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Queen Mortimer (née Ward) at Fieldside Road, Downham, 1927
Queen Mortimer (née Ward) at Fieldside Road, Downham, 1927

Queenie Mortimer

"What people call a kitchen, number one London County Council didn't build kitchens, they were sculleries because they had the copper in them, and that's where you did the boiling and washing.

You weren't allowed to paint anywhere, that was the Council's job that. As regards flooring, well people didn't have carpets, they had mats and rugs, but the lino had to be within 18 inches of the walls because of the walls drying out properly.

The living room now, was the kitchen then, because you had the grate there and the oven above it, and it had to be black-leaded. That kept the chimneybreast warm, and the house warm, well the front bedroom anyway. This house has two bedrooms, scullery, bath, kitchen, with a recess, and it takes five adults.

To this day on the rent book it's five adults. The one bedroom upstairs for the parents, the other bedroom for two children of the same sex, and the recess for the third one, where there was a curtain across. And it so happened there was the two of us girls and just my brother. My brother slept down here in the recess in a bed chair, an iron one, and he had an old orange box with a piece of curtain round it, that was his little bedside cabinet."

 
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A life in pictures