Episode 3 A House Through Time


Episode 3

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When we live in a house, we're just passing through.

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People have occupied it before us,

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others will take our place when we leave.

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100 human dramas played out in every room.

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Every house in Britain has a story to tell,

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but in this series I'm going to uncover the secret life of just one.

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A single townhouse, here in Liverpool.

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A city that rivalled New York in the late 19th century.

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Yet, 100 years later, was one of the poorest places in Europe.

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In many ways, 62 Falkner Street is an ordinary house.

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But as I'm going to show you,

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in reality, it's an amazing treasure-trove.

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Cos he leaves them not just £100, but also number 62 Falkner Street.

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In March 1885, again, in this house,

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he grabbed her by the throat and assaulted her.

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The life that you can see recorded in these old documents

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is extraordinary.

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Delving into the archives,

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I'll use the personal histories of the residents of this house

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to reveal the story of Britain over almost 200 years.

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It's a period of seismic social change.

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From the early years of Victoria's reign...

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..right through to the present day.

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In this episode, we look at the house from the 1890s to the 1940s

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when its residents struggle with technological revolution.

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"We have nothing to fear from motor carriages."

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Two world wars changed the house forever.

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The bombs fell right here.

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And the building descends into shabby lodgings.

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I'm going on the ultimate detective hunt,

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to uncover lives that haven't been recorded in the history books,

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but which can tell us a new version of our nation's past.

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A new history of Britain, hidden within the walls of a single house.

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Welcome to 62 Falkner Street.

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Today, it's home to a 21st-century family.

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Gaynor and her two children, Rosie and Tom.

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-GAYNOR:

-Good idea!

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SHE LAUGHS

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Built in the early 1840s as a merchant's residence,

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by the late 1880s it had become an up-market lodging house...

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..run by landlady Catherine Robertson.

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Now it's 1890, and she's selling the house to new residents.

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But who are they?

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To find out, I'm delving deep into the archives.

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And hunting through official records.

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So I've called up a page from the 1891 census,

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and that tells us that the new residents of 62 Falkner Street

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are the Snewing family.

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William Snewing, who's 48 years old.

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And under profession or occupation it says, "saddler,"

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which means that he's a manufacturer

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of saddles and harnesses and bridles for horses.

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To afford 62 Falkner Street,

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William Snewing was clearly more than just a jobbing saddle-maker.

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Perhaps he even ran his own business.

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He's married, his wife is Fanny Snewing,

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and I think it says a lot about the way women's work was regarded

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in the 19th century that under occupation there's nothing.

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She doesn't have an occupation, according to the census,

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and yet, the couple have six children.

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There's a 13-year-old, 12-year-old, ten-year-old, seven-year-old,

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three-year-old and an eight-month-old baby.

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So she's not exactly living a life of leisure.

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The other resident is a 19-year-old domestic servant.

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The fact that they can afford a domestic servant

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and they can afford to live here

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means that they're probably not rich, but they're certainly

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going to be a comfortable,

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relatively well-off middle-class family.

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In the basement of 62 Falkner Street

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was the kitchen

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and a bedroom, where we THINK

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their domestic servant lived.

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On the ground floor, at the rear,

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a day room, where the Snewings lived on a day-to-day basis.

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At the front, the dining room, used only for entertaining guests.

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On the first floor was the parlour, the grandest room in the house.

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Just for best.

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Across the way, the main bedroom.

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Used by William and Fanny.

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Then, on the top floor, were bedrooms.

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Most likely shared by the six Snewing children.

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Inside the house you can begin to imagine what it must've been like

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when it was the family home of the Snewings.

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You wonder - what were the sounds that echoed around

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these corridors and these rooms?

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Did they have a piano, like many people did?

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Did the children sit in this room and have piano lessons?

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Did they go out and buy one of the new gramophones?

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The main sound for many, many years in this house

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must have been the sounds of children, SIX children.

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FAINT ECHO OF CHILDREN PLAYING AND LAUGHING

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The two youngest, Lillian and Mabel, were actually born in the house.

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Ranging in age from teenagers to toddlers,

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the ground floor day room would have been full

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of their toys and games.

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This is one of the last remaining original features in the house

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and you can imagine children sliding down this banister

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and really taking possession of the house and making it really feel

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and sound like a family home.

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Around the back were stables,

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where the Snewings probably kept their main form of transport...

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A horse and cart.

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If we take a look at the jobs their neighbours did

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it gives us a good indication

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of how the social status of the street's residents has changed.

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There's a draper's agent, a brush-maker.

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A watchmaker and a painter.

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These are not the merchant and managerial classes

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who once lived here.

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By the 1890s,

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Falkner Street was clearly less fashionable than it had been.

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The Snewings first appear

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in Liverpool's Gore's Directory in 1877.

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When they're living in nearby Upper Hope Place.

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By the 1890s they had made enough money to move up the ladder into

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the much larger 62 Falkner Street.

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As this early footage of Liverpool shows,

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horses powered all forms of transport on the city's streets.

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So saddlery and harness-making were profitable trades to be in.

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TRAIN WHISTLE HOOTS

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Even the coming of the railways didn't dent the industry.

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In fact, the number of working horses increased dramatically

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as they were still needed to move goods to and from stations.

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In the city, they lugged carts laden with goods from the docks,

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pulled trams, and carriages owned by wealthy merchants.

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There were over three million

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working horses in Britain at the time.

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But I have a question.

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If William Snewing did run a saddlery business, how big was it?

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The 1891 census simply tells us he's a saddle-maker.

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So I'm looking back through the archives for more clues.

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The 1881 census tells us a little bit more.

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William is listed here as employing 11 men.

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So this is clearly a proper saddle-making business.

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And if we spin forward, 20 years through time to the 1901 census,

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we can see that their son, William Junior, who was then 23,

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has joined the firm as a saddler's assistant.

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So this is a classic family business.

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I've trawled through trade magazines and newspapers,

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looking for references to Snewing Saddle-makers, but found nothing.

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In fact, I could see no reference to them anywhere.

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I need to find some sort of family connection.

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By forward tracing Snewing descendants, using birth,

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marriage and death certificates, I HAVE tracked down a relative,

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who I hope can provide some answers.

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SHE LAUGHS

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Eileen Burkenshaw's husband John was William's grandson.

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He was absolutely besotted with the history of the Snewings.

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She has found photographs of William and Fanny

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taken around the turn of the 20th century.

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She also has a picture of William's uncle, Charles Snewing,

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that gives us a clue

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as to where William's passion for horses came from.

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This is a painting of Caratacus,

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with Charles Snewing and, of course, the jockey,

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and this blue is the Snewing colour.

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They won the Derby.

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And this is 1862, so you can see why he wanted to be in the horse trade.

