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T47 – Summary

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

Personal Background

  • Name: Barbara Southern

  • Born: 12 July 1944, at 7 Harrison Street,  then Buchanan Street.

  • Residence: Lifelong resident of Ramsbottom; later lived at 89 George Road.

  • Education: Attended St Paul’s School, then Peel Brow.


Childhood & Community Life

  • Attended Sunday school and participated in the Whit Walks, holding flowers and ropes in processions.

  • Recalled two cinemas in Ramsbottom:

    • The Empire (with balcony, matinees, and Saturday night double screenings).

    • The Royal (later the Summerseat Players theatre).

  • Entertainment included the wireless (radio), listening to plays, and walking around town with her parents.

  • Local shops and landmarks:

    • Paper shops, barbers, fruit & veg shops, coal shops, and butchers (Billy Butcher’s).

    • Chip shop on one of the four streets.

    • Patmos Church (with pantomimes).

    • Three old cottages behind the Good Samaritan.


Family & Home Life

  • Lived with parents and a younger brother (born when she was 9).

  • Early home lacked bathroom and had an outdoor toilet; bathed in tin baths filled with boiled water.

  • Laundry done with dolly tubs and washboards.

  • Later homes were modernised with a bathroom and toilet indoors.

  • No central heating; used flock mattresses that sagged over time.

  • Flooding on Kenyon Street was common in the 1950s until the river was dredged.


Childhood Activities

  • Spent much time at the waterside near Kenyon Street, building dams and swimming in the stream.

  • Played traditional street games: marbles, whip-and-top, cigarette cards, four corners, rally, and knock-and-run.

  • Collected stamps with her father (still keeps her stamp books).

  • Rode on the milk cart (horse and cart) with Mr. Wolfenden.

  • Rag-and-bone man with a donkey also visited the street.

  • Families often scrubbed their steps and flagged pavements weekly.


School Life

  • Teachers at St Paul’s were very strict.

  • Activities included pantomimes, PE on black mats, and lessons with chalkboards, later ink pens.

  • Enjoyed pantomimes but disliked at least one teacher.


Work Life

  • Left school at 15 and started work at Shepherd’s making candlewick bedspreads.

  • Later worked as a weaver, operating up to four towel looms on piecework; earned about £11/week at best.

  • Work environment was dusty and noisy, requiring lipreading due to the machine noise.

  • Learned quickly to operate a “kissing shuttle” loom.

  • Memories of workplace camaraderie, Christmas parties, and playful traditions (e.g., mistletoe at Christmas).

  • Her father worked lifelong in the mills, eventually becoming a supervisor.


Social & Leisure

  • Trips by train to Blackpool and coach to Morecambe.

  • Ramsbottom station: had waiting rooms with fires, pay-to-use toilets, and a phone box outside.

  • Enjoyed dances at the Bolton Palais and Princess Ballroom from about age 16.

  • Travelled on the diesel trains or red buses with conductors.

  • Recalled the coronation celebrations for Queen Elizabeth II – street parties with hats, streamers, and long tables.


Reflections

  • Despite hardships (floods, lack of amenities, hard mill work), Barbara recalls a “brilliant childhood” filled with fun, close-knit community life, and simple pleasures.

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