What has become obsolete in your lifetime.
I remember the slide rule and how important it was.
I remember the slide rule and how important it was.
Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
Rotary telephones
8 track tapes
Common sense
Typewriters
Cathode Ray Tube TV's
Manual chokes for car engines
Distributors for car engines
Walkie-Talkies
Modern walkie talkies are very popular here.
1948 was just before I was born. Some of the things you mention are still the same today, some are definitely obsolete, and some seem almost unbelievable (not suggesting you were lying of course )David, I left England in 1948. Should I even begin to list the things that have changed.
The only things I can remember my mum getting from gypsies were clothes pegs!We went to the gypsies for medicines;
Yes, my parents' house was the same. Some homes still have "pre-payment meters", but you don't feed them with coins; you "top up" an electronic payment card or key. About 12% of households have these now.gas and electricity was on a coin-deposit box,
Apart from certain specialist museums, I don't think gas lighting is in use anywhere in the UK any more.all our house lamps were gas,
That sounds like the ration book, used in the 1939-45 War and several years after. It has been obsolete since the mid-1950s.and I still have the little booklet the merchant signed for our purchases.
All those are still the same. A subway is a walkway for pedestrians under any road, not just motorways (M1, M25 etc). But "Subway" is now also a chain of fast food outlets. A lay-by is a short stopping place beside any ordinary road, but not motorways, which have a continuous "hard shoulder" for emergency stops, and service stations (with toilets, petrol, restaurants, shops) for other stops.The subway was a passage under the motorway, a layby was a rest stop on the motorway and a tailback was the lineup of traffic
Yes many homes in those days had outside toilets. Some still have, but that is in addition to an indoor one. Sewage going down an open channel sounds like the exception rather than the rule.....Oh, yes, we never went more than about three blocks from home in East London, which was West Ham. When got indoor loos, the sewage went down an open channel near the house to the street drain.
Do you mean the Aga, a solid fuel burning cooker? Those are still used in farmhouses and some other homes in the countryside, but unlikely to be seen in towns and cities.I was lost everytime I came home. Do you still have the cookers with the lids on burners at top and four oven closures??
Cheers, mate,
Jim
I don't remember the soil man or the iceman.Ah, the out door lavvie.....and the night soil man what a disgusting job that must of been.
What about the ice man
the grocery boy delivering goods
milk vendors
doctors making home visits. ( almost passe )
women waiting for their men to come out of the pub at closing time
progressive dinners
Analog clocks and wrist watches. You have any idea how few folk 25 and under know how to tell time on an old clock?