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-Yes.

-Yeah.

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-It's in the blood, clearly.

-Yes.

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As a young man, his uncle's success at the Derby

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must have made a deep impression on William.

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And Eileen has another family treasure

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that I'm hoping will provide more clues

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about William's saddlery business.

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All that we know about the Snewings was in this letter.

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-So this is real treasure?

-So this is...

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-LAUGHING:

-It's wonderful.

-So...

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-So, tell me, tell me...

-And all handwritten.

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..what it tells me.

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"William Snewing was always interested in horses,

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"and finding it either impossible or impracticable

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"to be a veterinary surgeon,

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"he joined the firm Mennies, who were leather merchants."

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So, he'd wanted to be a vet...

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-And couldn't...

-Couldn't get the training or...

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Perhaps he wasn't capable, I don't know.

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-Yes.

-So, he's gone to London to be an apprentice, I think?

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Yes, in saddlery, horsemanship, anything he could find, I suppose.

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Anyway... "William soon encountered obstacles to his plans.

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"Mennies had an agreement with all their staff,

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"that if they set up in opposition,

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"it had to be more than 50 miles away.

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"So, he chose the town,

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"which in 1875 was the most prosperous

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"and certainly the most aristocratic outside London - Liverpool.

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"He took over ownership by loan of Dobell & Son."

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Ah, Dobell & Sons.

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-Yes.

-That's the company's name?

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Yes.

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So it sounds like he's gone to London,

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learnt the leather trade

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and then decided to take those skills out into a new venture...

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-Mm-hm.

-..and chosen Liverpool and come to the town

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and then bought this company.

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Now I have the name of the company,

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I can look them up in Gore's Directory.

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And it reveals that Dobell & Son were based at 31 Church Street.

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Today, Church Street is exactly what it was back in the 19th century,

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it's one of Liverpool's main shopping streets.

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It's about 20 minutes by foot from Falkner Street up the hill,

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but William and Fanny Snewing

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probably didn't come down here by foot,

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they probably came in a horse and carriage.

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And they had to come down here

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because that's the site of their saddlery and harness shop.

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This is a prime city centre location,

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and you can imagine what the shop would have been like,

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with the saddles and the harnesses all around the door, decorating it.

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It would have looked like what it is, a thriving city centre business,

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involved in a trade that was essential to the lives of absolutely

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everybody in the late 19th century.

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They were in a prime location, so presumably, doing well.

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I want to know the type of saddlery Dobell & Sons were making,

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and who they were selling it to.

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So I've come to what was once the heart

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of the Victorian saddle-making industry...

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Walsall, in the West Midlands.

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Today, it's still a centre for leather-working.

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A select few make saddles here for the leisure market.

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The curator of Walsall's Leather Museum, Michael Glasson,

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has been searching the archives for any reference to Dobell & Son.

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-Mike.

-Hi, David.

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Hi. What have you found?

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Well, we found a few obscure references to Dobell & Sons.

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They're not easy to track down.

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Here we've got a reference to the Liverpool International Exhibition,

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and Dobell & Sons win a prize -

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this is 1886 - for their saddlery and bridles.

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So it suggests that it's... You know, it's high-end stuff.

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Michael has also found some classified adverts,

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placed in Liverpool newspapers.

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We've got one here, too -

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a light set silver-mounted harness by Dobell.

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And then another one here, too...

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Plated mountings on a set of double and single harness

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by Dobell & Son.

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These are the metal parts?

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These are the metal parts, the sort of the buckles,

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and the sort of ornate fittings.

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So this stuff is really desirable.

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-It's part...

-Blingy, yes.

-Yeah.

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-So, patent, shiny leather...

-Yeah.

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-..and nice silver buckles and metalwork.

-Yes.

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So you can imagine, it would be very striking.

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So William Snewing's Liverpool shop

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focused on the top end of the market.

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What's happening in the late 19th century is that increasingly,

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the cheaper saddlery and harness is being made in Walsall.

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-Where we are now.

-Where we are now, in factories like this,

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and there were about 200 factories in Walsall,

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are really cornering the market in ready-made saddlery and harness,

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and they're very, very good at it

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and they can churn it out really cheaply.

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But their secret weapon, their competitive advantage,

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is the fact that unlike the saddlers in Liverpool and other centres,

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they're getting all the stitching done by women stitchers.

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Male saddle-makers were paid up to 40 shillings a week.

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But they could get away with paying women just ten shillings.

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That was less than a third of the wage needed

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to support a family in the 1890s.

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Exploiting women gave Walsall saddle-makers a competitive edge

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and allowed them to produce more saddlery at a cheaper rate.

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Dobell & Son in Liverpool couldn't hope to compete in this market.

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So for Dobell & Sons, the options are either you sack all the male

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saddle-makers, hire a load of women and pay them peanuts,

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-or you go into the top end of the market.

-Yeah.

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-So they are providing services to the wealthy...

-Yes.

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..and that's where you can manage to find a niche in the market

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cos you can't compete with what's being produced here in Walsall.

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-Yeah, yeah.

-So it's quite clever what they've done.

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Yes, yes.

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By 1897, the Snewings had lived in 62 Falkner Street

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for seven years.

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In that same year,

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Gore's Directory shows that Dobell & Son have moved from Church Street

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in the heart of the city.

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Their new address is 22 Paradise Street.

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These days, Paradise Street has been very much tidied up,

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but in the 19th century, this was a side street,

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it was off the main thoroughfare, away from the route to the docks,

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and so for the Snewings to relocate their shop to here,

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and we think their shop was somewhere around here,

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has got to mean that they were downsizing,

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that their business was in decline.

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By the late 1890s, we know transport was about to be revolutionised.

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But to establish what was hitting Dobell & Son's trade,

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I've tracked down a sixth-generation saddle manufacturer,

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who has spent his life working in the industry...

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-Cliff Kirby-Tibbits.

-..An ongoing problem.

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Some of the people started to buy bikes,

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and latterly you then had the car.

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And, in fact, if you read this article here from Saddlery And Harness News...

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-So this is the trade magazine?

-This is the Bible.

-Right.

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"Now we hear another cry threatening the extinction

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"of the horse on our roads.

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"Carriages propelled along the highway by machinery worked by

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"a small quantity of petroleum are now causing great excitement."

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Then it goes on to say that,

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"We have nothing at all to fear from motor carriages."

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CLIFF LAUGHS

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So they're pretty confident that the car's a fad.

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It seems obvious to us today

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that the car was going to decimate the saddle business,

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-but it's not obvious to them at the time, is it?

-No.

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In 1895, the total number of cars in Britain was 14.

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Then along came a vehicle that changed everything.

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The Ford Model T.

