Difference between revisions of "Social Snapshot articles by Joan West"

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[[2024 Dentists]].
 
  
SOCIAL SNAPSHOTS. [[Winter Weather]].
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'''1911. Employment Analysis from the Census of Speen and Lacey Green.'''  These figures do not include Loosley Row which are not yet to hand.
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'''103 Agricultural Labourers''' were recorded.  Agriculture was in severe depression with yet worst to come.  Bad weather had caused crop failures so there would have been very little work and thus no pay.
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'''28 Chair Turners''', commonly called “[[Bodgers]]”'''.''' Hampden Estate ran a commercial wood.  From time to time they held an auction of felled trees when a group of men would purchase one and working in the woods make it into arms and legs for the Windsor chairs made up in High Wycombe.
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'''15 were listed as Chairmakers.''' A few worked for themselves at home.
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'''There were a variety of other occupations with fewer numbers.'''  Farmers, blacksmiths, farm bailiffs, builders, brick makers, bricklayers, carpenters, innkeepers, millers, bakers and iron founders.  Denner Hill stone quarry provided a number of jobs.  Denner Setts were famous cobble stones, much sought after for streets and floors.  Women virtually all made lace, sometimes beaded lace, but their market was drying up. Some were dressmakers, but times were hard and most women made their own clothes.  Some were servants, but there were few big houses hereabouts to employ them.
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'''There was no doctor.''' For that you had to get to Princes Risborough. Occasionally a monthly nurse was in the parish after a confinement. There was always someone local able to lay people out.
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'''1911 Life in the Parish.   Analysis from the census of Lacey Green Loosley Row and Speen'''
  
From the Lacey Green head teacher’s logbook. ''' 1912'''. January 18<sup>th</sup>. '''Very severe weather'''.   January31st. '''Very severe weather'''.  February 5<sup>th</sup>. '''Ink wells frozen''' this morning.
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'''Houses Large & Small.'''   In the Parish there were very few large houses.   A few farm houses were bigger but there were hardly any others.   The Vicarage, [[Grymsdyke]] and [[Loosley House]] alone and a few farmers had house servants.   All other homes were cottages, one up and one down with maybe a “Bucks Back” tagged on if they were lucky.   These were the homes of the rest of the population.  
  
Lacey Green School then consisted of just the old part next to the road, which was not made up with pavements as we know it.  All the children walked to school, some even from as far as Green Hailey and near Saunderton Station.   Here are some more reports just for good measure :-
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'''Draughts Low out the Candles.    I'''n 1911 they would have had no foundations, no damp courses, and no cavity walls.  They were very cold and damp.  The windows were small, for glass was costly.   It was also very thin and easily broken.  These cottages and even those larger house were very draughty, enough to blow their candles out.   There were of course no modern amenities.   No piped water, no electricity, gas, telephone or sewerage.
  
'''1919.''' January 13<sup>th</sup>. '''Weather very severe'''.  January 20<sup>th</sup>. '''Very stormy'''. Road unfit for children to stand about in, so kept all the children that were remaining for dinner inside the school to take their meal From January 22<sup>nd</sup> to February 3rd weather was reported as '''very severe'''.  Children cannot work well.  '''Heavy snow'''  has rendered the roads almost impassable. All the children are wearing their coats, arranged to be as near the fire as possibleDrill taken frequently to keep warm.   February 4<sup>th</sup>. '''Thawing slightly'''.   February 5<sup>th</sup>. '''Snowing heavily''' all day.   Allowed children living in outlying districts to leave early as the snow was deep, notwithstanding the plough had cleared the first fall.  Attendance good considering the severity of the weather, and the long distance many had to come and the cold of the main room.   February 7<sup>th</sup> and 12th Weather still '''unusually severe'''. On February 12<sup>th</sup> Thermometer 32 degrees at opening of school.   February 18<sup>th</sup>. Attendance very reduced owing to '''heavy snow''' '''falling.'''
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'''Essential Fires.'''   To keep the home dry the fire would be kept in all the time, being banked up at night All the cooking was done over it as only the grand houses and the baker had ovens.   For many centuries it had been the common right to gather fallen wood from the parish woodlands.   A high wind would see women and children going to pick up this treasure.   It was considered more vital than going to school.   There had been vast woods here belonging to the parish up to 1823 when The Enclosure Act took place here.   At that time all these woods became privately owned and were soon being felled and the timber sold By the mid nineteenth century half the men were employed sawing down trees.   By 1911 there were no sawyers left working here for all the woods had been cut down.  How could they manage to keep the cottages warm and to cook now?
  
