinated. It's just so fascinating to me, it's like a time machine.

    • @Lantern66
      @Lantern66 Рік тому +11

      My nanna (born 1914) used to take on visits to her friends in care homes in the early 1980s. I was preschool age, so I didn't think much of it back then. However, in retrospect how many people I would have seen and walked past that were born in the 1870s onwards. I wish now I appreciated and remember these details better. My granddad from my mother's side was born in 1901 - that's the closest I get to engaging with someone close to that era.

    • @rabbit64sj91
      @rabbit64sj91 Рік тому +2

      @@Lantern66 what lovely memories you have, bless you. 🙏🏻 Thank you for sharing them. Merry Christmas & a Happy New Year to you and your family. Tim

  • @logarithmic7
    @logarithmic7 4 роки тому +506

    This program could have been another 5 hours and I would have loved every second more!

    • @bethrobb3684
      @bethrobb3684 4 роки тому +10

      logarithmic7 Me too, it brought back many memories of Grandma’s and Granda’s gone, also later Ma’s & Da’s. Nothing compares to Family 💕

    • @ingiemummalove130
      @ingiemummalove130 3 роки тому +10

      Me too! I’ve watched it 3 times!!! 🥰

    • @Leeebow
      @Leeebow Рік тому +2

      @@bethrobb3684 ..so true, I spend so many hours daydreaming of the past & how I miss people no longer with me. (As much as I do love the family I am lucky enough to have)

    • @Katie-rx8ql
      @Katie-rx8ql 4 місяці тому

      Me too :)

    • @proudindiancitizen2494
      @proudindiancitizen2494 Місяць тому

      I am 50 now... lost my father when I was 28... miss him more and more day by day... my childhood too.. growing up in India in the 70s... middle class.. we have many festivals.. but like the ladies here, we had a lot more warmth, good cheer and everything homemade.. I miss those days.. less money but so much more hope

  • @welshlad6427
    @welshlad6427 4 роки тому +588

    Wonderful. I miss this generation of people ❤️🎄

    • @bethnotw5143
      @bethnotw5143 4 роки тому +15

      Me too.

    • @MyName-bi4pt
      @MyName-bi4pt 4 роки тому +37

      I’m 36 and as I’ve grown older I have started to gravitate towards the elder generation. I can’t stand these young kids nowadays.

    • @gordontaylor5373
      @gordontaylor5373 3 роки тому +34

      Everybody should miss them. We won't see their like again.

    • @chefevilee9566
      @chefevilee9566 3 роки тому +20

      Yes these women were just a little bit older than my grandmother. They were a really wonderful generation of people.

    • @WitchKing-Of-Angmar
      @WitchKing-Of-Angmar 2 роки тому +4

      @@MyName-bi4pt I don't want to stand them, they aren't even brought up by anything anymore except their own mind. There almost inhuman...its...so...wrong these generations are.

  • @julieanna8495
    @julieanna8495 Рік тому +99

    I say this honestly, I could have listened to these sweet ladies for hours. Each one so charming as they retold their past Christmases. I literally stopped all my housework to actually watch these ladies talk. I was born in the late 50s, so I smiled to see the host’s outfit because it was so early 1970s clothes. 😁😬. This was an enchanting show.

  • @createone100
    @createone100 Рік тому +28

    My parents emigrated from England to the Canadian prairies in 1952, with three of us under 3. We were very poor, but I remember many of the things these ladies remember from the early 1900’s - home made everything, mince pies, Christmas pudding, Christmas cake, paper chains, one of our own chickens, (wood stove and no running water or electricity), singing carols, one present each from Father Christmas, my father would have a cigar, and those very precious parcels from England. How my mother worked!

  • @JudyWhat34
    @JudyWhat34 Рік тому +33

    I love that these women are still sporting the hairstyles that were in when they were young. Every generation does that, my own mum and aunts wore short hair like the host into old age as they were about her age, but it's delightful to see these guests sporting bobs and a wave from the days of flappers and bright young things.

  • @raycase6125
    @raycase6125 Рік тому +138

    This is the most fabulous interview and a real insight into what life was like for people of that generation. I wish we had TV like this now, just unpretentious straightforward chats about issues that mean something. Absolutely great.

  • @amandairedale706
    @amandairedale706 3 роки тому +106

    I could listen to the Yorkshire women all-day long. If these women were transported into 2021 they'd die of shock.

    • @trevorjennings
      @trevorjennings Рік тому +1

      Hello Amanda, how are you doing today, hope you’re fine and safe from the Virus??

    • @marilyn6556
      @marilyn6556 Рік тому +12

      I think that they would be very disappointed in how things are now. Most of us have plenty, but we still aren’t happy. They grew up poor but very happy!!! These lovely ladies are a fine example of the people of that time, and I admire them.

    • @VintageLifeCars
      @VintageLifeCars Рік тому +4

      @@trevorjennings go away

  • @joannaba4565
    @joannaba4565 Рік тому +25

    Even in the 1950s it would be a simple Christmas. We had a tiny Christmas tree. And hung paper chains across the ceiling. And basically got one or two but no more presents. Our food was homemade. And Mum put a silver sixpence in the pudding. No fridge. No TV. But a big roaring fire and fresh food.

  • @2frakers
    @2frakers 4 роки тому +299

    I saved this video in my favorites for those days when it seems the whole world has gone mad, I can come back to watch this again and let these ladies take me back to a time when life was so much simpler....

    • @theeggtimertictic1136
      @theeggtimertictic1136 Рік тому +11

      I've saved it too ☺️

    • @richardc8795
      @richardc8795 Рік тому +7

      Same 😔

    • @ellie698
      @ellie698 Рік тому +6

      I've only just discovered this.
      It's joyous 🎄❤️

    • @theshabbyrose
      @theshabbyrose Рік тому +3

      Absolutely 💯

    • @anybodyoutthere3208
      @anybodyoutthere3208 Рік тому +12

      Little late to the video but I am
      Saving this because now the world is insane
      Nice to listen to these sane women

  • @chrislee-anneminturn5111
    @chrislee-anneminturn5111 Рік тому +27

    This is absolute gold. I loved Edna from the Yorkshire region. What a heart warming lady.

