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IRN97894
Kitchen Scales
Household tin scales.
IRN95766
Table
Wooden rectangular table, with space for a draw under the table top. The table appears to be a typical kitchen table.
IRN85864
Kitchen Scales
To weigh 25 lbs. White, vertical scales with tin tray.
IRN71891
Rocking Chair
Ash rocking chair. This was the one that was brought from Home Farm kitchen in January 2006. It did not have any other I.D. number on it at the time. It was discovered that it's original number was 1962-235, so this number is now in effect void, please refer to original number.
IRN6577
Kitchen Range - Panel & Door ( only )
Cast iron, from kitchen range from a house, 21, Mavin Street, Durham. May have been washhouse/ bakery for another house in Hallgarth Street. c.1840 - 50.
IRN62531
Mourning Card
Stephen Kitchen. Died 1927 aged 75.
IRN42485
Filter Stone
Used for filtering water in kitchens, see notes
IRN20986
Kitchen Press
Kitchen "press" - i.e. cupboards and drawers. Has been "grained" a dark oak colour. See notes
AUD2004-11
Mr Jackson
Talking to a group of children about the mining life. Going into the pit, the different jobs involved. Increased mechanisation. Journeying underground. Conditions - mice, water, injuries, taking care, strikes. Northumberland accent. Housing, water supply and cleaning clothes. Pocket money. Soup kitchens when no work. Sacked for fighting in the pit.
AUD1974-17d
Mrs Calver
Visits to the dentist as a small child, treatment with poppy and chamomile. Poverty, children with no shoes. Sister born 1915, something wrong, couldn't walk - various specialists, military doctor recommended shoes with copper wire support. Paying doctors, mother was taught massage. 1917 Zeppelin raids, blew glass out of Whitley bay station, sleeping under the kitchen table for safety in world war one raids. Sinn Fein attack on the electric train depot in 1918, trains still used by soldiers though burnt. General Strike 1926 - difficulties of getting to school; cycled in groups for safety. Firs...
AUD1974-72
Jack Elliott, songs
Songs and comic stories: the putter. Story (coloured privates). Around the Western Water. I don’t care what you used to be. The Rigs of Barley. Windy old weather. Scotland the Brave. Mandolin tunes. Jews Harp. Mandolin and Guitar. Dark as a dungeon. Banjo tunes (oh Suzanna, Golden Slippers, poor old Joe). Flowers of Edinburgh, rigs of Marlow. Satisfied Mind. Carry me back to the Mountains. Seven drunken nights. Story (spite bairn, Co-op). Mormon braes. Story (greedy bugger, Toc, waste the rest). Empty saddle. Story (man born of woman, tin of peas, fat arse). Love is teasing. Cushie Butterfield...
AUD1976-123
Joseph Barrie
House in Frances street. Toilet, sleeping, heating, baking, washing. Father an engine man for the pit; 1926 strike, soup kitchens. Pit buzzers. Sunderland Empire. Left school at 14, became a miner then a bricklayer's apprentice. Harshness of life in his father’s time. Childhood games. Christmas festivities. Leisure – the cinema, playing cricket and football. Easter time would dig the garden, also had hens. Sheep’s head broth and other food. Pig killing. Hetton fair – foot racing and crafts. Chapel anniversaries. Effect of nationalisation. Tramps and travelling salesmen. Midwife. Grandmoth...
AUD1981-207
Minnie Arbuckle
Work as a servant in beamish hall 1915-17, during world war one. Lots of detail about the house and its rooms, the staff and their jobs. Deerpark and deaths in the reservoir. Dogs. Walking to Gateshead on day off. Bellrope for meal times. Commodes, daily routine of cleaning. Had own electrician. Sewing. Skinning rabbits for the dogs. Work in the kitchen, everything made from scratch. A servant's life, breaktime activities and meals. Fancy foods and crockery. Christmas food and decoration. Lodge and roads in. Fetching coal. Uniform, in detail. Paintings. Broke a leg in a sledging accidents. Is ...
