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Toilets
Does anyone still have and use an outside toilet? Who had a longdrop
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Moving off at a tangent - name the locations of the public urinals/toilets in the towbn. I'll start off with the urinal in Wheat Street, between Blackburn Rd & Dale St . Me & my mates called in Wee Street. This had nothing to do with the length of the street.
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Whatever has made you ask about loos?? |
I don't know what made me ask. My mum and dad lived on Willow Street when they were first married and they had a long drop. My wife's uncle lives near Newcastle. He still uses an outside toilet
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Right, tick off Geordies as minority group to offend this month ! ;) |
I've addressed the outside pot myself. It's not pleasant on a cold day.
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None of the toilets could really be used cisterns and pans completely frozen, lead pipes burst and turned off at the mains, but being sent home was never even considered. (most annoying I had a new sledge I wanted to use). |
I bet the cold certainly got the nipper offer tightened up
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My mum still has an outside toilet.......she has an inside one as well, but the inside one is upstairs. Fine when she goes to bed, but a trial when needing the loo during the day(she has mobility problems)....so when she is downstairs during the day she goes to the outside loo. It is a water closet, not a long drop.
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Long drop? no, we were posh, we had a tippler.
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When i was very young we had a communal backyard -one bog fer all.:eek: Can't remember the score wi the coal hole though:confused: Twas Number 14 Burnley Rd, the houses on that little row above Ann Parkins shop plus the few houses on the first block of Melbourne St, shared, Everyone who shared that yard were very friendly, n a guy n his wife used to take me oer Whalley Nabs n places in the summer, Happy Days.:)
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My dad often talks about the communal bog they had on Mill Street in Clayton. He said you could always tell when someone had been drinking Lion's bitter
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Can remember us having a long drop and for my sins I've dug a few out on grant jobs in the sixties, it was a task usually falling on the shoulders of the happyrentice. My family home still had an outside WC up until my Father died in 2003, whether it still has I don't know. Not sure but I would think long drops would be illegal now, elf and safety:rolleyes:
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Alice Street (where some horrific crime aginst a young boy took place), Blackburn Road near the railway arch (where I once disturbed a sleeping tramp at midday).
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I lived on Mill Street for a while as a child. Just about where Morrisons is. We had a communal yard shared with Barnes Street, with tippler toilets at the bottom. Scared me witless!!
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I can just about remember our outside lavatory we had when I was a child.
We walked about twenty yards up the muddy grass to a brick shed, inside was a board with a hole in it and below was a big tub. The shed had a little square door in it facing the lane outside. One a week a lorry with a tin covered bath like body came and two chaps got out, they pulled our tub out and tipped it into the thing on the lorry. I always remember one chap called Scutt who was very small and when he lifted the tub over the side of the lorry it was higher than his head. I waited for it to go all over him but it never happened. Once it was empty and replaced my dad had to go and get buckets of water from our stream and flush it out. Like most of you on here my job was to make little squares out of newspaper for the bum wipes. Happy days in village life. |
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Remember my Uncle having a long drop when he lived on Lion Street, was scared stiff to go thought i would fall down never to be seen again. Always nipped home if i needed to go. My Dad had one outside that he still used untill he died five years ago. They call themselves posh now if they have two loo's, but when you think we were the posh ones. We were the first to have two loo's.
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I remember we had a long drop toilet in the back yard next to the coal place, this had a pipe part way down were the water from the kitchen when in.One time near xmas I had some jingle bells which I kept ringing and the dog would run round in circles with the noise,one evening my mother had the back door open,I was ringing the bells the dog all excited ran out of the kitchen,jumped on the toilet seat and went straight down the hole crying at the bottom.My mother made me go and bring my dad out of the Volunteers pub,I remember opening the door shouting my dads name and when I told him all round in the pub had a good laugh.
He came home got the dog with its collar pulled it out covered,left it in the yard for my mother to clean and went back to the pub. I went quickley to bed,that was the last time I saw those bells. |
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I can remember the outside toilet at my Grandparents on Exchange street, not a long drop though. They also had what we used to call "hard" toilet paper (Izal!) so me and my sister hated having to go there as we were used to Scottex at home:o Was next to the coal shed but they had it taken out when they got a grant to have a bathroom put in upstairs sometime in the seventies.
In the new bathroom my Gran put what she called "soft" toilet paper for guests in a sort of doll whose skirts held the paper! It was kept on the window ledge next to the loo!:D |
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I remember the long drop in our house on Water Street, Great Harwood. We used old cut up newspapers instead of toilet paper so on cold days I just lit some and dropped them down. It was warm and comfortable but I finished up with a smoky bum!
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My grandparents had a 'long drop'. I remember going out to it one day and hearing this meow from the bottom(luckily before I used it).
Grandad got a torch and there at the bottom were these two glowing eyes. He came back with a long brush, lowered it down, the cat climbed on and up he came. As soon as he reached the top he flew off, showering us with unpleasantness! I still remember it was a sort of ginger, although that may not have been its natural colour. I wonder what would happen to a cat which fell in a 'tippler' which then tipped? They say cats can find their way home but there's a limit. I remember the old Observer had a nice texture, similar to Izal but thicker and safer to use. |
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My Grandparents had a two hole tippler toilet outside......they also had a flush toilet upstairs(I thought they were very posh)...back to the two holer...who on earth would want to have someone sat next to them while they did the necessaries?
Grandad was always sent out to the backyard lavvy when he had been out and had a skinful the night before.......it was a long time before I understood the reasoning behind this. |
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.... and eating curry.;) The mind bog-gles. |
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First I remember was a tippler, when we lived on Queen Street ... when we moved in with my grandad on Rishton Rd., there was a real flush, ceramic bog outside.:D Weren't all outdoor bogs next to the coal shed? Oh for the days when you could recycle the "Daily Mail" right in your own bog:D
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In our communal yard, at the house where I spent most of my childhood, the lavvies were in a bank on one side of the yard, the coal holes were in a bank on the other side of the yard.
Coal holes were locked ...the lavvies were not(thank goodness). You didn't need to worry about anyone stealing the lavvy paper, we all wiped our BTMs on one newspaper or another. No Andrex back then. |
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remember public toilets at the top of victoria st clayton next to the canal near to the tory club violet
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