From March 4<sup>th</sup> to 12<sup>th</sup> '''Heavy Rain''' impossible to go out to play.  Roads in a very muddy state.   March 18<sup>th</sup> and 20<sup>th</sup>. '''Heavy snowstorms''', raining, more snow.   Roads in very bad condition, almost impossible for children coming long distances.  March 24<sup>th</sup> and 31<sup>st</sup>. '''Weather very severe'''.   April 8<sup>th</sup>. 10<sup>th</sup> and 14<sup>th</sup> '''Rained heavily''' every dayApril 28<sup>th</sup>. After Easter. '''Very cold'''.    37 degrees at 9am.   Showers of '''snow and hail''' at intervals during the day.
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'''''Research comment.''''' ''  These properties changed very little until after 1945 when WW2 ended.   Life had been pretty bleak in the years preceding the 1914-18 war.   The weather had been atrocious and crops had failed in field and garden.   Agricultural labourers were not required as crops failed and that is what the majority of men did.   With few vegetables to harvest in the gardens people were going hungry.   So was the pig, which most people kept.   It was their one source of meat but largely fed on scraps and peelings of which there was now few The woods had gone so no free wood for the fires.   Women probably went without most for the sake of their families and the birth rate dropped as they became unfit.   The men were glad to go to war to earn some money when it broke out in 1914.''
  
1947 is renowned as being a very bad winter.  I have a photo of me, aged 8, holding an icicle that was as tall as my shoulderIt wasn’t an exceptional one, there were dozens of them.   In 1963, living at no 1 Stocken Cottages, John and I were going on holiday (February is a good time for farmers to get away).  We had to dig our way through a snowdrift to get out of our front gate.   The snowdrift was still there on our return a fortnight later.  That same winter I took a photo of Slad Lane with the snow completely filling it up to the top of the hedgerows.
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''WW1 was followed by a flu pandemic that was said to have killed more people than all those who died in the war.   From then on the country went into an economic recession which saw the General Strike, farms laying abandoned and men out of work.  It was only after another war that things began to slowly improve as new homes were built in the villages to replace those bombed in the cities during the war.  ''
  
In the 1950’s and 60’s the snowplough came down the Main Road throwing the snow to the side, heaping it onto the pavements.   When it came through Walters Ash it then cleared the way into Bomber Command.  The snow it threw aside there, effectively blocked the New Road to Lacey Green.  Gerald Bedford who worked at Stocken Farm, Lacey Green, would go home to Naphill on a tractor, and would open-up the road in the evening and morning.   This let the villagers in and out.
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1914. Local Life. click [[2014 Reporting Local Life in 1914]]
  
There is much more from the Teachers’ Logbooks, Bill Cleaver’s regular reports on the weather and how the Council eventually stopped snow blocking the open roads reported on the Media Wiki -www.LaceyGreenHistory.com  in which I am putting together our local history.  Put ‘Weather’ into ‘search’, (top right) to access.
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[[1920 Homes and Weather pre 1950]]
  
I would welcome any comments or information you might be able to provide to add to the wiki about our local history, on any subject or photos of people or events.  Please email to [[Mailto:laceygreenhistorywiki@gmail.com|laceygreenhistorywiki@gmail.com]]  Thank you to those who replied to my report on dentistry.
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[[2024 Dentists]].
  