AUD1983-217
Mr Richardson
Was in the emergency rescue service in the mines - describes in detail the breathing equipment and the training sessions in fake conditions, carrying a wooden dummy he called Frankenstein. Instance of saving someone's life when breathing equipment not working. Got a dislocation of the neck. Crook used wild redpolls instead of canaries, but had to replace regularly as they became more accustomed to bad air over time. Difficulty of moving around in cumbersome equipment. Browney colliery village, shops. All the pubs round about and the route walked between them. One was right by Brandon pit, man ...
AUD1983-222
Mrs Buck
Getting electric lighting to Shotton. Earth closets, mother shocked when took seat indoors to dry. Miner's cottage kitchen, cleaning and possing clothes. Grandmother a stern Victorian, did all the sewing, wanted bought clothes. Father served in world war one, they sent him parcels with chocolate figures and cigarettes. Always there for your neighbour. Grandmother laid out bodies, was a custom to tip a glass of whisky down corpse's throat. Local women had medical knowledge. Everyone in one or another of the churches. Brother wanted to be Pentecostal because they had free lantern shows. Spiritua...
AUD1983-227
Mr Gardiner
Life in a mining village - games children played, took cricket balls from visiting coconut shy, Sunday school trip to South Shields and sports day. Headmistress didn’t put him in for eleven plus, probably because father a noted drunkard so wouldn’t be able to afford more schooling - similar thing happened to wife. Helped with younger children. Child teased because couldn't draw. 1921 strike, father involved in gathering food for the soup kitchens, by lorry. 1926 strike straight after starting in pit. Sleeping on cinders in dry midden pile to protect them from others. Cut down trees, turned out...
AUD1983-232
Mrs Gowland
Father's family were farmers, she went to farmhouse in Holwick at weekends - describes the farmhouse kitchen and the best room, lighting etc. Keeping a pig, helping scrape the intestines. Washing day - same pot used to washing and for broth making. Mother an unqualified midwife. Clogs with iron studs on. Going out into the countryside, blackberries, cycling. Paste egg rolling at Easter. Clothing. Running to meet father from the mine, he would have save a piece of scone for her. Deliveries to the door, sweets, groceries, yeast. Shops in the village. Coming of transport to the village. Chapel an...
AUD1984-250
Mr Sherwood
Social distinctions and relationships between ordinary miners, deputies and overman. Moving up the ranks. Welsh miners. Room in the pub nicknamed "the fat beast" because it was used by "the management's side". Characteristics of a good deputy - different skills needed in different pit districts and conditions. Mining equipment. Sorting out pay disputes between clerks, overmen, miners etc. Happy when the pit head baths came in and could go home clean. 1926 strike, enjoyed it, soup kitchens. Joined the army and realised Durham miner's condition of living worse than those in other places. Those w...
AUD1984-256
Mr Harrison
Household chores. Swimming in pit pond "full of dead dogs". Going to the cinema and variety shows. Fairground, someone being sick. Playing football. Rooms in the house. Bowling and pitch and toss. Teenage drinking. Starting down the pits. Violence in the household, how hard women had to work. Had to pull your weight in the pit. Courting wife down the chicken run. Work firing boilers, people walking long distances for work during depression. General strike of 1926, enjoyed himself; soup kitchens and baton charges. Half a crown dare to go round church yard at night. First wireless in the area, p...
AUD1990-103
Mrs Crockett
Pockerley farm - used Ferguson tractor when moved in. Lived in Hermitage cottage until marriage in 1940. Description of house. Wash tub inside back door. Scullery with stone sink and wooden shelves. Living kitchen, range and furniture. Upstairs, back bedroom and bathroom. Other bedrooms. Cellar and pantries, killing pigs and storing meat. Sitting room furniture. Toilets. Live-in maid. Garden. In-laws and German prisoners of war. Use of bedrooms. Use of farm buildings. Back yard. Milk round and distribution. Shopping in Newcastle. Harvesting. Riddling potatoes. Ploughing and threshing.

 

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