Archive Interview: Y08i004

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Speaker 1:

interviewerY08i004

Speaker 2:

informantY08i004a

Age Group:

51-60

Gender:

Female

Residence:

Tyneside - Newcastle

Education:

Left school at 15; subsequent NVQ (National Vocational Qualification)

Occupation:

Housing Officer

Speaker 3:

informantY08i004b

Age Group:

51-60

Gender:

Male

Residence:

Tyneside - Newcastle

Education:

Left school at 16; subsequent City and Guilds

Occupation:

Service Technician

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  Interview Transcript

Speaker 1:

Right ok. (unclear) Right so how long you lived in Newcastle and like whereabouts have you lived and know anything specific in the areas? Any incidents or neighbours that you remember and stuff like that?

Speaker 2:

Well I lived at -- I was born in Newcastle right in the centre of town right next to the football ground. As a child I can remember the old men queuing up (pause) to get into the match on match day (pause) and we used to open (unclear) at half time and we used to get in for nothing (pause) or the police used to hoy you over the wall so you'd get in free when you were little.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) The wall?

Speaker 2:

(unclear) the wall.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) But you can't get over the wall anymore.

Speaker 2:

You could at one time

Speaker 1:

That small!

Speaker 2:

Was that -- was that -- was that low yeah wasn't it? By the Leazes End?

Speaker 3:

mm-mm

Speaker 2:

Do you remember when we were at the FA Cup Final?

Speaker 3:

Actually (pause) I remember going through the turnstiles with little people in between my legs that were sneaking in for nowt.

Speaker 1:

eeh!

Speaker 3:

They did. We used to let them go under the legs

Speaker 2:

And your dad and I before we met we both (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) The peanut man chucking the peanuts

Speaker 2:

yeah

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

(unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) And then went in your pocket.

Speaker 3:

Aye.

Speaker 2:

Remember when we you went to the FA Cup Final eh -- eh sorry semi final and I was in the same Leazes End as your dad and never met him anyway (pause) we were both in the same end.

Speaker 3:

And I wanted to go home because we were getting beat three one

Speaker 2:

(interruption) I did go home.

Speaker 3:

And all the crowd went (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(laughter) Loads of riots

Speaker 3:

(interruption) People were getting trampled and everything

Speaker 2:

Aye (pause) I held on to the post.

Speaker 3:

It was terrible.

Speaker 1:

Where el- where did you live then?

Speaker 3:

Me I was born here in Westerhope.

Speaker 2:

(pause) Can you remember when it was small (pause) village

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Yes it was just a small village (pause) and eh (pause) the Co-op and everything and I remember my mother's divvy number, forty-seven ten.

Speaker 1:

What's a divvy number?

Speaker 3:

It's a dividend number, your Co-op (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Ah right a Co-op number. I know what you mean now

Speaker 3:

Man used to deliver from the Co-op (pause) all your goods to the door in a little dark blue carrier bag thing.

Speaker 2:

Remember when

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Aye you h- you had all sorts of vans coming round then. You had the fish man come round the butcher came round the Brough Stores man came round. (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) The what?

Speaker 2:

Brough Stores

Speaker 3:

(unclear)

Speaker 2:

The -- the -- the corner shop down the bottom of North Avenue

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Well they delivered round the streets then because you didn't have supermarkets then

Speaker 2:

I can

Speaker 3:

(interruption) All came round the door delivering. You had a man coming round with his sharpener his grindstone. Ninety-nine shilling to sharpen. Come and (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Sharpen what?

Speaker 3:

out your scissors and stuff like that

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter) sharpen your knives and your scissors (pause) yeah

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Well aye. The used

Speaker 1:

(interruption) In the street?

Speaker 3:

In the street! Then the rag and bone man coming round selling you balloons. Giving you rags for g- give him balloons and pegs.

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

You did.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) did. But your grandma when she was little used to say the used to collect jars (pause) jam jars and you used to get a halfpenny for a jam jar and the used to save as much money as they could to go to the cinema or hire a bike and not bring it back for the whole day.

Speaker 3:

Aye (pause) used to collect

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

We used (pause) to collect all the pop bottles

Speaker 2:

Aye

Speaker 3:

Three pence. Three d. That's old d. Ol ol old proper money (pause) not this nonsense

Speaker 2:

Three d. How much is it? About a penny isn't it?