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Launched in Detroit in 1908, it brought motoring to the masses.

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By 1910, the number of cars in Britain was 100,000.

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What was different about this car to the other cars that had come before it?

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This was mass-produced on a production line.

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And they even moved production to Manchester.

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So this was cheaper?

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Cheaper, quicker, more reliable.

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So what did saddle-making companies do to try to adapt and survive?

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My great-grandfather Frederick realised early on

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that you had to diversify to survive.

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And this just shows you what we used to make.

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-Oh, really?

-Leggings.

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-So putties that the Army wore.

-Oh, yes.

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Dog clothing, look at this.

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That's lovely. It's with a hood.

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I actually want one of these. DAVID LAUGHS

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We moved into items like this...

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-This is a medicine ball, isn't it?

-That is a medicine ball.

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Six pounds.

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We were making footballs,

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we had 600 women stitching footballs in the 1930s.

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We're still making saddle and harness, but in smaller quantities.

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For the Snewings, the speed of change must have been terrifying.

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If they didn't adapt fast, they were dead in the water.

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The 1911 census tells us 20 years after moving in,

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the Snewings are STILL living at 62 Falkner Street.

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It should also reveal how their company, Dobell & Son, is doing.

0:20:390:20:43

What this document tells us is that the company is still going,

0:20:450:20:48

but that it's not being run any more by William.

0:20:480:20:51

Instead it lists Fanny Snewing as the employer.

0:20:510:20:55

And the company is still described

0:20:550:20:57

as a manufacturer of harnesses and saddles,

0:20:570:21:00

which means they haven't chosen to diversify

0:21:000:21:03

or to produce any other sorts of leather goods.

0:21:030:21:06

It looks like the firm is still in business,

0:21:080:21:11

but why is Fanny now listed as the person running it?

0:21:110:21:15

I've called up William's death certificate,

0:21:160:21:19

and it reveals that he dies in 1908, aged 66, in his home -

0:21:190:21:23

62 Falkner Street.

0:21:230:21:25

The cause of death is listed as Bright's disease,

0:21:270:21:31

a chronic inflammation of the kidneys.

0:21:310:21:33

So that's the reason why Fanny is registered in the 1911 census

0:21:350:21:40

as being the one who's running the family business.

0:21:400:21:43

And it's also significant that in that 1911 census,

0:21:440:21:47

it shows that their son, Charles,

0:21:470:21:49

who was then single and 32 years old,

0:21:490:21:52

was working as a travelling salesman for Reckitt's & Co,

0:21:520:21:55

who were a chemical company.

0:21:550:21:57

He'd chosen not to join the family saddle business.

0:21:570:22:02

So perhaps the writing was already on the wall for the Snewings

0:22:020:22:06

and their family business.

0:22:060:22:08

While Fanny Snewing tries to keep the business afloat and a roof over

0:22:100:22:13

their heads, she has no idea what's about to hit the country.

0:22:130:22:18

In July 1914, the First World War broke out.

0:22:240:22:28

Almost a million horses were requisitioned from farms and cities

0:22:340:22:38

to haul guns, ambulances and ammunition wagons.

0:22:380:22:41

For the residents of 62 Falkner Street,

0:22:490:22:51

demand for military saddles and harnesses

0:22:510:22:54

SHOULD have provided a much-needed boost to their business.

0:22:540:22:57

But there was no call for the posh saddles they made.

0:23:000:23:04

What the Army needed was cheap saddles made as quickly as possible.

0:23:040:23:09

Worse was to come for the whole saddle industry...

0:23:100:23:13

..when hundreds of thousands of horses died at the front.

0:23:140:23:17

This is Liverpool after the First World War.

0:23:270:23:30

And it's clear that electric trams...

0:23:300:23:33

..lorries...

0:23:360:23:37

TRAM BELL RINGS

0:23:400:23:42

..and, of course, petrol cars were replacing the horse.

0:23:420:23:46

What I haven't been able to find is a single advertisement that leads me

0:23:500:23:54

to believe that Dobell & Son were still operating,

0:23:540:23:57

that they were still trading throughout the 1920s or the 1930s.

0:23:570:24:00

And what that leads me to believe is that the company failed to diversify,

0:24:000:24:04

and they continued to try to make traditional saddles and harnesses

0:24:040:24:08

in the traditional way,

0:24:080:24:10

and that by the time Fanny died in 1934,

0:24:100:24:12

there wasn't a company to leave to her eldest son.

0:24:120:24:15

And if that's the case,

0:24:150:24:16

it is a really sad end to a proud Liverpool company

0:24:160:24:20

and a sad end for a proud Liverpool family,

0:24:200:24:23

who lived in 62 Falkner Street for 45 years,

0:24:230:24:26

longer than any other family.

0:24:260:24:28

Fanny Snewing's death certificate tells us that she,

0:24:320:24:35

like her husband 26 years earlier, died here at 62 Falkner Street.

0:24:350:24:40

Her son, Charles, still living at home, was at her side.

0:24:430:24:47

A few months later,

0:24:500:24:52

the house was on the market for the first time in two generations.

0:24:520:24:56

The '30s were a tough time for Liverpool.

0:25:020:25:05

The Wall Street crash had resulted in economic turmoil

0:25:050:25:08

around the world.

0:25:080:25:10

International trade was badly hit

0:25:120:25:14

and had a profound effect on Liverpool's port.

0:25:140:25:18

And those who worked there.

0:25:180:25:20

One in five Liverpudlians found themselves out of work -

0:25:220:25:26

double the national average.

0:25:260:25:28

The depression also hit house prices.

0:25:380:25:41

Although the Land Registry records for Liverpool in this period

0:25:420:25:45

are incomplete,

0:25:450:25:46

it's likely that the new owners got 62 Falkner Street

0:25:460:25:50

at a bargain price.

0:25:500:25:51

The 1935 electoral register tells us they were a couple.

0:25:560:26:01

Robert and Sarah Ann Duffy.

0:26:010:26:04

I've tracked down the birth certificates

0:26:060:26:08

for Robert and Sarah Ann

0:26:080:26:09

and what they tell us is that Robert was born in 1870 in Liverpool,

0:26:090:26:13

and Sarah Ann was born four years later, 1874, in Manchester.

0:26:130:26:19

So they are relatively old when they buy 62 Falkner Street.

0:26:190:26:23

Robert - 66, Sarah Ann - 62.

0:26:230:26:25

And they must've had a reasonably large amount of cash to buy the house outright.

0:26:250:26:30

We can find out a little bit more about them through their certificate of marriage.

0:26:300:26:34

They got married in 1902, Robert was 31, Sarah Ann was 27.

