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Snowdonia 1890 - meet the families

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´óÏó´«Ã½ Wales History ´óÏó´«Ã½ Wales History | 13:48 UK time, Wednesday, 6 October 2010

The identities of two Welsh families picked to take part in ´óÏó´«Ã½ Cymru Wales's new series set in Snowdonia 1890 have been revealed.

The Jones family from Denbigh and the Braddock family from Abergavenny have been chosen to travel back in time to 1890.

The two families commit to living as closely as they can to the 1890 way of life - where the men have to tackle back-breaking work at the local quarry while the women run the house, and the families work the land and run a smallholding to put food on the table.

The Jones family from Snowdonia 1890

The Jones family from Denbigh

The Jones family have a huge range of ages, from Heulwen, 75, right down to her grandson Jac - who at nine is the youngest entrant to the farmhouse, along with the Braddocks' daughter Leah.

Jac's sister Ela, 11, joins him in thinking there will be "nothing to do" without a computer, while Ela faces other issues as a vegetarian in a time where meat from a family's own animals was the staple food.

Their big brother Ben, 18, and parents David, a partner in a law firm, and Catrin, a tribunals officer, make up the rest of the Jones family.

Snowdonia 1890 Braddocks family

The Braddock family from Abergavenny

The Braddocks are couple Mark and Alisa, and children Jamie, 19, Jordan, 16, Tommy, 13 and Leah.

Before entering the farmhouses which will be their homes for almost four weeks, the families were realistic about the hardships they could face.

"I thought it would be good to be out in a house where you've got no mod cons... to really get back to basics and bond as a family," said Alisa.

And Mark, a medical technician, was realistic about the hardship of the days he was about to face:

"If we don't have enough slate or make enough tiles, we don't get paid; so of course then if you don't get paid, you haven't got money to buy food for the family, so there's a different kind of pressure. Back then they had that worry - if they didn't work, they didn't eat!"

The families will be helped along by a host of local north Wales individuals, such as the butcher, the preacher and the teacher, who appear as 1890 versions of themselves.

Filmed mainly in Rhosgadfan on the slopes of Snowdonia, as well as other locations around the area, the landmark series starts on ´óÏó´«Ã½ One Wales on Monday 18 October, 7.30pm on ´óÏó´«Ã½ One Wales, and continues every Monday, Wednesday and Friday evening for three weeks.

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Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    Dear Snowdonia Families
    I thought the Snowdonia programme was absolutely fabulous. I thoroughly enjoyed watching. Well done to both families who coped so well with what I know to be very difficult times. As a little girl and one of four children, I lived in a farm house in a place called Wattsville. The house was not disimilar from the house on Snowdonia. Only my Father worked and for 6 days a week. The house had stairs made from stone and we had a fire range just the same that we had to build each day. The toilet was at the top of the garden and yes we too bathed in a tin bath. There were no radiators and in winter ice formed on the inside of the windows. We moved from there eventually when I was 8 years old because my mother feared for our health. It was very important that the families relied on eachother, because that is how it was. Unlike today,everybody helped eachother.
    I was doubley amazed while watching the program that a little face that I recognised appeared.......and ex pupil from the school I currently work at.....JORDAN ha ha ha.........well done Jordan you did extremely well and it's nice that a child of today has some idea of how life was......even for me in the 1960s. Congratulations to both families for what I know was a very tough experiment.
    Jordan, visit us back at school at Design Technolgy and tell us your thoughts we would love to see you again.
    Best wishes for the future for you all.

    Mrs Rideout (Debbie)

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