Speaker 3:

Penny. Penny now aye (pause) When

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Well when I was little I went to St Andrews school (pause) em which is around the corner from (pause) where I lived and

Speaker 1:

(interruption) I thought St Andrews was down south?

Speaker 2:

No the school is in Newcastle. It's not -- it's not there anymore. Morden Street.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) No Newcastle. City centre.

Speaker 2:

And when I met y- your dad (pause) em I went into his house and I heard this voice

Speaker 3:

(pause) That's right aye.

Speaker 2:

And it made me (pause) cringe because it was the voice of my old headmaster from St Andrews

Speaker 3:

(interruption) After all them years

Speaker 2:

(interruption) And I thought he was a giant and when I got next to, him he was only five foot two (laughter)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Looked like a garden gnome. (laughter) (unclear) (NAME) (NAME) I know him.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Uh-uh.

Speaker 1:

No no no no don't mind (unclear) you put pseudonyms in

Speaker 2:

Do you remember?

Speaker 3:

That's right aye (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Oh it was so funny. I was thinking oh my God I know that voice and then you find it was him. (laughter)

Speaker 1:

So are there any like neighbours or incidents that happened when you were younger

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Oh God yeah

Speaker 1:

(interruption) and stuff that you remember well?

Speaker 2:

Well (pause) I can remember when I was younger I was about fifteen when I lived in Surrey and it's a horrible one to remember. Christmas Eve and we were all in the village hall (pause) having a Christmas party and the police came and my friend and been missing (pause) and they found her on Christmas Day. She had been murdered (pause) It was the little red riding hood murders down in Surrey. And my dad sent me to stay with my friend and we found out the two guys who w- who had done it lived round the corner from where I was staying (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter) What about you?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) I can remember that

Speaker 3:

I can remember m- one of my friends up the road eh (pause) catapulted me with a metal rivet in the head and my head burst open (pause) I thought I'd lost my eye.

Speaker 1:

Why'd he do that for?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Because he was stupid

Speaker 3:

Because he

Speaker 1:

was it?

Speaker 3:

Younguns were really daft like they are now. They just do daft things.

Speaker 1:

So you slate us for having potato guns and (pause) you got rivets

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Well you (pause) well aye well they had catapults. Aye. You had a catapult

Speaker 1:

So it was all right (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Shot the catapult and I bent down like this like (unclear) (pause) Punctured my head. And there was blood. I was like this and there was blood all over place

Speaker 2:

You dad was a (pause) horrible little terror

Speaker 3:

I was -- I was -- I was -- I was a bit of a rip till (pause) my dad died when I was sixteen. It quietened us down.

Speaker 1:

Right. Eh are all your family from the same area (unclear) pretty much. Well where are they from and like what who's in your family and how many brother's you've got

Speaker 3:

(interruption) How do you mean?

Speaker 1:

Well like your parents and your brothers and stuff

Speaker 3:

Well my dad's not from round here he was the east end. Walker. Then they went to Newburn.

Speaker 2:

(unclear)

Speaker 3:

They lived behind the chip shop in Newburn.

Speaker 1:

Which chippy?

Speaker 3:

On Station Road

Speaker 1:

What? Gu Guiliano's?

Speaker 3:

I've just told you that aye.

Speaker 1:

Ah right. Ah yeah you did. Erm what about y- like your mam and your brothers and stuff?

Speaker 3:

My mam was from eh Burradon. Born in Burradon. Lived in Netherton and (pause) then Morpeth (pause) Northumberland aye.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Then married your dad

Speaker 1:

(unclear) (pause) Mam

Speaker 2:

My mam was born in Newcastle. Yes so was my dad.

Speaker 1:

Was he?

Speaker 2:

Mm-mm

Speaker 1:

I thought one of them was born down South.

Speaker 2:

No no we are all born in Newcastle.

Speaker 1:

Well what about your brothers and sisters (pause) How many you got and do you get on with them?

Speaker 3:

I got -- got

Speaker 2:

(interruption) I got (pause) I got two sisters and a brother who is dead. And I've got two older sisters and I'm the baby of the family. (unclear) (pause) (unclear) (pause) got well we've got loads of nieces and nephews and the all (unclear) and they all lived up here. Apart from my sister who lives in Southampton.

