Does your house have an interesting history for any reason ?

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Dave7

Dave7

Legendary Member
Location
Cheshire
There's nowt particularly remarkable about mine, it's just a typical semi on a housing estate. My parents told me it was built in 1947, and that looks about right, as it's on an RAF aerial photo dated 25.6.49, but not on one dated 10.5.46.
1947 makes it VERY special....year of my birth.

BTW.....our 1st house in 1971 was a 2 up-2 down with toilet down the yard. It was awaiting demolition so we couldn't get a mortgage. We, legally, took over the
mortgage and it cost us the princely sum of £695.00.
My wage at the time was £15.00 per week.
 

Webbo2

Über Member
1947 makes it VERY special....year of my birth.

BTW.....our 1st house in 1971 was a 2 up-2 down with toilet down the yard. It was awaiting demolition so we couldn't get a mortgage. We, legally, took over the
mortgage and it cost us the princely sum of £695.00.
My wage at the time was £15.00 per week.

What job were you doing for £15 a week I was on £7:50 a week as a second year apprentice engineer. When I qualified in 1975 I was £40 a week.
 
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Dave7

Dave7

Legendary Member
Location
Cheshire
What job were you doing for £15 a week I was on £7:50 a week as a second year apprentice engineer. When I qualified in 1975 I was £40 a week.

Delivering coop bread, house to house, in the rough Runcorn council estates.
TBF I had just moved to Warrington in a rush as my wife wasnt well (long story) and the bread was the 1st thing I did to errhh put some bread on the table :rolleyes: .
I had some decent jobs after that.
 
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There is something which keeps cropping up in my social media feeds. It’s a ‘click here’ type of thing to find out who lived in your home during WW II.

Never clicked on it, and wholly expect it to be nonsense, but for me it’s easy. None of the homes I have ever lived in existed during WW II or, as in the case earlier in this thread, were animal shelters at that point in history.
 

Gillstay

Veteran
The last house we had was an old school house. Not the classroom, but the house of the headmaster and the house of the teacher which had been knocked through to make one house two up two down. They were buried in the grave yard at the back.
When we cleaned off some plaster to make a repair we found a small fire place, then my Dad said `keep going !'. so we did and found it surrounded by another fireplace. He said it again, so we did and found a huge fireplace which used to have a range in it.
By then I had the measure of the room and when my dad stopped for tea I carried on and found a bread oven and a proving oven.
It went from the most boring room to the most interesting.
 

PeteXXX

Cake or ice cream? The choice is endless ...
Location
Hamtun
Boring bungalow now, but one of my old houses, Canon Road, Ramsgate, had been virtually untouched since it waz built c1900..
Still had live gas pipes behind the plaster for wall lights!
It was originally a 3 story house but the roof got blown off by a bomb in WW2.
Soldiers were probably billeted tgere during the war as there was a shared bomb shelter from my cellar dug quite deep from the chalk foundation stretching maybe 100' and exiting, via a shaft, half way down next doors garden. They always wondered why there was a concave bit where grass didn't grow well. Turns out it was only sagging wooden planks covering the deep shaft! That be a surprise if it gave way whilst mowing the lawn!! 😋

It's the onlt house I've owned that I actually miss ☹️
 

johnnyb47

Guru
Location
Wales
Nothing special about my house apart from it being built around 1900.
It has very low ceilings and door frames and I often forget to duck resulting in a bang on the head especially after visit to the pub.
The stairs only have 10 steps to get upstairs too instead of the usual 13/15 steps.
Living by myself I often wonder about all the generations who lived here before me and the lives they led.
I sometimes imagine who was sitting in the living room listening to an old valve radio when Britain declared a state of war with Germany ,or how busy it may been here with a house full of kids at Christmas.
My ex sister in laws house was an old farm house right on the top of the Welsh border mountains.
In fact the English/Welsh border ran straight through the middle of the house.
It was strange because during lockdown and the different rules between the two countries you could have a family BBQ in the front garden but it was illegal to have one in the back garden.
 
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Beebo

Firm and Fruity
Location
Hexleybeef
This is my house £575 in 1936.
If I live here for another 10 years it will be 100 years old.
You can put 3 zeros on the end of the price tag now.
They were built as family starter homes, you have to be earning £100,000 to get a mortgage now as a first time buyer. Bonkers.
IMG_6346.jpeg
 
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