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Winter Of 1947
Did anyone see this on TV last night. Dare say its a repeat, but its the first time I've seen it. Its normally a repeat of the sixties winter. Thats what you call a real hard time, worth watching if you've not seen it.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I remember how terrible it was . Lived on a farm back then. Had to help dig the sheep out from under the snow before going to school and break the ice on the well to give the animals and ourselves some water. Melting snow in a bucket on a stove so that we could have a hot drink before walking on top of the snow covered walls, no buses the lanes had drifts 6 foot high. We still got to school and people walked to work. No-one seemed to moan . They just accepted the situation and made the best of it.
The fun part came when we made igloos and shelters for the sheep. Snowmen and snowball fights. Sledging and skating. I remember the 60s winter but by then we lived in a town and believe you me there was no comparison at all to country life in the winter.
Seen it? I experienced it in London, but unlike much of childhood I don't have many memories of hardship.
I went to school near to Regent's Park, a place frequently visited for recreation during lunchtimes, particularly boating on the lake.
After the first snowfall, the Headmaster announced at a morning assembly that it had come to his notice that boys were in the Park at lunchtime playing snowballs. I doubt that I was the only one that winced*, for much of the previous lunchtime had been spent tormenting the female student teachers at Bedford College, trapping and pelting them mercilessly with snowballs as they crossed their only exit, a metal lattice bridge across the end of the lake.
However, he obviously knew nothing of this and surprised us all by fully approving of what he regarded as healthy exercise and gave the whole school the first lesson off that afternoon!
* He had a cane - and he used it.
Everything was rationed because the trains couldnt get through, even coal, again because the coal came by train. Potatoes and every other veg perished in the fields, they even tried drilling the veg out the soil, what was left of them anyhow.
The British government at the time sent out a call to other countries for whatever food they could send. The fishing boats all around the coast couldn't get out either. They also tried explosives to try and clear the snow drifts on the railway tracks because they were so thick and high. The snow ploughs on the front of trains had little impact.