Speaker 3:

I've got four other brothers (pause) I'm the middle of the five brothers (pause) and we look nothing like each other.

Speaker 1:

Yeah you do

Speaker 3:

We do not

Speaker 1:

You do (pause) and eh what did your parents do for a living and what were your parents like because I didn't really know them that well to be honest.

Speaker 3:

Well my dad was eh a painter and decorator. Obviously when he -- he didn't have a -- I don't think he had a proper trade when he come out the RAF after the war. He used to mend eh (pause) spitfires and aircraft out in the far east. Obviously that's where all the lads have got this (pause) ability to fix things. As you call me a fixer.

Speaker 1:

(unclear) I've never known what you actually do?

Speaker 3:

I'm -- well I served my time as a diesel fitter (pause) repairing engin- huge engines on locomotives.

Speaker 2:

Steam trains

Speaker 3:

Steam. I used to work on steam (pause) work on diesel engines. I've worked on lifts, I've worked on all sorts of engines and things and now I'm classed as a then I was a fitter but now I'm classed as a service technician.

Speaker 1:

Is that just the same thing?

Speaker 2:

Just a posh word for it

Speaker 3:

(interruption) It's just a posh word to say

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Like a cleaner as a hygiene maintainer. Yeah

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Yes (pause) Just a technical word instead of just saying you're a fitter. Instead of doing one thing now you do all sorts. Like sweeping the floors and tidying the toilets and everything else you know.

Speaker 1:

What did gran do?

Speaker 3:

Multitasking it's called.

Speaker 1:

Mm right. What did gran do?

Speaker 3:

Your gran was a eh

Speaker 2:

Your mam

Speaker 3:

Your. My mam?

Speaker 1:

No. My gran your mam. Yeah

Speaker 3:

Ah she was a eh (pause) like civil servant I suppose she was a clerk (pause) in County Hall. That's right.

Speaker 1:

That's what it is. What is that?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) That's what it was. In the city.

Speaker 2:

(unclear) the County. Used to be (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) The County Hall in (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) The -- the Civic used to be?

Speaker 3:

No

Speaker 2:

(interruption) No

Speaker 3:

It's down by the eh (pause) High Level Bridge. I think it was because it's a hotel now

Speaker 2:

Newburn used to be Newburn County

Speaker 1:

Vermont Hotel?

Speaker 2:

Yeah (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Ah right right okay. I know where you mean now.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) You want to know what my dad did?

Speaker 1:

Yeah

Speaker 2:

My dad was a plumber then he went into the amphibious tanks in the war (pause) He was blown up, came back, got burned and then went back again (pause) and I remember him telling me a story about when they were (pause) at the end of the war they were in Cologne (pause) and they used to give their cigarettes to th- th- the Germans. One day six prisoners escaped and they chose the guy who was in charge of them and they had ten back. S- In other words they gained four of them (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 2:

And when he came back to after the war he -- he went back to work for the gas company and then he moved down south and worked for the water company until he died (pause) And then

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Did you work for the water company?

Speaker 2:

Yeah I did.

Speaker 1:

You worked at the same company as your dad. I would never do that.

Speaker 2:

It was all right. There was a Geordie who was a manager. Sorry a Mackem who was the manager. There was a tea lady from Durham. There was me and your grandad.

Speaker 1:

Out of how many?

Speaker 2:

All the b- all the top spots were given to (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter) I thought so

Speaker 2:

Em (pause) and then your grandma just worked in the Grainger Market in the cafe. Temple's Cafe.

Speaker 1:

Where's that?

Speaker 3:

Pies and peas

Speaker 2:

(interruption) It's not there anymore. Pies and peas hinny.

Speaker 3:

Come inside pies and peas.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Pies and peas hinny. Yeah

Speaker 1:

(laughter) Where -- whi- wh- what is it now though?

Speaker 2:

It's nothing. It's nothing anymore. Not there.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Not there now

Speaker 1:

Is it the clearing where they've done it all out?

Speaker 2:

Yes (unclear) was upstairs.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Was upstairs wasn't it?

Speaker 2:

Yeah ups- no down (pause) Where the archway where the clearing is

Speaker 1:

Yeah

Speaker 2:

Used to be cafes either side. The Twenty-One Cafe was that side and Temple's Cafe was the other side.

Speaker 1:

Mm (pause) So like above like the cheese shop and all that?

