General Chat

Top tip - using the Genes Reunited community

Welcome to the Genes Reunited community boards!

  • The Genes Reunited community is made up of millions of people with similar interests. Discover your family history and make life long friends along the way.
  • You will find a close knit but welcoming group of keen genealogists all prepared to offer advice and help to new members.
  • And it's not all serious business. The boards are often a place to relax and be entertained by all kinds of subjects.
  • The Genes community will go out of their way to help you, so don’t be shy about asking for help.

Quick Search

Single word search

Icons

  • New posts
  • No new posts
  • Thread closed
  • Stickied, new posts
  • Stickied, no new posts

The Industrial Revolution

Page 2 + 1 of 3

  1. «
  2. 1
  3. 2
  4. 3
ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

igor

igor Report 18 Jun 2009 22:08

hi all
1 -the downfall of Ireland did not begin with the potato blight although it was a catalyst but with the ocupation by England i.e Oliver Cromwell
2 the industrial revolution spawned many an embryo for todays technology a lot of forward thinking people Telford, Stephenson, Farady, to name just a few.
The name of the game was greed mill owners, mine owners played on the poor , terrible working conditions etc knowing that a few coppers a week was better than the jack s**t they earned before
igor

Uggers

Uggers Report 18 Jun 2009 22:08

I bet most of us on here relate to the past a good bit Mel, probably why most of us are here. But it's different being fascinated by the past and being transported to living the life isn't it;) Wouldn't mind a vist though

Sue and Sally have said what I was thinking but couldn't put in words:)

~♥footie~angel♥~

~♥footie~angel♥~ Report 18 Jun 2009 22:09

Hi Igor good points but surely progress alwes comes at a price?

Muffyxx

Muffyxx Report 18 Jun 2009 22:10

My bones have been creaking for ages lol.....and my grey strands have at least doubled during the past year.

Doesn't mean you're ancient....or it's down to always having to look after people.......you're..just not 20 anymore that's all lol.xx

~♥footie~angel♥~

~♥footie~angel♥~ Report 18 Jun 2009 22:11

True Uggers if only we could travel back in time I'd take my risk assessment book, my child protection leaflets and Aggie and Kim {not newby or Viz} with me

~♥footie~angel♥~

~♥footie~angel♥~ Report 18 Jun 2009 22:12

lol Muffy if only but I've been this way the past 30 years

Silly Sausage

Silly Sausage Report 18 Jun 2009 22:12

I wouldntlike to live in the past people hardly washed even rich people poor people and had no display stuff at all ...I know that they knew no differant so it was excepted but it must of ponged in homes in the summer of BO, bet in 100 years it wll be scoffed at because people wipe their bums with loo roll.

Whirley

Whirley Report 18 Jun 2009 22:14

Yes Mel...............going back in time a............if only..............

~♥footie~angel♥~

~♥footie~angel♥~ Report 18 Jun 2009 22:15

you mean especially the rich people ~ nethertheless some interesting points ~ polite question what is display stuff I feel Im missing out here?

Muffyxx

Muffyxx Report 18 Jun 2009 22:20

I know what you mean Hayley.

I'd love to go back to Tudor England for a day but can you imagine the stink!!!!!! YUK !!!!!!!Mind I bet it was fun at times shoving your chamber pot out of the window to coincide with a disliked neighbour walking past lololol xx

~♥footie~angel♥~

~♥footie~angel♥~ Report 18 Jun 2009 22:22

Im pretty sure they only did that in films Muffy

Rambling

Rambling Report 18 Jun 2009 22:23

Hi Igor, entirely true about Cromwell .... ( don't start me off lol I was being very restrained given my Irish roots )

sitting on my hands a lot this evening...do I get a prize? ;)

I am reading at the moment about my ancestors life on the Thames barges... my nan being in service at age 15... neither of which i would want to be doing .

I can remember when i was a kid, my mum putting sheets through my nan's mangle...fun for me to turn..but would I really like to do that to get the clothes dry as an alternative to the spin cycly which does it all for me? to turn the sheets outer edge to middle when they wore out rather than buy new? to go barefoot because I had to save my only pair of shoes for church or work? to go round the market as it closed picking up the dropped or discarded veg for soup because there was no money to buy it?

Simplicity of lifestyle is one thing...and one can have that as a choice still....but no I wouldn't swap!

~♥footie~angel♥~

~♥footie~angel♥~ Report 18 Jun 2009 22:24

I have to go tis a school nite ~ thank you all for a very interestin discussion

Rambling

Rambling Report 18 Jun 2009 22:26

No they didn't Mel ...if you look at the oldest houses you will see the upper floors have an overhang....

"gardez l'eau (or maybe: Garde de l'eau!) loosely translated as "watch out for the water!") which was used in medieval times when chamber pots were emptied from a window onto the street."

:)

SueMaid

SueMaid Report 18 Jun 2009 22:29

I think there is a price to pay for progress, Mel. Just look at the mobile phone. No matter where I am or what I'm doing my family or work can get hold of me - sometimes a good thing often a bad thing. The computer has put me in touch with family I never knew I had but it's opened us to fraud. Cars are improving all the time but more people are being killed on the roads. And as the gap between the haves and have-nots widens the crime rate rises.

Sue x

Libby

Libby Report 18 Jun 2009 22:29

Not sure some things have changed. I personally know of 2 families on benefits (the parish) because the husbands have been laid off for over 12 months. Behind with all utilities including rent. The wives working extra hours to bring in more money so HB is reduced. They are not sure when landlords (private) will serve them notice because of rent arrears. Only option then is B&B for wives and children, husbands elsewhere maybe (workhouse?).

These families have no landline/mobile, no car, no internet and are still struggling on minimum wage. Husbands looking for work within 200 miles from home (how I don't know with no transport).

The longer you are without work the harder it is to get it.

Muffyxx

Muffyxx Report 18 Jun 2009 22:32

Godmanchester which is near where some of my ancestors come from.....have tudor style houses with the over hang.......and they were designed for that very purpose lol.

Mind there must have been times where you had to move aside so others could walk along the same stretch of pavement.......law of averages says if you bided your time and worked out their routine you'd be able to get em eventually lololol xx