  • @rongablue
    @rongablue Рік тому +13

    Where there’s room in the heart, there’s room in the home…Our purses were often empty, but our hearts were full. ❤

  • @kelly1038
    @kelly1038 4 роки тому +234

    My only criticism of this video is that it should have been longer

  • @jannydots3870
    @jannydots3870 Рік тому +4

    I am here in Texas watching in 2022. I love listening to these sweet ladies. I especially love listening to Edna and her Yorkshire dialect. Reminds me of the old “All Creatures Great and Small” series. Those were the best.

  • @markhenryramsey9132
    @markhenryramsey9132 4 роки тому +350

    One Christmas around 1987 my whole family on my mums side chipped in to get me a present. A fullsize Kermit the frog that I then used to 'entertain' everyone. Hardship can breed strong memories.

    • @markhenryramsey9132
      @markhenryramsey9132 4 роки тому +31

      One is indeed British, foreskin intact.

    • @remove574
      @remove574 4 роки тому +7

      Mark Henry Ramsey 😂😂😂

    • @bethrobb3684
      @bethrobb3684 4 роки тому +3

      Mark Henry Ramsey Nice subject at the Xmas Dinner. !! 😂 Happy New Year.🍻

    • @markhenryramsey9132
      @markhenryramsey9132 4 роки тому +14

      Happy new year to all 🍻

    • @katieoreilly7846
      @katieoreilly7846 4 роки тому +17

      calihartley2010. ..... What’s that got to do with the price of turnips ?????? Why ask that question to begin with ????

  • @clod8
    @clod8 4 роки тому +468

    Believe me, Christmas in the 1970’s was a lot simpler than it is today

    • @mrFalconlem
      @mrFalconlem 4 роки тому +47

      Christmas was awesome then, and everyone was nice too.

    • @rosemaryspencer1501
      @rosemaryspencer1501 4 роки тому +15

      So true.

    • @janeokeeffe5297
      @janeokeeffe5297 4 роки тому +17

      Happy Times

    • @matt4239
      @matt4239 4 роки тому +45

      Adrian Heath there would have been elderly people back in the 1970’s that shuddered at the idea of having children and adults watching TV on Christmas Day too. Times change, not better or worse, just change.

    • @bethrobb3684
      @bethrobb3684 4 роки тому +6

      Mitchell C Let’s hope Brexit doesn’t happen. ( my opinion !)

  • @Youssii
    @Youssii Рік тому +105

    I’m very grateful to the people of the 50s, 60s and 70s for making these important historical documents. Hearing from women at different walks of life unfiltered through someone else’s or even their own written word is so important and so unique and I’m glad people began making these types of recordings relatively early on😊

  • @covcrew
    @covcrew 4 роки тому +70

    This should be shown in all Schools

  • @sirronnitram8937
    @sirronnitram8937 4 роки тому +339

    Mary Parkinson is 83 now, probably older than her interviewees here

    • @insertnamehere5146
      @insertnamehere5146 4 роки тому +59

      Good comment and makes you think! time catches us all.

    • @avalondreaming1433
      @avalondreaming1433 4 роки тому +30

      @@insertnamehere5146 Indeed. Time waits for no one.

    • @mrFalconlem
      @mrFalconlem 4 роки тому +10

      She was hot then whoa.

    • @cockertoo8920
      @cockertoo8920 4 роки тому +8

      Always loved Mary, much nicer than her husband

    • @gustavo5989
      @gustavo5989 4 роки тому +12

      It'd be great to hear she talking about her impressions about this interview

  • @mariestreeting4213
    @mariestreeting4213 Рік тому +10

    Stir up Sunday……I love it. How wonderful and simple those times were ❤️

  • @michaeljohnson-li5nn
    @michaeljohnson-li5nn Рік тому +35

    I thought I would just watch a few minutes of these ladies reminiscing about Christmas long gone. Watched the whole video - what delightful ladies they are. Assume they have all passed on now, thank goodness they had the chance to reminisce and tell their stories.

  • @markhodgson2348
    @markhodgson2348 4 роки тому +172

    Good British television before the madness

    • @katieoreilly7846
      @katieoreilly7846 4 роки тому +13

      Absolutely Mark ... It’s full of rubbish now & one show trying to be “ madder “ than the nxt ,,, So boring !!

    • @vmm5163
      @vmm5163 4 роки тому +4

      @Maitre Mark yes, 3 years for me. Never turned it on. I don't even know if I still need a TV licence for the internet? I've been paying it all this time

    • @balthiersgirl2658
      @balthiersgirl2658 4 роки тому +6

      I'm 44 and I can't stand the programs on today

    • @geoffdundee
      @geoffdundee 3 роки тому +1

      @@vmm5163 ....you only need a licence if you watch live tv (news,etc) including on the internet.......lots of advice on clips on here should you wish not to pay it anymore.........If YOU DONT USE YOUR TV you more than likely dont need to be paying anymore but check first.

  • @johnsbox
    @johnsbox 4 роки тому +134

    The generation that remembers both World Wars and the Depression and hard times.

    • @kyliepechler
      @kyliepechler 4 роки тому +5

      @Maitre Mark Wow, how smart and prophetic he was!

    • @gordontaylor5373
      @gordontaylor5373 3 роки тому +6

      And a generation that remembers good manners, discipline and respect - things you rarely see nowadays. Respect to these delightful ladies!

  • @paulascott5701
    @paulascott5701 Рік тому +138

    Emily's mother took in a lady from the workhouse for Christmas. That is so touching.

    • @Trevorjennings679
      @Trevorjennings679 Рік тому

      Hello Paula, how are you doing today, hope you’re fine and safe from the Virus??

    • @daftirishmarej1827
      @daftirishmarej1827 Рік тому +2

      The sad thing is that there were workhouses...