Speaker 2:

No the other as you go in

Speaker 1:

(interruption) The other side. The flowers and stuff.

Speaker 2:

Yeah yeah.

Speaker 1:

Ah right I think I know where you mean. Yeah yeah yeah. Em (pause) Did they do anything special or of note in their lifetime like a big like deal kind of thing?

Speaker 2:

Not really

Speaker 3:

W- Our parents?

Speaker 1:

Yeah or have you even done anything or even your brothers something like that

Speaker 3:

(interruption) What do you call er what do you call of note?

Speaker 1:

No just something that's quite quite interesting that's quite cool

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Special? (pause) Not that I can think of

Speaker 2:

But they were special in their own way because they survived things that (pause) we would never have survived (pause) Your gran was always in your mam was always

Speaker 3:

(interruption) We are the cogs that keep the clock ticking

Speaker 2:

Your mam was always in and out of hospital. How she even got to where she is now

Speaker 3:

(interruption) My mother was very very very ill all her life

Speaker 1:

Aye you did tell us she was in and out of hospital when you were younger

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Oh yes. Well I used (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Scarlett fever the lot wasn't it?

Speaker 1:

Scarlett fever? Don't you die?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) She had -- she had sh- sh- You'll not remember m- your gran had terrible em (pause) psoriasis.

Speaker 1:

(unclear) on there. On her elbows.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) No (pause) I'm talking about nobody else ever had di- did you ever see the Singing Detective on the telly?

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

That bloke. Well it was skin was peeling off. Your gran was like that.

Speaker 1:

Seriously?

Speaker 3:

Yes. She didn't -- she didn't like to go outside on the bus because people wo- wouldn't sit next to you. She used to wear she would never wear she would always have buttoned up things and everything down to here so nobody could see (pause) her skin.

Speaker 1:

Ah

Speaker 2:

Used to fall off

Speaker 3:

(interruption) She was like -- she felt like an outcast in society

Speaker 1:

That's really sad (pause) She's still got it though.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Not t- now they've got treatments for all that now. She's been on (pause) the poova machine and the (unclear)

Speaker 1:

Er

Speaker 3:

Magics your skin.

Speaker 2:

It's like a (pause) sunbed

Speaker 3:

Aye. It's like a sunbed thing. Ultraviolet rays or something (pause) She gets zapped (pause) But y- you wouldn't recognise her (pause) used to walk round the house there was -- there was like just skin lying and that around the house (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 2:

It was like that yeah it was.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) It was horrendous

Speaker 2:

I never really saw her that bad but (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I've never ever I've -- I've seen people with psoriasis and I've never ever seen anybody as bad as my mother (pause) ever (pause) apart him that wha- on the telly.

Speaker 2:

(unclear) you mean Michael er (pause) yeah

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Michael Gambon playing The Singing Detective. It was exactly. Did you ever see that? Watch that and (unclear)

Speaker 1:

I have seen it. I've seen the film version with Robert Downey Junior in it.

Speaker 3:

Have you?

Speaker 1:

Yeah

Speaker 2:

It was horrendous it was.

Speaker 1:

I knew she was ill but

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Well I remember (pause) I remember you telling me something about down south. They told you off for calling your mam 'mam' (pause) the stupid cockneys

Speaker 2:

(interruption) yeah (pause) when I -- when I first moved down south I was a you know -- with being Geordie (pause) the -- they used to call me wee MacHaggis because the thought I was Scottish (laughter)

Speaker 1:

I keep getting Scottish. People at uni think I'm Scottish.

Speaker 2:

And I wasn't allowed to go to this girl's party because I had an accent.

Speaker 3:

Aye

Speaker 1:

(interruption) That's rude (pause) That's rude

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Exactly (pause) But that's what they are like (pause) They're snobs down there man

Speaker 2:

(interruption) mm-mm

Speaker 3:

Well some of them are all right -- they're all right.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I suppose you get people up here like that. They're called social -- social climbers

Speaker 2:

(interruption) climbers. Yeah

Speaker 3:

Forgetting where they actually come from.

Speaker 2:

That's the worse type of person. They have nothing and then they've got something and they think they are better than anybody else.

Speaker 1:

Eh (pause) How and where did you meet?