0:26:340:26:39

It tells us Robert was a tailor and Sarah Ann, a dressmaker,

0:26:410:26:45

so perhaps they met in the trade.

0:26:450:26:47

We also know quite a lot about Robert's life

0:26:500:26:52

leading up to buying 62 Falkner Street at the age of 64.

0:26:520:26:56

His father, also Robert Duffy, was a cotton porter.

0:26:580:27:02

Now that's a manual job.

0:27:020:27:04

It's the very bottom rung of the rag trade.

0:27:040:27:07

This also tells us that the family are living in Renshaw Street, in Liverpool,

0:27:070:27:11

which is described here as court housing.

0:27:110:27:15

FAINT ECHO OF BABY CRYING

0:27:160:27:19

Court housing was the very worst slum accommodation

0:27:190:27:23

Liverpool had to offer.

0:27:230:27:25

Built around a central courtyard with a communal water pump,

0:27:300:27:33

they typically had just two toilets for 80 residents.

0:27:330:27:37

A far cry from a four-storey townhouse like 62 Falkner Street.

0:27:410:27:46

This is not a very auspicious start for the young Robert Duffy.

0:27:500:27:54

To discover how a boy from the slums

0:27:570:27:59

rose to become the owner of our house,

0:27:590:28:02

I've tracked down one of his relatives.

0:28:020:28:05

There's that one of Sarah.

0:28:060:28:07

Ceilia Ellis, now 71, lives in Matlock, Derbyshire

0:28:080:28:12

and is Robert and Sarah Ann Duffy's granddaughter.

0:28:120:28:16

Is he somebody in your family who you are proud of?

0:28:160:28:19

Very proud of him, yes, yes.

0:28:190:28:22

I would have loved to have met him, but he died before I was born.

0:28:220:28:25

He was ambitious, but he was kind.

0:28:250:28:27

My mother told me that he came across some children with no shoes

0:28:270:28:32

and he bought each of them a pair of shoes.

0:28:320:28:34

And so that shows just how caring he was.

0:28:340:28:38

But when he saw childhood poverty,

0:28:380:28:39

it kind of maybe triggered something in him?

0:28:390:28:41

Yes, yes, that's right.

0:28:410:28:43

-You can take the boy out of the slum, but, uh...

-Yes.

0:28:430:28:45

SHE LAUGHS

0:28:450:28:46

Although Ceilia can't remember Robert, she CAN recall her grandma,

0:28:460:28:51

Robert's wife, Sarah Ann.

0:28:510:28:53

This is the sewing box my grandma had.

0:28:540:28:57

So the tools of the trade for someone who'd been a seamstress?

0:28:570:29:00

-Yes.

-It's a lovely thing.

0:29:000:29:01

It is.

0:29:010:29:03

She gave me this book when I was a little girl.

0:29:030:29:06

-And this is Sarah's handwriting?

-That is, yes.

0:29:060:29:09

It says, "To my dear little granddaughter, Ceceilia.

0:29:090:29:12

"From Grandma, with lots of love,

0:29:120:29:14

"Christmas 1955."

0:29:140:29:16

That means an awful lot to me, that book.

0:29:160:29:19

I can't give a value to it because it's so special.

0:29:190:29:22

What do you recall of what Sarah told you about her childhood?

0:29:220:29:27

I knew that she hadn't had a happy childhood

0:29:270:29:30

and she found it difficult to forget that.

0:29:300:29:33

-So these are drawings that you did...

-Yes.

0:29:330:29:36

..of Sarah's childhood, how you imagined it?

0:29:360:29:39

Her mother was very, very strict

0:29:390:29:40

and she had to do several jobs before she went to school.

0:29:400:29:43

One was cleaning and polishing the range in the kitchen,

0:29:430:29:47

and another job she had to do

0:29:470:29:48

was polishing her mother's shoes and fastening them for her,

0:29:480:29:52

and if she pulled the laces too tight, then she was hit.

0:29:520:29:54

So you can gather from that,

0:29:540:29:56

she didn't have a happy childhood.

0:29:560:29:58

We'd call that today an abusive childhood.

0:29:580:30:00

Yes. And I think it's something that she...

0:30:000:30:03

never forgot.

0:30:030:30:05

Cos it does seem she had a really happy later life.

0:30:050:30:08

She did, yes.

0:30:080:30:10

It was very fortunate that she met my grandfather.

0:30:100:30:13

They were very close.

0:30:130:30:15

Sarah Ann's rise is even more remarkable,

0:30:190:30:22

given her difficult childhood.

0:30:220:30:24

Searching through the newspapers,

0:30:260:30:27

I've come across an article which backs up Ceilia's story.

0:30:270:30:31

This is an article from one of the Manchester newspapers from the year 1887.

0:30:340:30:38

It's a report into cases of cruelty to children,

0:30:380:30:41

and the victim of one of these cases is Sarah Ann Duffy,

0:30:410:30:45

then the 12-year-old girl Sarah Ann Gemmell.

0:30:450:30:48

And her abuser is her own mother, Elizabeth Gemmell.

0:30:480:30:53

What seems to have happened is that Sarah Ann was taken to a children's shelter

0:30:530:30:57

and there she was examined by a doctor.

0:30:570:31:00

And he found her covered all over the back,

0:31:000:31:03

from her head to her feet, with bruises.

0:31:030:31:06

When the doctor counted these bruises,

0:31:060:31:08

he reported that there were 33 double bruises from 8-12 inches long

0:31:080:31:13

and four short, thick bruises.

0:31:130:31:16

Now, when Sarah Ann's mother was confronted

0:31:160:31:19

with her child's injuries,

0:31:190:31:20

she admitted that she'd stripped her naked and then beat her with a

0:31:200:31:25

piece of clothesline, and the reason for this was because Sarah Ann

0:31:250:31:28

had fallen out with another child.

0:31:280:31:30

Because of these injuries, Elizabeth Gemmell was summoned

0:31:300:31:33

to the Society For The Prevention Of Cruelty To Children.

0:31:330:31:37

This was an era in which parental rights were everything.

0:31:400:31:44

The Victorian writer, Whatley Cooke-Taylor,

0:31:440:31:47

claimed he "would far rather see

0:31:470:31:49

"even a higher rate of infant mortality prevailing

0:31:490:31:52

"than intrude one iota on the sanctity of the domestic hearth."

0:31:520:31:57

That view was challenged in the 1880s

0:31:580:32:01

when, here, in Liverpool,

0:32:010:32:03

the Society For The Prevention Of Cruelty To Children was set up...

0:32:030:32:07

A forerunner of the NSPCC.

0:32:070:32:10

Sarah Ann was one of its early cases.

0:32:110:32:14

It was entirely normal in the late 19th century for children to be

0:32:160:32:21

disciplined and punished violently.