  • @dodosmamma1692
    @dodosmamma1692 Рік тому +67

    I have always loved listening to the elderly. They’re so respectful, have integrity and are grateful for the little things. They also have a wealth of knowledge and we can learn so much from them.

  • @helenhicks7542
    @helenhicks7542 4 роки тому +210

    No miserable grannies there, they've brightened up my day, they are had so much less but so much more!!!!!

    • @ColtraneTaylor
      @ColtraneTaylor 4 роки тому +4

      I know what you mean, selective videos are so much better than reality.

    • @helenhicks7542
      @helenhicks7542 4 роки тому +3

      @@ColtraneTaylor its just great to hear these people, they are not now in living memory, so thank goodness there were people around who thought of doing the interviews 👋

    • @Sandra-ey7py
      @Sandra-ey7py 3 роки тому +3

      Yes they had less but were still happy thats what my mum and aunts use to say to me sometimes when they use to talk about their childhood days 🙂

    • @emily_3400
      @emily_3400 3 роки тому +5

      Yes, I love and respect grannies who manage to remain cheerful. In those days those women had so much which was understandably unfair, some were poor too but they made the best of it which warrants that additional respect.

  • @derekc6445
    @derekc6445 4 роки тому +380

    Great to listen to these ladies. Mind blowing to hear Emily remembering the year 1902.

    • @geoffdundee
      @geoffdundee 3 роки тому +17

      Derek C
      .....id a great aunt who was born in 1902 and died 1998.........used to love listening to her talk about the past.....i wish she was still here as ive a box full of old family photos - some from 1800,s but no names on the back of who they were......ive also traced family tree during covid lockdowns and have managed to get back as far as 1460...some gravestones are still standing in a nearby cemetery from way back then (but they are fragile).....family havent moved far over the centuries....been fun finding out who they are and jobs they done,etc......alot of them lived well into their 80,s and 90,s

    • @derekc6445
      @derekc6445 3 роки тому +3

      @@geoffdundee That's interesting, I've been doing my family tree as well. I tried going back directly from each of my four grandparents, their fathers then their fathers and so on. It's frustrating that the 1921 Census details won't be available until next January (2022). It should be easier to find 1900's info than the 1800's, but it isn't. Our social history shows how lucky we are nowadays. I've always been in awe of our WW2 generation, our greatest. I think it's important to find out our family history. Some intriguing stories to be found.

    • @geoffdundee
      @geoffdundee 3 роки тому +1

      @@derekc6445 ...most of my family have stayed local (scotland) so its sortoff been easy so far but im stuck on one member at moment (found zero records after his birth) may have either emigrated or went to england? (ive yet to research there..ive just used scotlands people website so far and found most of what i need (it is otherwise free to browse but been costly as i pay to download all birth/death/marriage/wills documents,etc)....ive just done my mothers side so far and i have no doubt i will be frustrated with fathers side as from ireland a few generations back.....rekon it will be a nitemare LOL......i guess the census records are to protect anyone who may still be alive - even aged 100......good luck with your research.

    • @jesselivermore2291
      @jesselivermore2291 2 роки тому +3

      my great grandmother died with 102 yo, in 1999, still with 19 century mannerisms.

    • @annonymous3948
      @annonymous3948 Рік тому +1

      ...120 years ago!

  • @sarahperkins2340
    @sarahperkins2340 3 роки тому +168

    I love this. I was born in 1974 and I remember as a young girl my Aunts and Mother washing the dishes after big dinner that my Grandmother had cooked and I couldn't wait to be a grown up woman who would be included in the washing up. Tho I was occasionally allowed to put away Tupperware in the lower cubby and I thought it was so very important. Lol

    • @staceykersting705
      @staceykersting705 Рік тому +4

      Wow..u must have been VERY young! By the time I was 3, I was standing on a chair and washing most of the dishes! Never thought it was fun. My more made every task absolute drudgery.

    • @richardc8795
      @richardc8795 Рік тому +7

      I was born in 1966, and love helping with the cooking as well as cleanup. I would stand on a stool and dry the dishes for my mother. No complaints at all.

    • @suzannemills7920
      @suzannemills7920 Рік тому +1

      I remember being at my grans house always full of family x

    • @cecilefox9136
      @cecilefox9136 Рік тому +2

      @@staceykersting705 When I was ten after washing up I dropped the pile of plates,at my aunt's in Paris.

    • @staceykersting705
      @staceykersting705 Рік тому +1

      @@richardc8795 If u were still standing on a stool, u weren't working too hard yet. Once u turn 5-6, it got serious at mom's. If it wasn't perfect, u got beaten bad. I swear, we put in 12 hour days. My mom was from the 'old country'...cooked all night many nights. Ever prep 2 boxes of apples and one box green beans in one afternoon? Min weight of produce boxes is 38 lbs, BTW. Ya, the simpler stuff was fun...like baking...roll out cookies are easy, even if you're 8-10 yr old. Maybe it was being hit and yelled at that made it harder. Hit more if we cried. We did this on top of changing cloth diapers, scrubbing floors, doing windows, darning wool socks, hand scrubbing heels of socks to perfection, scrubbing bathrooms, ironing everything, etc

  • @laurasavidge6637
    @laurasavidge6637 Рік тому +17

    These ladies remind me of my grandparents and what fun I used to have with them. We’d play games and make things and laugh. It was lovely … very special. I miss the good ol days.

    • @desertrose1226
      @desertrose1226 Рік тому +1

      Same. I so miss my grandparents and my elder relatives. All my family are gone now. I lost my mother a few years ago. There was so much love and fun. Today the world is a colder place.

  • @aaarrrggghhhh
    @aaarrrggghhhh 3 роки тому +26

    I was a chef for many years and used to deliver cookery lessons to young people (11-21) at a youth centre in London. I was shocked that they knew nothing about food and nutrition. It was frightening that they rarely cooked at home and thought eating fried chicken and pizza every day from a take away shop was healthy. All they wanted to cook was cakes. I had to redo all the washing up myself because they didn't know how to do it and were painfully slow. One girl told me that her aunt refused to eat anything that had ever been touched by another person. They lived in a dream world where food grows already prepared in plastic packaging.