Speaker 3:

Oh that's a long story. I'll give the official version.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Go on (pause) Yeah the official version.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter) That's his version of it (laughter)

Speaker 1:

We'll have both versions of it then

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Well what happened was (pause) It was nineteen seventy

Speaker 2:

(interruption) I'd met you before that though

Speaker 3:

No no. You'd never met me (pause) you'd probably seen me but met- meeting somebody is totally different to seeing

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Right. All right

Speaker 3:

You never spoke to us before.

Speaker 2:

No I did not

Speaker 3:

To any capacity (pause) What happened was (pause) it was (pause) around Christmas time

Speaker 2:

It was Christmas Eve nineteen seventy nine.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) seventy nine.

Speaker 2:

It was just after your grandad had died and I had come up here with my mam

Speaker 3:

(interruption) My grand-

Speaker 2:

No my- her grand

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Your dad

Speaker 2:

My dad had died uh-huh

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Just died in nineteen seventy nine

Speaker 1:

Right

Speaker 3:

And eh

Speaker 2:

Came up for Christmas

Speaker 3:

Yes. And we were in the eh (pause) Excelsior so- the local social club

Speaker 1:

Is that W- Westerhope Excelsior?

Speaker 2:

Aye

Speaker 3:

Aye

Speaker 1:

Right

Speaker 3:

We were in there and I was with my mates (pause) and

Speaker 1:

(interruption) That was open then?

Speaker 2:

Still is

Speaker 1:

How old is that place? It's been open for years

Speaker 3:

She was there with her s- I don't know who you were with.

Speaker 2:

(NAME) and (NAME).Michael.

Speaker 3:

(NAME) and (NAME) and who else?

Speaker 2:

Just me

Speaker 3:

I was -- who was I with? My mates?

Speaker 2:

I presume you must have been because I can't remember that much (laughter)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Because I -- I used to always thought that I was (unclear) when I used to go to the club I always thought I was Johnny Cash y'knaa

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I used to wear a black -- black shirt with a turned up collar you know. Thought I was a bit of a (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) I didn't see it (laughter)

Speaker 3:

(laughter) I thought I was the bee knees y'knaa.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter) Ee in your dreams.

Speaker 3:

Well you do (pause) And eh (pause) I never -- I use- used to sit there and just drink (pause) like you did then when you were younger (pause) you used to drink madness you know. And eh I never ever got up to dance

Speaker 1:

There's a reason for that and I've seen it.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Ju- just (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

I just could never understand the effort involved in doing it

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

What a waste of effort. I could never understand the issue about dancing.

Speaker 1:

You sound like (NAME)

Speaker 3:

And yet (pause) little do anybody know (pause) I once won a twisting competition at school.

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 2:

(laughter) Did you? So did I

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Now there you are now (unclear) not many people know that

Speaker 2:

So did I at the Labour Club.

Speaker 3:

No. I won it at school (pause) I was a mean dancer at school. Course I had hair then you see (pause) because I started losing my hair when I was twenty one (pause) so that was a downgrade.

Speaker 2:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Anyway going back to how we met (pause) what happened was (pause) m- minding my own business (pause) as you do having a good laugh in the club (pause) and em

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Don't say the name.

Speaker 3:

I'm gannen -- what happened was

Speaker 1:

(interruption) No you can say the name I'll just

Speaker 3:

I had l- I had a great -- I had a great evening with my mates. I was on my way out of the club (pause) leaving the club (pause) and obviously (pause) her nibs here

Speaker 2:

(laughter) Thanks very much my wife (NAME) (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

Her nibs here must've been having a bit grief with some gadgie in the pub.

Speaker 2:

Club.

Speaker 3:

In the club (pause) Must have been trying to hit on her as you do you know.

Speaker 1:

Yeah

Speaker 3:

And she couldn't stand him because he was a pain in the neck (pause) And what happened was (pause) she just got a hold of me in -- in -- outside the club. W- Was it? (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) It was inside the club actually (pause) It was inside the club

Speaker 3:

(interruption) It -- It was on the stairwell actually (pause) I was being attacked by this young female (pause) shouting save me from the hairy beast.

Speaker 2:

(laughter) Lying!

Speaker 3:

That's truth!

Speaker 2:

Y- You've got it all wrong! (laughter)

Speaker 3:

If the lord strikes me down that is truth.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) No (pause) Wait there. What -- w- w- what is your version?