0:32:210:32:24

Children were smacked at home,

0:32:240:32:27

they were beaten and subject to corporal punishment at school,

0:32:270:32:29

and very few people saw anything wrong in that.

0:32:290:32:32

So, for Sarah Ann's case to have ended up in the newspapers

0:32:320:32:35

and her mother to be summoned to the authorities,

0:32:350:32:37

it must have been extreme.

0:32:370:32:40

Of all the people I have met who lived at 62 Falkner Street,

0:32:410:32:45

the one who you hope recovered

0:32:450:32:48

and had a happy life has got to be Sarah Ann Duffy,

0:32:480:32:52

the 12-year-old girl covered in bruises.

0:32:520:32:56

And so it is wonderful to learn that she did go on to have a happy life,

0:32:560:33:01

that her and Robert found one another

0:33:010:33:04

and lived together in love and happiness,

0:33:040:33:09

and that the abuse that she suffered

0:33:090:33:11

did not shape and direct the rest of her life.

0:33:110:33:14

But how exactly did Sarah Ann and Robert

0:33:220:33:25

turn their lives around and rise from the slums?

0:33:250:33:29

Official records tell us that by the time they married in 1902,

0:33:360:33:40

Robert had surpassed his father's job as a cotton porter.

0:33:400:33:44

In the 1901 census,

0:33:450:33:47

Robert has risen up to become a tailor's cutter.

0:33:470:33:51

A cutter was one of the most important jobs in tailoring.

0:33:530:33:57

Responsible for designing the suit

0:33:580:34:01

and making patterns to form the panels of the garment.

0:34:010:34:04

By the age of 40, Robert's skills are in high demand.

0:34:070:34:11

In the 1911 census,

0:34:130:34:16

we can see that Robert Duffy

0:34:160:34:17

has risen to the top of his profession,

0:34:170:34:20

he is now a master tailor, he has transformed his life.

0:34:200:34:24

He no longer has a hands-on job,

0:34:250:34:28

he was now running his own tailoring business.

0:34:280:34:30

But Robert Duffy, together with his wife, Sarah Ann,

0:34:320:34:35

still had ambitions.

0:34:350:34:37

In the 1920s and '30s, they invested their money...

0:34:420:34:46

..building up an impressive portfolio

0:34:470:34:50

of businesses and houses for rent,

0:34:500:34:53

including our house, 62 Falkner Street.

0:34:530:34:57

After living in number 62 for a year, Robert and Sarah move out.

0:34:590:35:04

But they keep the house and rent out rooms.

0:35:050:35:08

Until now, this has been a residence

0:35:130:35:16

for merchants and middle-class families.

0:35:160:35:19

By 1939, though,

0:35:200:35:22

62 Falkner Street was not the desirable home it had once been.

0:35:220:35:26

I've discovered some adverts the Duffys placed in local papers

0:35:300:35:34

that give us clues as to how the house was divided up.

0:35:340:35:38

One offers a furnished basement and bedroom, own linen, no children.

0:35:410:35:46

Another, furnished or unfurnished rooms.

0:35:490:35:52

The basement kitchen and servant's quarters are most likely converted

0:35:590:36:03

to provide rooms to rent.

0:36:030:36:05

And the hall, stairs and bathroom

0:36:060:36:08

were communal areas,

0:36:080:36:10

shared by all the tenants.

0:36:100:36:12

Professor Deborah Sugg Ryan is an expert on how people in the past

0:36:180:36:21

lived in their homes.

0:36:210:36:23

These rented rooms are not like self-contained flats or bedsits,

0:36:240:36:28

it's simply tenants occupying individual rooms.

0:36:280:36:32

They probably didn't even have locks on the doors.

0:36:320:36:34

But one of the things they would be doing

0:36:360:36:38

would be sharing the washing facilities in the house.

0:36:380:36:40

With all these different tenants,

0:36:450:36:46

the hallway, the stairs and the landings

0:36:460:36:49

would have accumulated quite a lot of dirt and grime.

0:36:490:36:52

Despite their relative poverty,

0:36:550:36:57

the women tenants of the house would have had a rota

0:36:570:37:00

for cleaning the front steps

0:37:000:37:02

and keeping the portion of pavement outside of the house clean.

0:37:020:37:05

The Duffys' tenants, packed into 62 Falkner Street,

0:37:090:37:13

were now very much working men and their families.

0:37:130:37:17

There's Joseph Ward, a dock labourer,

0:37:170:37:20

his wife Patricia and their daughter.

0:37:200:37:23

James Flood, a builder's labourer and his wife.

0:37:230:37:26

Patrick Behan, a bricklayer,

0:37:270:37:29

his wife Eileen and their son and daughter.

0:37:290:37:31

Jack Greenall, a dock labourer, his wife Florence and their son.

0:37:310:37:36

And Mary Hallsall, a hotel cook.

0:37:360:37:38

ECHO OF AIR RAID SIREN

0:37:400:37:44

Their worlds were about to be turned upside down on September 3, 1939.

0:37:440:37:50

The residents of the house had survived the First World War,

0:37:520:37:55

but they were under threat again as World War II broke out.

0:37:550:37:59

Liverpool found itself in the line of fire.

0:38:020:38:05

Its port was vital to the war effort.

0:38:090:38:11

Two-thirds of Britain's food was imported.

0:38:140:38:17

Cattle, dairy products, sugar, oil,

0:38:200:38:24

wheat and fruit all came through the city's docks.

0:38:240:38:29

To cut off supplies,

0:38:340:38:35

the German Air Force conducted 68 air raids on Merseyside...

0:38:350:38:39

..peaking in a seven-night blitz in May, 1941.

0:38:400:38:44

This footage reveals the destruction wrought upon Liverpool.

0:38:470:38:51

The Germans were targeting the docks and the city's infrastructure,

0:38:530:38:56

but, in the process, destroyed huge areas of housing -

0:38:560:39:00

a real threat to our house and to the residents of Falkner Street.

0:39:000:39:05

These documents are the bomb reports.

0:39:050:39:07

They're a report of every bomb that drops in this part of Liverpool in May, 1941.

0:39:070:39:12

Now that was the very darkest days of the Second World War

0:39:120:39:15

for the city of Liverpool,

0:39:150:39:16

because for night after night, the Luftwaffe targeted the city.

0:39:160:39:20

And this area, Falkner Street and the streets around it,

0:39:200:39:23

didn't escape their attention.

0:39:230:39:26

On the 2nd of May, the second day of the so-called May Blitz,

0:39:270:39:30

bombs fall on the junction of Falkner Street and Bedford Street.

0:39:300:39:34

Well, this is Bedford Street, this is Falkner Street,

0:39:340:39:38

and our house is just there.