    • @a.charlie2161
      @a.charlie2161 Рік тому +3

      I remember a story I heard from a lady who took care of foster children during the summers. One particular day the children sat in the kitchen drawing pictures as she was making lunch. She asked them to paint a sun and the painted a yellow ball with "rays", she told them to draw an apple and they all drew a heart shaped sphere etc. She then proceeded to tell the children to paint a landscape under the sea. She remembered how befuddled she was when one of the boys drew boxes so she asked the boy what those were and he replied that those were schools of fish. It turned out that the boy had only eaten fish sticks in his family in his life so he imagined fish looked like squares.

  • @dannygriffiths7952
    @dannygriffiths7952 4 роки тому +324

    It’s so strange watching this with just days until the 2020s begin

    • @zoiciteUK
      @zoiciteUK 4 роки тому +16

      I agree i dunno how i stumbled across it . Fate i suppose to show me how precious time is

    • @StevieMooreOfficial
      @StevieMooreOfficial 4 роки тому +10

      I was just thinking the exact same thing!

    • @paulies5407
      @paulies5407 4 роки тому +8

      @@zoiciteUK Well said. Here's to a good decade

    • @zainabsiddiqui7358
      @zainabsiddiqui7358 4 роки тому +2

      @@zoiciteUK Kismet.

    • @jimmyshelton2301
      @jimmyshelton2301 4 роки тому +4

      well that was the way it was for real,,i remember we had lots of food, and we made the decorations for the tree because we were poor and couldn't afford much but most of all " WE HAD LOVE FROM OUR PARENTS " JIMMY

  • @faithoffaith
    @faithoffaith Рік тому +44

    Please , please keep these videos for future generations! We need to keep these stories alive because we'll never get a chance to teach our children, grand-children etc if they are all destroyed or lost.

  • @beckys6260
    @beckys6260 3 роки тому +92

    I miss this long lost world, with nan’s and mum’s who looked after the household, everything was cooked from scratch and really tasty, it made being at home such a joy. I miss my childhood and my nan’s so much. Life these days is so hectic and rushed.

    • @samhilton4173
      @samhilton4173 Рік тому

      The downside of feminism lol
      Now women haven't got the time to make everything from scratch, and if they did they'd get upset that the men aren't helping

    • @suzannemills7920
      @suzannemills7920 Рік тому +1

      So true

    • @unacceptablesisterpeter3431
      @unacceptablesisterpeter3431 Рік тому +7

      Well stop.
      Return to tradition.
      Don't buy into the hectic.

    • @SpectreOZ
      @SpectreOZ Рік тому

      Sadly the reality is to buy the raw ingredients and DIY costs more than a mass produced product, I imagine if you could purchase directly from farmers markets this may still prove cost effective (unless you have a productive garden of your own which would be even better).

    • @patriciakeats5823
      @patriciakeats5823 Рік тому

      Me too!!

  • @zoyablake9538
    @zoyablake9538 3 роки тому +133

    Everyone was so polite and well-spoken.

  • @richardc8795
    @richardc8795 Рік тому +34

    I would love to go back in time. I much prefer these simpler times. These ladies are so lovely!

    • @Scanini
      @Scanini Рік тому

      What to workhouses? The rich crushed the common man, today's tories like Mogg would love to take us back im sure

    • @adelem432
      @adelem432 Рік тому +2

      Wouldn’t want to do the chicken killing.

  • @dpf2122
    @dpf2122 Рік тому +38

    How nice of Thames to record this while this generation was still with us. Wonderful historical record (and quite charming!)

  • @ManInTheBigHat
    @ManInTheBigHat 4 роки тому +146

    I love the gold painted walnut shells with a coin inside. That would've made my day as a kid.

    • @googlethis313
      @googlethis313 4 роки тому +17

      ManInTheBigHat
      In our family we do this. But we just glue a string in them and then back together for painting.
      Never would I have thought of putting coins in them for the children to crack open! She just inspired a new tradition!

    • @pommiebears
      @pommiebears Рік тому +8

      My grandad used to give me matchstick dolls. They were little dolls, in a matchbox, and I loved them.

  • @marqetteliz
    @marqetteliz Рік тому +10

    Absolutely lovely. Their simple childhood Christmases seem so joyful. The magic of Christmas was there. And I feel we've lost a bit of that along the way.

  • @hazelisaacs2201
    @hazelisaacs2201 Рік тому +75

    My great grandmother was born 1890s & died in the 1970s. She was a nurse in WW1.
    I remember her well, very strict, austere because she’d lived in times when food was really scarce & mothers genuinely struggled to feed & clothe their kids; they’d be grateful for a rabbit even if they had to skin & gut it themselves and we had to use up every scrap of clothing handed down or be considered ungrateful. She’d have been horrified by some of the attitudes today.

    • @royandjacqueline1294
      @royandjacqueline1294 Рік тому +3

      I would never eat rabbit. It's the same reason I won't eat duck. They're my friends by the pond in the old days. However my husband has had both.
      Merry CHRISTmas!!
      💖💓💝💘💗💖
      💛💙💛💙💛💙
      🎉🎅🏻🤶🏻🛷🍫🎂
      ❄️☃️🎄🎊🎈🍰
      👸🏻💖👑🇬🇧💝👸🏻
      🥰🇯🇲🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🕊️🔥✝️

    • @hazelisaacs2201
      @hazelisaacs2201 Рік тому +15

      @@royandjacqueline1294 folks on the brink of starvation in the days before welfare cheques couldn’t afford to be so picky. That we get to pick & choose where we get our nourishment is a modern luxury.

  • @beverleightodd5710
    @beverleightodd5710 Рік тому +3

    This is so brilliant, kids today would die if they had to make their own decorations and entertainment.

  • @TurnFullCircle
    @TurnFullCircle Рік тому +18

    Wow….how did we get to where we are now? Having nothing was so much more. We have too much today and we always want more. People do not appreciate what they have. Great insight into happier and more wholesome times. Thank you.