Speaker 3:

You said save me from the hairy beast!

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Shh! (pause) No I didn't!

Speaker 3:

You did!

Speaker 2:

Well e- half -- half way till he said it was on the stairs. It wasn't it was actually in the club itself.

Speaker 3:

It was it wasn't in the room, it was outside the room (NAME).

Speaker 2:

Oh you're always right then. I'm not going to argue.

Speaker 1:

N- No mam what was your side?

Speaker 2:

Don't

Speaker 1:

No no!

Speaker 2:

(unclear) what he said and i- it was -- I am sure it was inside the club and not outside the club. And that's how I met your dad.

Speaker 3:

That's where we met.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) You shouted save me from the hairy beast at him?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Well he (unclear) (laughter)

Speaker 1:

Really?

Speaker 2:

Really. (laughter)

Speaker 3:

I think the truth of it sorely is, I'm going to tell you this (pause) what it is her sister (NAME). I knew her sister (NAME) (pause) from (pause) because she used to work in one of the pubs local. And I'm s- I'm sure she must have twigged on that I had money you see. (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) You didn't have money!

Speaker 2:

(laughter) Ah shush man.

Speaker 3:

I had money (pause) then. Before I got married my girl I had some. I was quite well off. Now I've got (pause) brass farthings in my pocket.

Speaker 2:

All right so what else do you want to know?

Speaker 1:

Did you get on straight away or was it kind of (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Well no it was funny. I'll tell you a tale about that

Speaker 2:

I stood him up

Speaker 3:

No, it was funny that. Did you stand us up? I can't

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Yeah because I couldn't my mum wasn't my mum was really upset that night and I couldn't get contact you because I didn't have your number

Speaker 3:

Did we not pa- (interruption) di- w- did we have phones then?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) No

Speaker 2:

No

Speaker 3:

(laughter) No!

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) You did have a phone but I di- no I didn't have

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Did we h- no I didn't think we had a phone.

Speaker 2:

I said I would come on Christmas Day and I couldn't get on the Christmas Day because my mum was really really upset.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I don't think we had a telephone (pause) In nineteen eighty one.

Speaker 2:

I -- I did. Yes we did. Because I used to ring you up and you used to ring me up.

Speaker 3:

Ah we used to sit on the stairs all night yapping. That's right aye.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Sad

Speaker 3:

It is. It's terrible. It's disgusting. I can't believe it. It's embarrassing.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 2:

That's the first time, you know he never talks on the phone in (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I don't talk to p- I'm very quiet person. I'm like a church mouse (pause) I am.

Speaker 2:

Go on

Speaker 3:

I'm like a church mouse. I divn't

Speaker 2:

His nose is getting longer.

Speaker 1:

(pause) Did yous just not get on straight away? Was it a bit weird?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Yeah we did actually.

Speaker 3:

Well I

Speaker 1:

(interruption) How was your first date?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I was always awkward with women. Women were always a pain in the neck. They always wanted something you d- d- ah something else. Some other issues you know. If you didn't treat them right they just dumped you y'knaa (pause) Got sick of women. They're just a pain (pause) But anyway what happened with (pause) her nibs here

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter) her nibs (laughter)

Speaker 3:

(pause) was eh (pause) We did arrange to meet.

Speaker 2:

And I couldn't go! (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) No we did go. We went somewhere on the bus.

Speaker 2:

Oh that was later on.

Speaker 3:

Aye. Well I'm saying that's the next time we met. We got -- I gets on the bus to come and sit next to her and she gans and sits behind some lass with some lass. So I'm s- gets on the bus and I'm at a loose end. I'm on my own. I'm saying 'This is clever.' So I thought I'd been dumped without speaking to us (pause) You sat next to your niece

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (NAME)

Speaker 3:

Exactly. I said what about me? Sa- I        off and sat on my todd.

Speaker 2:

I did speak to you.

Speaker 3:

You did later on (pause) You were flashing your headlights at me.

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

If you divn't know what headlights are now you don't know what headlights are.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter) Shut up man! You didn't have to say that! (laughter)

Speaker 3:

Well that's what it's all about isn't it (pause) She was after my cash

Speaker 2:

(laughter) Shut up!

Speaker 3:

Johnny Cash

Speaker 1:

Em. Have you seen many changes in the area since you were younger and (pause) em if so what are they and are they for better or for worse?