0:39:380:39:41

And the report says, "The bombs fell in the roadway,"

0:39:410:39:44

which means that they fall right here.

0:39:440:39:46

Our house is 20, 30 metres away from where bombs are dropping.

0:39:460:39:50

It is metres away from being destroyed.

0:39:500:39:53

The bomb reports use codes.

0:39:530:39:55

H.E. means high explosive bomb, I.B. means incendiary bomb,

0:39:550:39:59

and both types of bomb

0:39:590:40:00

have fallen on Falkner Street and Bedford Street on this night,

0:40:000:40:03

because there's a fire in Bedford Street,

0:40:030:40:05

the streets are blocked by a crater.

0:40:050:40:07

There's debris burning in the houses

0:40:070:40:09

between Falkner Street and Myrtle Street,

0:40:090:40:11

which is just over there.

0:40:110:40:13

The next night, the 3rd of May, 1941,

0:40:150:40:18

Liverpool suffered the worst bombing in its history.

0:40:180:40:22

Hundreds of people were killed.

0:40:270:40:29

Few eyewitnesses remain of those fateful nights in May, 1941.

0:40:340:40:39

But one current resident of Falkner Street,

0:40:430:40:46

just a few doors down from number 62, lived through it all...

0:40:460:40:51

June Furlong.

0:40:510:40:53

How long have you lived in Falkner Street, June?

0:40:540:40:56

I was born here 87 years ago.

0:40:560:40:59

I was born in this room.

0:40:590:41:01

So you remember that week and a half in May, 1941, when Liverpool really

0:41:010:41:06

-gets hammered by the Luftwaffe?

-Yes. Yes, I do.

0:41:060:41:10

-What happened?

-We had a bomb,

0:41:100:41:12

an incendiary bomb that came in, I remember that!

0:41:120:41:15

An incendiary bomb came through the ceiling of your house and it didn't go off?

0:41:150:41:19

Well, around the lampposts around here were bags of sand, you see?

0:41:190:41:23

And the sand put out these bombs.

0:41:230:41:26

Cos these are bombs that are designed to cause a fire, not to explode.

0:41:260:41:29

Yes. So my grandfather said to my mother,

0:41:290:41:33

"Flo, go out and get a bag of that sand for this bomb," you see?

0:41:330:41:37

They put it out.

0:41:370:41:38

Residents of Falkner Street

0:41:390:41:41

could buy a Morrison air raid shelter for £7...

0:41:410:41:45

A metal box that doubled as a kitchen table.

0:41:450:41:48

We had here a pit bull mastiff dog and the pups,

0:41:500:41:53

and when the sirens went,

0:41:530:41:54

the whole family had got under that great, big table -

0:41:540:41:58

also the dog and all these pups!

0:41:580:42:00

So I remember all that, everybody under the table,

0:42:000:42:03

not in the air raid shelters.

0:42:030:42:04

That was funny. And that's true, and it was...

0:42:040:42:08

You wouldn't get hit on the head, I suppose, with bombs.

0:42:080:42:11

I remember that.

0:42:110:42:12

It would have been the same story in 62 Falkner Street.

0:42:160:42:19

These are just some of the bombs

0:42:230:42:25

to fall on the streets around our house.

0:42:250:42:27

It's a miracle that number 62 survived.

0:42:330:42:37

When you walk along Falkner Street

0:42:400:42:42

and you see this mix of 19th-century houses

0:42:420:42:45

built in the 1840s like our house,

0:42:450:42:47

and then modern developments from the '60s

0:42:470:42:49

or more recent developments,

0:42:490:42:51

some of it is due to what happened in the spring of 1941.

0:42:510:42:55

The real cost of the Liverpool Blitz

0:43:040:43:06

has got to be measured in human lives,

0:43:060:43:08

4,000 people died in this city as a result of German bombing.

0:43:080:43:12

But the other cost was in the destruction of property.

0:43:120:43:15

Now, Falkner Street was already in decline

0:43:200:43:22

before the Second World War,

0:43:220:43:24

but the level of bomb damage, the destruction of houses,

0:43:240:43:27

the gaps that were left between the houses,

0:43:270:43:30

the bombsites that littered this whole area,

0:43:300:43:32

that really accelerated the street's decline.

0:43:320:43:36

Throughout this period, a variety of tenants lived at 62 Falkner Street,

0:43:420:43:47

in rooms rented from Robert and Sarah Ann Duffy.

0:43:470:43:50

Then, on the 6th of December, 1941,

0:43:520:43:56

as Liverpool lived in fear of more attacks,

0:43:560:43:59

Robert Duffy died, aged 71.

0:43:590:44:02

Sarah Ann had lost not just her husband of almost 40 years,

0:44:050:44:09

but also her soulmate.

0:44:090:44:11

She was now a widow in a city bludgeoned by war.

0:44:130:44:17

The last will and testament of Robert Duffy

0:44:190:44:22

is a truly remarkable document.

0:44:220:44:24

This is a man who was born in the courtyard slums

0:44:240:44:28

of late Victorian Liverpool,

0:44:280:44:30

and yet, on his death, he's able to leave money to charity

0:44:300:44:33

and amply care for the future of his family.

0:44:330:44:36

The first thing he does

0:44:360:44:38

is he bequeaths unto the RAF Benevolent Fund

0:44:380:44:41

the sum of £100.

0:44:410:44:43

Now, in his final months,

0:44:430:44:46

Robert will have witnessed

0:44:460:44:47

the RAF desperately trying to protect Liverpool

0:44:470:44:50

from the German bombers of the Blitz

0:44:500:44:53

and he clearly understood their sacrifice,

0:44:530:44:56

cos he leaves them not just the £100, but also two houses -

0:44:560:45:00

number 32 Princes Road, and our house, number 62 Falkner Street.

0:45:000:45:05

He then goes on to leave to his daughter, Margaret Elizabeth Criton,

0:45:070:45:11

shops and houses to care for her future.

0:45:110:45:15

And then finally, he speaks directly to his wife, Sarah Ann Duffy.

0:45:150:45:19

And he writes,

0:45:190:45:21

"All the remainder of my property,

0:45:210:45:23

"including stocks and shares, cash at the bank,

0:45:230:45:25

"and personal belongings go unto my wife, Sarah Ann Duffy,

0:45:250:45:29

"to whom I am eternally grateful

0:45:290:45:32

"for all her loving kindness and loyalty in our long, married life."

0:45:320:45:38

This is the final act of that long marriage,

0:45:390:45:42

a marriage of two people who were never supposed to make it in life,

0:45:420:45:46

and yet, they escaped from poverty.