  • @madgemuso7314
    @madgemuso7314 Рік тому +38

    Love the Yorkshire lady talking about her mother making cakes for everyone who wanted one and woe-betide anyone who opens the back door! She reminded me of my own Yorkshire granny. ❤

    • @fashionkiller5052
      @fashionkiller5052 Рік тому

      I don’t understand the back door reference?
      How does that relate to cakes?!

    • @wendynicholls6231
      @wendynicholls6231 Рік тому +3

      @@fashionkiller5052 probably make the cake go flat ?

    • @madgemuso7314
      @madgemuso7314 Рік тому +3

      @@fashionkiller5052 Keeping the heat in the kitchen to ensure the cake rise perfectly I guess. Not opening it to to the freezing backyard (I’m assuming they had a 2 up 2 down) with a back door leading to the yard.

    • @missmuffet3874
      @missmuffet3874 Рік тому +2

      The cake will not rise properly.

    • @gillygrey6545
      @gillygrey6545 Рік тому +5

      I live in yorkshire and I can identify with the Yorkshire lady, my mother was exactly the same when it came to not opening the back door when the cakes were in the oven, we dare'nt slam any doors, because mother didn't want the cakes to sink, THOSE WERE THE DAYS.

  • @smittysmeee
    @smittysmeee Рік тому +6

    Wonderful stories! My parents were both born in the 1950s and grew up very much the same way in the rural Dakotas, USA. Homemade decorations and big dinners with self-butchered meat from your own livestock and what you could hunt, cold root cellars and frost on their blankets in the morning, and of course, church was always the main event.
    My mom still talks about how amazing it was to get an orange in her stocking on Christmas morning. My Dad would only ever get new church clothes, no toys. As kids we thought that all was so tragic lol, oranges and clothes?? We were definitely spoiled by comparison.
    For all you out there whose parents and grandparents are getting older, ask them about their lives before you. Someday, you won't be able to ask any more questions, and that will truly be tragic.
    RIP, Dad. I miss you every day, but especially on Christmas ❤

  • @rensha8635
    @rensha8635 4 місяці тому +4

    I can barely express how much I enjoyed listening to these ladies chatting about Christmas ‘in the old days’. Wonderful.❤

  • @venust.4119
    @venust.4119 Рік тому +76

    I'm Russian, and I really enjoyed this old interview. So many stories and memories these ladies have, it's was fascinating! The old times and a distant country... both of which I haven't seen. Our Christmas in Russia is January 7th and it's mostlya religious holiday, but anyone willing can celebrate it. People go to churches and stand through the long service well into the night on the 6th. The 7th is filled with trips to the relatives and friends for gift giving and dinners together. Or you could just stay at home and enjoy the Holiday dinner with family and entertaining Christmas TV shows and movies. For us the New Year Holliday has much more significance and is more festive than the xmas. But the Xmas coming a week after the New Year celebration gave us somehting fun to look forward to as kids :) For ALL the western world: Merry Christmas!

    • @Jesuslovesus599
      @Jesuslovesus599 Рік тому +9

      God bless you

    • @Noetje1970
      @Noetje1970 Рік тому +11

      Thank you for sharing this story!

    • @kittybitts567
      @kittybitts567 Рік тому +6

      Merry Christmas and a blessed and peaceful New Year, Amen!

    • @auraberglund5766
      @auraberglund5766 Рік тому +4

      Merry Christmas from Romania!

    • @nancyk5203
      @nancyk5203 Рік тому +1

      I'm Orthodox and live in U.S., and we celebrate Christmas/Nativity on January 7th as well. 😊

  • @Smoker2110
    @Smoker2110 4 роки тому +91

    We made paper chains and popcorn strings in the 70s. For years We had a little angel tree topper that I made in kindergarten.

    • @bethrobb3684
      @bethrobb3684 4 роки тому +4

      hi monkey! Those are the memories that count !!

    • @meganwilliams2962
      @meganwilliams2962 4 роки тому +8

      Same here.

    • @0patience4flz
      @0patience4flz 4 роки тому +1

      So sweet..

    • @guccideltaco
      @guccideltaco 4 роки тому +5

      Same in the '80s! I also remember my mom giving me some felt, colored thread, and stuffing to sew ornaments to give my teachers in elementary school.

    • @Smoker2110
      @Smoker2110 4 роки тому +3

      @@guccideltaco i was thinking about homemade ornaments. i know we made some out of felt, and also out of papier mache, but i can't quite remember how..i mean..i think we stuffed them somehow. i mostly just remember painting them.

  • @janetcrane59
    @janetcrane59 4 роки тому +172

    My grandma was born in 1894. She said for Christmas she usually got a peppermint stick & a shiny penny in her stocking.

    • @KLASSCULTURE
      @KLASSCULTURE 4 роки тому +4

    • @rebeccacharles4010
      @rebeccacharles4010 4 роки тому +28

      My grandfather said they would always get an orange and a small bag of peanuts

    • @yvettemoore1228
      @yvettemoore1228 3 роки тому +6

      @@rebeccacharles4010 my nannan was born in 1905 and said they might get an orange, a few walnuts and perhaps a little doll in a stocking.

    • @michaelgoulding6609
      @michaelgoulding6609 3 роки тому +6

      my grandmother was born in 1903 & she got a book ( a local directory) she wrote in it that she received it from her parents in 1910,& i still have the book,

    • @kitph24
      @kitph24 3 роки тому

      Wonderful x

  • @Massev6871
    @Massev6871 Рік тому +10

    This speaks volumes of how people appreciated less and seemed to have a wonderful family time.

  • @ironlion45
    @ironlion45 Рік тому +4

    I love how direct and matter-of-fact these interviews are. No posturing, no proselytizing, just describing their own experiences and nothing more. What a fantastic source of understanding of how things were long ago.

