Vienna
Registered Shopper
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2012
- Messages
- 6,008
So much changed in such a short time. My Mum had my oldest brother in 1943, in the single bedroom they rented in an elderly couple`s home. It was wartime and she gave birth in her own bed and was delivered by a lady who was considered to be the local midwife, though unqualified.
They boiled his nappies in a metal bucket over a coal fire, his terry nappies often took days to dry, there were blackouts daily and when he fell ill it was often old wives remedies which he was given.
Fast forward to the birth of my youngest brother in 1956, just 13 years later and after 2 more of us had been born in the interim and there was the NHS. Free ante natal care, free doctors visits, penicillin had become a prescription drug in 1948 and womens deaths from childbirth dropped dramatically as did childrens deaths.
Free National dried baby milk meant babies could be well fed, free orange juice meant rickets almost disappeared, if you broke a leg you had it x rayed, plastered and were given a free wheelchair or crutches, or if you needed stitches or crushed your hand in the factory you were seen by a doctor etc etc etc.
Life changed and Bevin`s from the cradle to the grave was truly believed in and the Country was rebuilding itself in many ways. Social housing was being built, people were moving out of slum areas onto new housing estates but alongside that came isolation, no local shops , no family backup and often far away from community hubs such as pubs, cinemas and places of work. Many people wanted to stay in the terraced back streets because it was home in more ways than one.
They boiled his nappies in a metal bucket over a coal fire, his terry nappies often took days to dry, there were blackouts daily and when he fell ill it was often old wives remedies which he was given.
Fast forward to the birth of my youngest brother in 1956, just 13 years later and after 2 more of us had been born in the interim and there was the NHS. Free ante natal care, free doctors visits, penicillin had become a prescription drug in 1948 and womens deaths from childbirth dropped dramatically as did childrens deaths.
Free National dried baby milk meant babies could be well fed, free orange juice meant rickets almost disappeared, if you broke a leg you had it x rayed, plastered and were given a free wheelchair or crutches, or if you needed stitches or crushed your hand in the factory you were seen by a doctor etc etc etc.
Life changed and Bevin`s from the cradle to the grave was truly believed in and the Country was rebuilding itself in many ways. Social housing was being built, people were moving out of slum areas onto new housing estates but alongside that came isolation, no local shops , no family backup and often far away from community hubs such as pubs, cinemas and places of work. Many people wanted to stay in the terraced back streets because it was home in more ways than one.