0:45:460:45:48

A boy from the slums

0:45:480:45:50

and a girl who had been beaten and abused by her own mother,

0:45:500:45:54

and together they found wealth and happiness.

0:45:540:45:58

It is a beautiful, beautiful story.

0:45:580:46:01

62 Falkner Street was now the property

0:46:050:46:08

of the Royal Air Force Benevolent Fund.

0:46:080:46:10

Yet, the records show little changed.

0:46:130:46:16

Rooms were still being rented out...

0:46:170:46:20

And in 1941, as the war raged on,

0:46:210:46:25

one family living in the house particularly stand out.

0:46:250:46:29

John Greenall, his wife Florence and their young son.

0:46:310:46:36

They're both 31 years old

0:46:360:46:38

and John is described as a "wharf labourer, light work,"

0:46:380:46:42

which means he works down at the docks.

0:46:420:46:44

Florence is described as doing unpaid domestic duties,

0:46:440:46:48

which probably means she's a housewife

0:46:480:46:51

and that she's looking after their son, John Junior,

0:46:510:46:53

who's just six years old.

0:46:530:46:55

Another thing we learn is that John's father,

0:46:560:46:59

also called John, was a foreman stevedore.

0:46:590:47:02

So he also works down at the docks,

0:47:020:47:05

but in a much more senior position to his son.

0:47:050:47:08

The 31-year-old John Greenall, known to his family as Jack,

0:47:100:47:14

was one of tens of thousands of men working at Liverpool's docks,

0:47:140:47:18

loading and unloading ships.

0:47:180:47:21

In an age before mechanisation, all of this was done by hand.

0:47:230:47:28

They worked in teams around the clock,

0:47:300:47:32

under the supervision of a foreman.

0:47:320:47:35

A job that was tough in peacetime was even harder during the war.

0:47:360:47:41

As a stevedore labourer,

0:47:440:47:45

Jack's take-home pay would have been just a few pounds a week.

0:47:450:47:48

Squeezed into just one room at 62 Falkner Street would have been Jack,

0:47:510:47:55

his wife Florence and their six-year-old son.

0:47:550:47:58

There was space for just the bare essentials.

0:48:000:48:03

In a local paper, I've come across an advert for what could very well

0:48:060:48:10

have been Jack and Florence's room,

0:48:100:48:14

complete with a kitchenette, a tiny kitchen area.

0:48:140:48:17

They would have had a small,

0:48:190:48:20

compact space to do their cooking

0:48:200:48:23

and food preparation in,

0:48:230:48:25

and what they were likely to have is one of these.

0:48:250:48:27

This is a kitchen cabinet.

0:48:270:48:29

These became popular in Britain from the mid-1920s.

0:48:290:48:34

So if I open it up here...

0:48:340:48:36

So you can see that you've got lots of places to store packets

0:48:410:48:45

and jars of food.

0:48:450:48:47

But where it really comes into its own,

0:48:470:48:49

is if I actually want to do some food preparation.

0:48:490:48:52

I can pull out this enamel top here,

0:48:520:48:55

and open the doors,

0:48:550:48:57

and, hey presto, I've got my own work surface here.

0:48:570:49:01

This is an incredibly useful piece of furniture,

0:49:030:49:06

because it's your entire kitchen in a cupboard.

0:49:060:49:10

And the nice thing about the kitchen cabinet

0:49:100:49:12

is that when it had been used,

0:49:120:49:14

it could all be shut up and put away.

0:49:140:49:16

We can get a real sense of how Jack,

0:49:200:49:22

Florence and their son John would have lived in their cramped space.

0:49:220:49:26

The kitchenette would probably have been at one end

0:49:280:49:31

and the beds at the other.

0:49:310:49:33

Then, in the middle, the kitchen table.

0:49:350:49:37

This was not just a place where the family sat down to have their meals,

0:49:390:49:44

it was more than this.

0:49:440:49:46

Lots of these women who had husbands on low incomes

0:49:460:49:50

needed to work to supplement the family income.

0:49:500:49:53

However, work outside the home was frowned upon,

0:49:550:49:59

so women often took in work that was hidden from view.

0:49:590:50:03

So the kinds of things that Florence might have done is took in

0:50:030:50:06

dressmaking or mending, or even piecework, like making matches.

0:50:060:50:12

With the kitchenette, table and beds crammed into one room,

0:50:130:50:17

there may have been no space for cooking.

0:50:170:50:19

Instead, Florence would have had access

0:50:210:50:24

to a communal stove on the landing.

0:50:240:50:26

It's likely that the Greenalls endured these cramped conditions

0:50:290:50:33

throughout the war.

0:50:330:50:34

I'm intrigued by Jack's background

0:50:380:50:41

and how he ended up living in one room at 62 Falkner Street.

0:50:410:50:45

He has no direct descendants,

0:50:470:50:49

but, by building his family tree,

0:50:490:50:51

I've managed to trace his niece, Jane Greenall.

0:50:510:50:55

There's Jack, he was the eldest boy.

0:50:550:50:58

-There's Jack.

-Yeah.

0:50:580:51:00

And that was my grandad and my grandmother.

0:51:000:51:02

So, your father was the baby of the family?

0:51:030:51:06

-He was the baby of the family.

-And Jack was his big brother?

0:51:060:51:08

Yes, yes.

0:51:080:51:10

Your grandfather looks like quite a stern character.

0:51:100:51:13

I think he probably was.

0:51:130:51:14

Obviously, I never knew him, he died before I was born.

0:51:140:51:17

I suppose the thing I have to remember about your grandfather is

0:51:170:51:19

I say he looks stern, but he is literally a Victorian.

0:51:190:51:22

-He is, yes.

-So I'm probably judging him a bit harshly.

0:51:220:51:26

I remember my dad saying that when Jack was a young boy -

0:51:260:51:32

I suppose he would have been in his teens -

0:51:320:51:35

he would come home late and me grandad would be hanging around, waiting for him coming in,

0:51:350:51:38

and he'd beat him up for coming in late.

0:51:380:51:41

And me dad wondered if that caused his epilepsy.

0:51:410:51:45

-Jack had epilepsy?

-He did, yes. Yes.

0:51:450:51:48

-He's working on the docks and he has epilepsy?

-That's right.

0:51:480:51:52

Yes.

0:51:520:51:54

Um, working on the docks, even if you're in full health,

0:51:540:51:57

is a very demanding, difficult job.

0:51:570:52:00

To do it with epilepsy...

0:52:000:52:02

It would have been very difficult, I would think, for him.

0:52:020:52:05

We don't know how severe Jack's condition was,

0:52:090:52:12

but in the 1930s and '40s,

0:52:120:52:15

there was a terrible stigma attached to any suggestion of epilepsy.