  • @MrRadiorobot
    @MrRadiorobot 3 роки тому +10

    Can I please go back in time and sit with these ladies, have a cup of tea and a mince pie, carry on talking about times gone by, they remind me of my mum and aunties who are all sadly long gone. X

  • @velvethoot4507
    @velvethoot4507 Рік тому +9

    Keep coming back to watch and listen to this. How times have changed. What would these ladies think about GB today? What a gift to see and hear this video. Being born mid 60's and being a child then and through the 70's. Such different and wonderful times.

  • @patriciakeats5823
    @patriciakeats5823 Рік тому +10

    I'm so happy to say the hostess is alive...86 years of age. How wonderful!!!!!!!!

    • @yuchenglin5799
      @yuchenglin5799 Рік тому +1

      Merry Christmas of 2022! It's so remarkable an achievement to outlive her contemporaries and persist to today. How delightful to hear the old-fashioned accent!

  • @dawnanderson4967
    @dawnanderson4967 4 роки тому +199

    Have you noticed back in the day, older pensioner women were 'allowed' on TV, it was normal. Not anymore. 😐

    • @maybrittrnningen580
      @maybrittrnningen580 4 роки тому +33

      Yes i have .The ONLY ladies WHO Are allowed on tv nowadays is just young woman with a lot of makeup , fillers and lipinjections.They would not show us ordinary people.

    • @dawnanderson4967
      @dawnanderson4967 4 роки тому +14

      @@maybrittrnningen580 Exactly, it's not right. 😐

    • @maybrittrnningen580
      @maybrittrnningen580 4 роки тому +15

      @@dawnanderson4967 No its not.And if you Are going to ser a movie , there its not normal looking woman there anylonger either.They Are all fake with fillers and fake lipps.I want too ser normal people .Thats probably why i love watching old black white movies.

    • @dianevarga4976
      @dianevarga4976 4 роки тому +7

      Well, there is the show Vera with Brenda Blethyn. I mean, she's not an older pensioner woman but she surely isn't a young blonde with injections.

    • @lmtt123
      @lmtt123 4 роки тому +5

      Only "gorgeous" people allowed now.

  • @omnivorousbiped2447
    @omnivorousbiped2447 4 роки тому +247

    A fascinating discussion; a reminder that people matter far more than things.

    • @bethrobb3684
      @bethrobb3684 4 роки тому +8

      Omnivorous Biped How right you are, these ladies could teach some respect these days, especially when it comes to families. My grandchildren are taught the best things, “ caring, dignity, respect for Elders” also , Please & Thank You!!

    • @balthiersgirl2658
      @balthiersgirl2658 4 роки тому +2

      I'm sure the poor in are country where we are as bad as then parents not able to eat just so there children can

  • @Alsatia28
    @Alsatia28 Рік тому +16

    It's important to have a historical grasp of some of the contextual details of the era these ladies grew up in. It's not just the technology that was different, but the economics of everything was VERY different than today.
    Food was much more expensive in 1900. One woman mentioned chicken was not a regular meal. This was absolutely true. Chicken originally was a luxury meat, as they took a long time and space to raise a chicken that was signifantly smaller and lighter than today.
    The wages their fathers made were about 1/4 what someone would be paid today for the same or similar work, or likely something much more physically demanding and dangerous. And I'm talking about wages adjusted into current time.
    Families were generally much larger than today. Housing would have been cheaper than now, but with wide spectrum of quality and possibilities.
    All of this had a huge effect on local culture and attitudes of the time. It really was a different world.

    • @evil1by1
      @evil1by1 Рік тому +1

      The agricultural revolution played a huge role in changing the food culture and landscape across the world. Regardless of how one feels about factory farming, the ability to raise thousands of birds in a confined space and get them to market weight in 6 weeks is nothing short of miraculous. It takes a quarter the time (which also saves on feed and water) to raise a bird 25 percent larger. A roaster then might be a 3-5lb bird vs now that same bird is 5-8lbs or more. Used to take 24 weeks to get a market bird and now only 6 weeks.

  • @Mxyzptlksac
    @Mxyzptlksac Рік тому +3

    I love how she said even those who don’t believe still practice peace and love around Xmas

  • @chrisstone8210
    @chrisstone8210 4 роки тому +74

    I did enjoy listening to these lovely ladies. Sad that one lost her brother in the 1914-18 war. Funny how Mary Parkinson looked so 1970's and the others wouldn't have looked out of place in 2019.

  • @adinamedrea5303
    @adinamedrea5303 Рік тому +7

    The ability of these common ladies to communicate clearly and logically a message is extraordinary, today this thing is rare. If you interview a young person you will notice how they jump between ideas, stop a sentence midway and jump into another and so on. Myself included, I feel like TV and the internet has dumbed us down.

  • @voxxclamantis9668
    @voxxclamantis9668 4 роки тому +164

    How spoiled we are all today. These ladies really appreciated Christmas and not used it like we do today for commercialization.

    • @mrFalconlem
      @mrFalconlem 4 роки тому +1

      Ya think?

    • @bethrobb3684
      @bethrobb3684 4 роки тому +1

      Vox Clamantis Exactly !!

    • @bethrobb3684
      @bethrobb3684 4 роки тому +5

      gary jones People in general, though, not everyone is lucky as some. I feel sad for the Vets that need help ( not just at Xmas) the homeless also @ the other needy. Bless Them.

    • @originalherdsman3524
      @originalherdsman3524 4 роки тому +6

      @gary jones we the people that are fortunate to have better medicines, benefits, social services, helpful charities, food banks , better transport links etc etc etc . It's a shame we live in times of materialistic want, where people don't appreciate what they have. Just don't understand how beggars can afford to drink, smoke and keep a pet dog.

    • @narrelleweir6383
      @narrelleweir6383 4 роки тому +4

      @@originalherdsman3524 It is up to parents of today to show compassion to others. I knew my grandchildren's other grandparents would buy big gifts, so hubby & I bought chickens for people who are doing it tough. Another year I took them out with a set amount of money to buy a gift that they would like to give to another child their age. They enjoyed themselves & spent more time looking for the best for value gift. We are not monetarily wealthy & I work for my dole money at two places that help people. It was an eye opener. May you have a joyous 2020.