                                                                                                                                                               Joan West
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2024 [[Winter Weather]].
  
 
[[1945 V.E.Day. Local Legacies]]
 
[[1945 V.E.Day. Local Legacies]]

Latest revision as of 05:47, 20 August 2025

1911. Employment Analysis from the Census of Speen and Lacey Green. These figures do not include Loosley Row which are not yet to hand.

103 Agricultural Labourers were recorded. Agriculture was in severe depression with yet worst to come. Bad weather had caused crop failures so there would have been very little work and thus no pay.

28 Chair Turners, commonly called “Bodgers. Hampden Estate ran a commercial wood.  From time to time they held an auction of felled trees when a group of men would purchase one and working in the woods make it into arms and legs for the Windsor chairs made up in High Wycombe.

15 were listed as Chairmakers. A few worked for themselves at home.

There were a variety of other occupations with fewer numbers.  Farmers, blacksmiths, farm bailiffs, builders, brick makers, bricklayers, carpenters, innkeepers, millers, bakers and iron founders. Denner Hill stone quarry provided a number of jobs. Denner Setts were famous cobble stones, much sought after for streets and floors. Women virtually all made lace, sometimes beaded lace, but their market was drying up. Some were dressmakers, but times were hard and most women made their own clothes. Some were servants, but there were few big houses hereabouts to employ them.

There was no doctor. For that you had to get to Princes Risborough. Occasionally a monthly nurse was in the parish after a confinement. There was always someone local able to lay people out.

1911 Life in the Parish. Analysis from the census of Lacey Green Loosley Row and Speen

Houses Large & Small. In the Parish there were very few large houses. A few farm houses were bigger but there were hardly any others. The Vicarage, Grymsdyke and Loosley House alone and a few farmers had house servants. All other homes were cottages, one up and one down with maybe a “Bucks Back” tagged on if they were lucky. These were the homes of the rest of the population.

Draughts Low out the Candles. In 1911 they would have had no foundations, no damp courses, and no cavity walls.  They were very cold and damp. The windows were small, for glass was costly. It was also very thin and easily broken. These cottages and even those larger house were very draughty, enough to blow their candles out.   There were of course no modern amenities.   No piped water, no electricity, gas, telephone or sewerage.

Essential Fires. To keep the home dry the fire would be kept in all the time, being banked up at night.  All the cooking was done over it as only the grand houses and the baker had ovens.   For many centuries it had been the common right to gather fallen wood from the parish woodlands. A high wind would see women and children going to pick up this treasure.   It was considered more vital than going to school. There had been vast woods here belonging to the parish up to 1823 when The Enclosure Act took place here. At that time all these woods became privately owned and were soon being felled and the timber sold.   By the mid nineteenth century half the men were employed sawing down trees. By 1911 there were no sawyers left working here for all the woods had been cut down. How could they manage to keep the cottages warm and to cook now?

Research comment.   These properties changed very little until after 1945 when WW2 ended.   Life had been pretty bleak in the years preceding the 1914-18 war.   The weather had been atrocious and crops had failed in field and garden.   Agricultural labourers were not required as crops failed and that is what the majority of men did.   With few vegetables to harvest in the gardens people were going hungry.   So was the pig, which most people kept.   It was their one source of meat but largely fed on scraps and peelings of which there was now few.   The woods had gone so no free wood for the fires.   Women probably went without most for the sake of their families and the birth rate dropped as they became unfit.   The men were glad to go to war to earn some money when it broke out in 1914.

WW1 was followed by a flu pandemic that was said to have killed more people than all those who died in the war.   From then on the country went into an economic recession which saw the General Strike, farms laying abandoned and men out of work.  It was only after another war that things began to slowly improve as new homes were built in the villages to replace those bombed in the cities during the war.  

1914. Local Life. click 2014 Reporting Local Life in 1914

1920 Homes and Weather pre 1950

2024 Dentists.

2024 Winter Weather.

1945 V.E.Day. Local Legacies