Speaker 2:

Worse

Speaker 3:

In which area?

Speaker 1:

Just in here in general.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) With me -- with me living here longest

Speaker 1:

Yeah

Speaker 3:

Oh aye it's eh (pause) well when I was a bairn it was just a little village. It was lovely. It had grass tennis courts and proper tennis (pause) Westerhope was a lovely little village but now it's -- it's just part of the urban jungle as I call it. (pause) It's all full of cheeky youngings.

Speaker 1:

What about you?

Speaker 2:

Me? Ab- bout Westerhope? It has changed

Speaker 1:

No, just about Newcastle in general

Speaker 2:

Newcastle. When I was li- when I was (pause) oo about nine they decided to take everybody outside out of Newcastle and put them on the outskirts

Speaker 3:

Aye

Speaker 2:

Biggest mistake. Because where I live was a village within the city itself and had our own little pub, own little shops and if you could come home from school

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Well it was a community wasn't it?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Yeah yeah. You used to come home from school and if your parents weren't there you could to somebody else's (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) That community's not there eh -- eh -- eh there's no community here now.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) That community's lost now.

Speaker 3:

Like it was. Wes- I mean wh- when I first met wh- when we first married and we lived in Wes- we lived in -- in with -- that's right we didn't have any money so you lived in them days -- you lived in with my mam (pause) We had a room.

Speaker 1:

Oh I know. I remember.

Speaker 3:

Now youngings they want everything. The want h- big houses, flash houses, this that. Soon as they get married they want it all. But that's not what marriage is about.

Speaker 2:

Then we rented a house didn't we?

Speaker 3:

We rented the property, aye.

Speaker 1:

Where?

Speaker 2:

Down in Briarside

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Briarside

Speaker 1:

(interruption) I thought you bought that?

Speaker 3:

No

Speaker 2:

(interruption) No we rented it

Speaker 1:

Is that when you got burgled and you moved here?

Speaker 3:

That's right aye.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Yeah I remember

Speaker 2:

(interruption) He went to work

Speaker 3:

I says '(NAME) we've been burgled. I'm away to work.' That's right.

Speaker 2:

You're kidding. We didn't even have a telephone. We didn't have a telly either.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) But eh (pause) When I first married (NAME) and eh

Speaker 2:

You knew everybody didn't you?

Speaker 3:

She us- It used to irritate (NAME) because everybody would say hello to us in the street. She didn't know anybody (pause) But now

Speaker 1:

(interruption) You. It's like that with you now.

Speaker 3:

It's the other way round now.

Speaker 1:

I get people coming up to me. 'Are you (NAME)'s daughter?' I'm like 'I divn't know who you are.'

Speaker 3:

(interruption) (NAME) knows everybody and divn't know anybody (pause) The role have been reversed

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (unclear) ever said that?

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Yeah!

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Who to?

Speaker 1:

People who. 'Ah I work with your mam' or something and I'm like 'I don't know who you are.' 'Ah you look like (NAME)'s daughter' (unclear)

Speaker 2:

Oh you mean (NAME) from eh

Speaker 1:

(interruption) I met you when I was four and I'm like

Speaker 2:

(NAME) was in -- from the school you worked in

Speaker 1:

What are the best and worst parts about living here and would you consider moving elsewhere?

Speaker 2:

No

Speaker 3:

Well i- well this is (pause) Where we live is like a little oasis in the desert (pause) That's how I put it. It's a nice little spot (pause) Good neighbourhood (pause) Not much trouble (pause) I like it.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Everyone's dying of cancer (unclear)

Speaker 3:

Well (pause) Well that's natural, natural (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Fact of life.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Weird (pause) So you wouldn't consider moving?

Speaker 2:

I don't want to move anywhere. I like it here.

Speaker 3:

Well I've -- I've always said if I ever moved I'd go and move into a bungalow. Because I don't want to get old and cannot handle the stairs.

Speaker 2:

And I hate bungalows because I've already lived in one.

Speaker 1:

Where?

Speaker 2:

In Surrey

Speaker 3:

Aye. She did aye. But o- looking at that I was -- because I when -- when I said that that was when I wasn't very well (pause) with my legs and all that. The ME problems that I had for twenty-five years of it. Torturous.

Speaker 2:

He's all right now.