  • @loonylinda
    @loonylinda Рік тому +16

    lovely ladies i couldve listened to them for hours..God bless them.

  • @bhav9229
    @bhav9229 4 роки тому +42

    This is a generation I hold so much respect for. Consumption has killed our senses!

  • @adamhughes4442
    @adamhughes4442 Рік тому +64

    These women are legends. Humble and happy with their lot. How many stories go to the grave unheard. Wonderful piece of footage giving us an insight into another, and quite different world.

  • @stevenalderley9036
    @stevenalderley9036 Рік тому +11

    Weird to think that all of the women interviewed here will be long gone now, even the presenter Mary Parkinson is 86 years old now. Really interesting to hear how Christmas has changed so much. It seems like a very traditional like for like event every year, but times really are changing fast.

  • @diannewhite573
    @diannewhite573 Рік тому +8

    I loved watching this. I could listen to them all evening 🌹

  • @KoniB.
    @KoniB. Рік тому +118

    Nearly fifty years ago, and this still fascinated me and put more than a single tear in my eyes. Thanks for re-broadcasting this.

    • @katsandcoffee
      @katsandcoffee Рік тому +7

      Just realised the presenter would be closer in age to these gorgeous oldies today!! People and their memories are so precious.

  • @poohbearrichie72
    @poohbearrichie72 4 роки тому +98

    When I started caring for elderly folks in the mid 1980s I loved listening to my patients and listen to all their wonderful stories we had a few ladies who were born in the 1880s/90s it was always so fascinating and I remember so many lovely elderly people (you never forget their names) and I am blessed knowing all their lifetime memories. By the way I now have a beautiful rescue Pug called Edna 😊

    • @rabbit64sj91
      @rabbit64sj91 3 роки тому +5

      Hi Richard, I had the same experience as you, and remember the lovely folk born in the 1880s & 1890s, whilst caring for them. The oldest person I remember talking to was a lady born in 1877, when I was 13 years old, in 1977. She was celebrating her 100th birthday. I will cherish these memories for all time. ☺

    • @marilynkennedy8236
      @marilynkennedy8236 3 роки тому +7

      It is such a tragedy that no-one wants to listen to old people's stories any more. Because they are so interesting and old people love to talk about the old days. Well done for getting Edna, hope she is still going strong.

    • @sexyblackjag
      @sexyblackjag 3 роки тому +2

      @@marilynkennedy8236 wait til we are old talking about "before the internet..." As a person born in 1980....I can say, we witnessed a giant shift in humanity. Born during vinyl and 8- track...just before remote controls. Pay phones and dewey decimals at the library for book reports.

    • @marilynkennedy8236
      @marilynkennedy8236 3 роки тому +3

      @@sexyblackjag Thanks for your comments . I was born in 1946. I honestly don't know what I would do without the Internet. It has been a lifeline for me during lockdown.

    • @rustshoo5068
      @rustshoo5068 Рік тому +1

      How did folk survive during lockdowns associated with the Spanish Flu pandemic? They had not even radio! Perhaps they sang songs and played the piano.

  • @leearandle2244
    @leearandle2244 Рік тому +6

    This interview made me feel so much warmth & love from their simple and appreciative and grateful hearts, not to mention their smiles! I will always remember this.

  • @shannonleplastrier5011
    @shannonleplastrier5011 Рік тому +9

    What a beautiful representation of times gone by.

  • @valgalloway6914
    @valgalloway6914 Рік тому +29

    I was born in the mid 1940s, the 7th of 8 children. Dad was a coalminer but, in his earlier years, he'd worked in the city's Fish & Poultry Market. In the 1950s people couldn't afford oven-ready turkeys but undressed (feathered) birds were available. In the week before Christmas my Dad would dress 3 birds per evening for 10/- each, extra money that came in very handy for us.

    • @Trevorjennings679
      @Trevorjennings679 Рік тому +1

      Hello Val, how are you doing today, hope you’re fine and safe from the Virus??

  • @jennifers9016
    @jennifers9016 2 роки тому +49

    So sad for Emily when she says her brother was killed in WWI. You could tell she was close with him. Lovely ladies, all of them.

  • @rach5516
    @rach5516 4 роки тому +82

    My nana was of this era, a completely different world to what we live in now.

    • @cassieoz1702
      @cassieoz1702 4 роки тому +4

      Mine too but she taught me well and I still make xmas pudding, gingerbread house (We're not xmas cake lovers), fruit mince and mince pies.

    • @rach5516
      @rach5516 4 роки тому +3

      @A Real Londoner absolutely true, it was more about family xx

    • @rach5516
      @rach5516 4 роки тому +3

      @@cassieoz1702 that's so lovely, Nana taught her daughters who in turn taught us. It has all been passed down xx

    • @rach5516
      @rach5516 4 роки тому +2

      @A Real Londoner I think it is most places now, families are so spread out, such a terrible shame. We can hope that community and caring for one another will come to the for again. It cant be just us that crave it. Have a lovely new year x

    • @Contessa6363
      @Contessa6363 4 роки тому +3

      Yes my nana was born in 1898. They were so poor they never received anything for Christmas. Even though she never had any gifts as a child this woman had the greatest Christmas Spirit I have ever encountered. I owe her my love of the season

  • @shelleyphilcox4743
    @shelleyphilcox4743 Рік тому +5

    Choked up when the lady said her Mum used to invite a lady from the workhouse to come for Christmas dinner. I have ancestors who did end up in the workhouse for a while. The family did manage to get out, but it would have been awful to be split up and alone at Christmas. I think this is a truly lovely thing to do.

  • @haleymarierobertson9402
    @haleymarierobertson9402 Рік тому +14

    This was absolutely perfect! Just lovely listening to these sweet ladies.

  • @stephenperretti8847
    @stephenperretti8847 Рік тому +10

    Thank you si very much for posting this.
    These women are a delightful array of a generation long past.
    Their memories and attitudes are a delight.

  • @Latbirget
    @Latbirget 4 роки тому +141

    How sad that lady's brother died in the first world war. He must have been very young.