0:52:150:52:20

If the dock management had known about his condition,

0:52:200:52:24

he would have been refused work.

0:52:240:52:25

Yet, the records show, for several years,

0:52:280:52:31

Jack held down a job at the docks.

0:52:310:52:34

So could his father,

0:52:340:52:35

a foreman's stevedore, have helped his son to hide his condition?

0:52:350:52:39

Generations of Tony Nelson's family worked on the docks.

0:52:410:52:45

And he knows how the system operated.

0:52:460:52:50

So there was a culture? If you were one of the dockers, one of us,

0:52:500:52:53

they would look out for him?

0:52:530:52:55

Without a shadow of a doubt.

0:52:550:52:56

They would have given him light work, they would have looked after him.

0:52:560:52:59

They would have recognised he had to feed his family.

0:52:590:53:01

It wouldn't be the boss that'd look after him, it'd be his workmates.

0:53:010:53:04

So they were making allowances because he was part of their community?

0:53:040:53:08

Yes, that was the... Uh, the culture behind those dock walls.

0:53:080:53:12

And his father also worked as a foreman in these docks,

0:53:120:53:15

so would that have made things a bit easier for him?

0:53:150:53:17

It would have helped,

0:53:170:53:19

because it was the foreman that done the hiring and firing.

0:53:190:53:22

Dock labourers were casual workers.

0:53:280:53:30

Every day, Jack arrived at the docks,

0:53:360:53:38

more in hope than expectation.

0:53:380:53:40

He would line up in the pen, hoping that the foreman

0:53:420:53:44

would give him a tap on the shoulder to get a day's work.

0:53:440:53:47

So, obviously, if he's working with his father,

0:53:470:53:49

his father would have looked after him.

0:53:490:53:51

So he wouldn't be assured work, but it would have helped him.

0:53:510:53:53

And then, after going through all of that,

0:53:530:53:55

then he has a very physical day's work on the ship.

0:53:550:53:59

He was 24 hours a day, he was under stress.

0:54:000:54:03

He probably didn't sleep at night because of the air raids.

0:54:030:54:05

-He would probably walk to work.

-That's a couple of miles.

0:54:050:54:08

-Yeah.

-Before you get to work.

0:54:080:54:09

-Yeah.

-So even though he's working,

0:54:090:54:11

even though he's got a job, he's still living in poverty?

0:54:110:54:14

He would just about be able to feed his family on the pay

0:54:140:54:17

and he wasn't guaranteed that pay week after week.

0:54:170:54:19

And, basically, he had to rely on the goodwill of his workmates,

0:54:190:54:22

basically, to earn a living for his family.

0:54:220:54:25

So his income is unstable and unreliable

0:54:250:54:27

and he's got a disability,

0:54:270:54:28

and we're a few years before the NHS,

0:54:280:54:31

so he's got almost no access to medical help.

0:54:310:54:34

But it's impossible to see how he could've made his life any better.

0:54:340:54:39

He was living in abject poverty, yes.

0:54:390:54:41

To me, Jack is an everyday hero,

0:54:440:54:47

who worked in all conditions through the Liverpool Blitz.

0:54:470:54:51

It's difficult to overestimate just how strong, just how cohesive

0:54:530:54:57

working-class communities were in this era

0:54:570:55:00

and the dockers of Liverpool were a classic case.

0:55:000:55:03

Thanks to men like Jack and his father,

0:55:050:55:07

the port of Liverpool remained operational throughout the war.

0:55:070:55:11

Ensuring that Britain was fed, equipped and armed.

0:55:120:55:15

But I can't imagine how Jack Greenall

0:55:170:55:20

could have sustained his job

0:55:200:55:21

without his fellow workers and the protection of his father.

0:55:210:55:26

The sad truth is that he had little else.

0:55:260:55:28

Back home, in their room at 62 Falkner Street,

0:55:380:55:42

was his wife Florence.

0:55:420:55:43

When you think about the predicament that Florence was in during the war

0:55:450:55:48

years, your heart does go out to her,

0:55:480:55:51

because she's huddled in this house,

0:55:510:55:53

looking after a child,

0:55:530:55:55

while the bombs are literally falling in the streets all around,

0:55:550:55:58

and her husband is down at the docks, working every hour he could

0:55:580:56:02

just to try to keep their heads above water

0:56:020:56:05

and make a little bit of money.

0:56:050:56:06

And she will have had, through all of that,

0:56:060:56:08

two thoughts in the back of her mind.

0:56:080:56:11

The first is that the docks are the number one target for the German bombers,

0:56:110:56:15

and the second is that, at any moment, her husband could have

0:56:150:56:19

an epileptic seizure and be injured, or...or worse.

0:56:190:56:23

I want to know how long Jack and Florence endured these conditions.

0:56:270:56:32

But there are few records of casual labourers in the 1940s.

0:56:320:56:36

And Jack's trail runs cold.

0:56:360:56:38

There's only one document that can help me.

0:56:400:56:42

I've got hold of Jack Greenall's death certificate

0:56:440:56:47

and it tells us that he dies in 1950,

0:56:470:56:49

and that the cause of death

0:56:490:56:51

is myocardial failure due to an attack of epilepsy.

0:56:510:56:55

Now, every death certificate is a tragic document,

0:56:550:56:58

but this one is particularly poignant,

0:56:580:57:00

because under "occupation", it says

0:57:000:57:03

Jack is an invalid with no occupation,

0:57:030:57:07

and he's only 42 years old.

0:57:070:57:09

So it's clear that, at some point, he was no longer able to work,

0:57:090:57:12

no longer able to support his family,

0:57:120:57:14

and the only hope you have to have is that this is 1950,

0:57:140:57:18

this is two years after the foundation of the National Health Service,

0:57:180:57:22

the beginning of the welfare state.

0:57:220:57:24

You have to hope that Jack and Florence, in Jack's final years,

0:57:240:57:28

at least had some help from the state.

0:57:280:57:30

Unlike the Duffys and the Snewings,

0:57:330:57:35

the Greenall family didn't have the resources to weather the hard times,

0:57:350:57:40

and poverty was never far away.

0:57:400:57:43

But one thing all three families had in common was 62 Falkner Street,

0:57:460:57:52

the place which provided them with sanctuary during the most turbulent years of the 20th century.

0:57:520:57:58

We see the house through

0:58:040:58:05

the post-war years to the present.

0:58:050:58:08

The very existence of number 62 hangs by a thread.

0:58:080:58:12

And if the house is vacant,

0:58:120:58:13

then it was at serious risk of being demolished.

0:58:130:58:17

Riots rage on the doorstep.

0:58:180:58:20

And a new epidemic takes hold.

0:58:220:58:25

People were not going to recover from this.

0:58:250:58:27

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