Changing
Times
Getting
Married |
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Remember
when ... New
mothers were confined to bed for two weeks. |
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Nina
Barr - born 1939
"When my friend was getting married she asked me to "stand" for
her on her wedding day. It was a rather sad, low key affair, as she
came from a huge family who could not afford a big wedding. She was
the youngest of 24 children. There was only the bride and groom, the
groom鈥檚 brother as best man, and me. Our footsteps echoed as we walked
down the aisle of the empty church - there were no other guests. When
it was over we went to the local shops, bought ten cigarettes, and
then went to the bride鈥檚 home, where her mum had a meal ready for
us". |
Changing
Times |
|
Remember
when ... It
was considered good luck to put a piece of silver in the baby's
hand. |
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Ann
Baker - born 1950
"I
was born in the parish of St. Albans, now the Vauxhall area. Outsiders
often called the area "the village" or "little Ireland", because most
residents were descendants of the Irish immigrants who came here during
the potato famine.
The whole area was purely Catholic, Protestants were not tolerated
at all. I remember a new family moved into the lock keeper鈥檚 house;
the father worked on the lock and the mother got a job in the local
corner shop. Word got around that the family was Protestant, and local
people boycotted that shop. The argument was that the shop owner should
have given the job to one of his own i.e. a Catholic. My own mother
was reprimanded for going into the shop.
Thank goodness times have changed. In the early l960s, the Council
decided to demolish the whole "over the bridge" area and start from
scratch. New families moved in and very soon, the religious divide
disappeared". |
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