    • @mrFalconlem
      @mrFalconlem 4 роки тому +24

      KatyandJoemac My grandfather was 16, joined up in 1917 and was gassed and left for dead but survived, they all were young.

    • @geoffdundee
      @geoffdundee 4 роки тому +27

      KatyandJoemac ......most in WW1 were very young......id a relative died aged 16 (but on paperwork he is 18 - he signed up early to fight for his country and changed his age to make him look older so he could join up)......he unfortunately died soon after and his uncle age 32 died 5 days later.........same story happened to many families and this is why WE MUST NEVER FORGET THE SACRIFICE THESE MEN MADE.....same with WW2.

    • @PrimeDirective101
      @PrimeDirective101 4 роки тому +8

      Yes, I was moved by that too; so many were lost.

    • @nancyisshopping7950
      @nancyisshopping7950 4 роки тому +7

      Yes. This broke my heart too.

    • @summerseahorse1363
      @summerseahorse1363 4 роки тому +1

      🥺

  • @catkendall5680
    @catkendall5680 Рік тому +13

    What an absolute privilege to listen and see these wonderful ladies. Amazing human beings 😍👍😍

  • @emilybemily4397
    @emilybemily4397 Рік тому +7

    Time is a great leveller. I came here from another video where I was in search of a nostalgic 70s Christmas. Here we are hearing, in the 70s, of bygone Christmases.

    • @Trevorjennings679
      @Trevorjennings679 Рік тому +1

      Hello Emily, how are you doing today, hope you’re fine and safe from the Virus??

  • @xanderthomson6960
    @xanderthomson6960 4 роки тому +63

    I’m a Yorkshire lad watching this from Australia in 2020 - wow, this was a great watch!

  • @chrismullan7191
    @chrismullan7191 4 роки тому +168

    Well this is 2019 and i still love the old vintage christmas, to me when i visit my older neighbours and have a good cup of tea and chat that means so much, my christmas tree is 35 years old and has the same dacs each year, i love to hear the christmas songs on the raido in bed, all the gift thing means nothing to me, having time for people is what matters, each year here in the UK another wee bit of christmas goes, its even called now the big day, where did that come from, its Christmas day, and the 12 days of christmas which ends on 6th jan. I willl always keep christmas the old way and i wish everyone many blessings for 2020.

    • @janetcw9808
      @janetcw9808 4 роки тому +11

      Chris Mullen, Same here, the 12 days of Christmas start on 26th.
      Pagan fest perhaps?
      That Yorkshire lady is Class. XXXX

    • @bethrobb3684
      @bethrobb3684 4 роки тому +8

      Chris Mullan I am with you, 100% 🎄. Happy New year from a Scot.🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇬🇧🇨🇦🍻🥂 Cheers !!🤗

    • @arriesone1
      @arriesone1 4 роки тому +9

      Chris Mullan Thank you so much. I always take a trip down memory lane at Christmas time and remember my happy childhood christmasses and the almost unbearable excitement of waiting for my grandparents to arrive by bus on Christmas Eve! Such simple and I believe better times. Of course there was crime but not like the almost daily stabbing reports we get these days. (My tree is old too and I make almost all the decs for it, each year adding a couple of new ones, such pleasure things like that give me).

    • @viva2pk
      @viva2pk 4 роки тому +2

      Chris Mullan I love listening to stories too. Blessing to you also 😊

    • @mickbachner
      @mickbachner 4 роки тому +4

      @@janetcw9808 the twelve days of Christmas begins on Christmas Day the 25th December it ends with twelfth night on 5th January and everything cleared away on 6th. Christmas Eve is not part of Christmas in itself but is the day (or more specifically the evening) before Christmas begins. Of course it has a religious significance but it is rooted in paganism, many symbols of this can still be seen in the food, decorations and traditions that are observed at this time.

  • @user-lz6dm5lk9y
    @user-lz6dm5lk9y Рік тому +10

    Wonderful....I really enjoyed this. Kids have far too much these days, and they do not really appreciate it because they do not know what it means to either have very little or to do without.

    • @katedine8979
      @katedine8979 Рік тому +1

      Unfortunately that's true for a majority but I think I lucked out with my son. He's mainly looking forward to spending time with his family and in his letter to Santa he only asked for nuts in their shell so he can crack them.

    • @user-lz6dm5lk9y
      @user-lz6dm5lk9y Рік тому +1

      @@katedine8979 That is lovely. He is a rare child these days!

  • @RichardVobes
    @RichardVobes Рік тому +4

    Those wonderful simple days - I wish they would return.

  • @woopwoop1747
    @woopwoop1747 Рік тому +10

    Absolutely love this. Having this piece of history is amazing to have.

  • @Pantherking916
    @Pantherking916 Рік тому +9

    I can only hazard a guess at what these distinguished ladies would think of what we have become nearly half a century down the line....

  • @MudlarksAlmanac
    @MudlarksAlmanac 4 роки тому +44

    my christmas stocking in the 1960s was much the same as these ladies remembered - an orange, some nuts, a new penny and a sugar mouse are all things I remember. Maybe some other bits and pieces like hair slides or a box of crayons. My main presents were often toys passed down from older cousins, or things made by my parents- like a miniature wooden ironing board, and a wooden doll's house - both of which I still have and treasure. And I still have some of the glass tree decorations that my parents put on their tree. I also remember my parents carrying the Christmas tree home from a local shop, with me at the rear, proudly holding onto the top spike. Christmas then was simpler, but magical for a small child like I was.

  • @tonypettigrew4124
    @tonypettigrew4124 Рік тому +6

    Fantastic women with no airs or graces telling it how it was, like others have said I could listen to them all day its like bringing our Grandmothers back for a cuppa and a chat, if only......

  • @saralast2570
    @saralast2570 Рік тому +7

    Love them all. I could sit and listen to stories like this for hours. I remember making paper bunting to hang round the ceiling and carol singing. No one really got toys only at Christmas so it meant more. Can't say I'd want to kill my christmas dinner but I loved my christmas's as a kid.