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T48 – Summary

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The transcript is an interview with Eddie Chatwood as transcribed by  Microsoft Word and summarised by ChatGPT  and subject to errors.

Personal Background

  • Name: Eddy Chatwood

  • Born: 1946

  • Early Home: Factory Street, Ramsbottom


Memories of Ramsbottom Shops & Businesses

  • Unique shops:

    • Low Mixes: famous for Lumix ice cream.

    • Buckle Banks chip shop: known for homemade puddings.

    • Vic Norman’s: only bicycle shop in town.

    • Lesters grocers: remembered for the smell of coffee beans sold in small purple bags, alongside raisins and sugar.

    • Pork shop: opposite the council offices.

    • Cocktails Blotches (Bridge St) and tobacconist near the Clarence.

    • Ken’s music shop: first place Eddy saw real instruments (trumpets, guitars costing around £9 in the late 1950s).

    • Temperance bar: sold real sarsaparilla from small wooden barrels with taps.


Streets & Daily Life

  • Streets were cobbled, not tarmac.

  • Steam rollers worked on roads.

  • Horse and carts still delivered milk; metal milk churns rattled in the mornings.

  • Police presence: Only one policeman, Mr. Johnson, on a green motorbike – children feared him and would scatter when he appeared.


Incidents & Childhood Memories

  • He and a friend once threw a brick at a Ramsbottom single-decker bus; they were caught and grounded for a month.

  • Bus depot: near the Esso petrol station.

  • Haulage: horses and carts still used around Garden Street and John Woods Foundry.

  • George Leach: known for his large grey horse.

  • Blacksmiths: on Paradise Street, where horses were reshod.

  • His mother worked on a farm using horses and carts.


Living Conditions & Home Life

  • Early home at Factory Street near St. Paul’s Church and School.

    • Communal yards and shared outdoor toilets.

    • A neighbor’s pipe noises scared him when using the toilet as a child.

  • Later moved to Kenyon Street/Heap Street:

    • Two-up two-down houses with shared toilets.

    • Toilet paper was newspaper squares; doors had no locks, so people sang to show they were inside.

    • Gas lights hissed through the night.

    • Moths cast huge, frightening shadows.

    • Winters: ice formed inside windows; children dressed quickly in the cold.

    • Bathing: galvanised tin bath filled in front of the fire; side nearest fire became scalding hot. Bath had to be carried out and emptied.


Sounds of the Town

  • Railway wagons shunting at night – loud but became a familiar background noise.

  • Cotton mills: constant vibration of looms.

    • Silence at mealtimes broken by women laughing, then the looms resumed.

    • One could “tell the time of day by the sounds.”


Work & Industry

  • Father: wagon driver, worked in cotton mills and transport.

  • Eddy spent time in boiler houses, helping shovel coal (“banking up”).

    • Doors of boilers glowed, giving off dazzling light.

    • Loud clanging of boiler doors common in the streets.

  • Large groups of workers walked across fields from Stubbins to Ramsbottom daily, wearing paths that have since disappeared.


Overall Reflection

Eddy describes a tougher but close-knit way of life, filled with strong community ties, simple pleasures, and the industrial sounds of mid-20th century Ramsbottom. Many of these practices, places, and sights have since vanished, replaced by modern developments.

 

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