Speaker 1:

Yeah

Speaker 3:

I -- I managed and managed and managed. Struggled through life.

Speaker 1:

(laughter) You heard him (laughter)

Speaker 3:

It's true! People don't realise I was (pause) i- it was

Speaker 2:

(interruption) He was on the brink of em

Speaker 3:

I went to see a doctor many years ago when I first got diagnosed about it (pause) and the people I met in the waiting room (pause) nearly sent me over the edge. They were lunatics (pause) They were moaning all -- they were just moaning about 'I cannot do this. I cannot do that. I cannot gan.' I says and I vowed then, I says this isn't going to happen to me. So I pushed myself and pushed myself and pushed myself. Made myself ill (pause) pushing myself (pause) instead of stopping (pause) But you hear about a lot of people with ME and (pause) they just give up. You cannot give up (pause) It's a hard life kidda.

Speaker 2:

Well you would have given up if I hadn't of pushed you.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Well if I hadn't exactly. I couldn't get out of bed in the morning to gan to work.

Speaker 1:

I remember that.

Speaker 3:

Eh?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) I used to force him to work.

Speaker 3:

I used to go

Speaker 1:

(interruption) It was about middle school wasn't it?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) uh-uh

Speaker 3:

I used to walk to the bus stop. I used to be hanging over the wall at the bus stop puking my guts out (pause) Because I was in such a state (pause) People divn't know -- see I've been a (pause) All my life I've been able to hide things like that. I've been a good magician.

Speaker 1:

(laughter) Magician

Speaker 3:

I have

Speaker 2:

Good actor.

Speaker 3:

You've just got to -- you d- don't you don't let other people see your frailties or y- y- you divn't let people into that.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) or your fears (pause) No

Speaker 3:

You've got to hide all that.

Speaker 2:

Macho man.

Speaker 3:

You put this facade on on the outside and thinks 'he's a (pause) fit looking guy but underneath you're a wreck (pause) I used to come home from work and fall asleep on the s- sofa.

Speaker 1:

I know, I remember. And then I w- I had to sit on the floor because you were taking up the entire sofa (laughter)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

Because I was just to tired.

Speaker 1:

I know

Speaker 2:

He never did anything when you were little with him.

Speaker 1:

I noticed. He just went into bed and I was like

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Because I was just. You know. Do you not think that upset me like?

Speaker 1:

Oh of course. I only ever saw you properly on Saturdays really

Speaker 3:

What used to narc us when you went to the doctors he would just say 'Ah you're depressed.'

Speaker 1:

Or you're idle

Speaker 3:

And I used to get annoyed because I says 'No I'm frustrated. It's got nowt to do with depression.'

Speaker 1:

(interruption) There's a difference

Speaker 3:

There's a hell of a difference between being frustrated about something and being depressed (pause) It's frustrating (pause) Your mind wants to do things but your body's stopping you (pause) But that's what I'm saying. It is. I- I- I- It's a -- it's a fight of wills (pause) gannen on inside your body.

Speaker 2:

A battle

Speaker 3:

It's a battle of will (pause) and no wonder y- it exhausts you

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (unclear)

Speaker 3:

I used to -- terrified to walk down the street. I remember my mother coming here once (pause) We walked down the shops (pause) She said 'pull yourself together. What's a matter with you?' She thought I was drunk. Because I couldn't

Speaker 1:

Walk

Speaker 3:

couldn't

Speaker 1:

Coordinate

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Coordinate. You can't coordinate muscles. I- It's -- It's a weird

Speaker 2:

I remember we used to go

Speaker 3:

(interruption) People don't know anything about ME until they have it.

Speaker 2:

He used to walk around in -- in the em (pause) supermarket and your dad used to push the trolley and you'd turn around and he'd be on the floor. He used to be on the floor

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I didn't push it. I used to hang on the bloody thing (pause) My legs used to just buckle. Go, kapoot (pause) No control.

Speaker 2:

(unclear) like a puppet.

Speaker 3:

It was -- when you -- tell you what it was one of the most frightening experiences I've ever had.

Speaker 1:

Have you ever had a near death experience?

Speaker 3:

A near what?

Speaker 1:

A near death experience

Speaker 3:

What do you call that like?

Speaker 1:

Well like you nearly died or something that's really bad and stuff

Speaker 3:

Well I was very ill with appendicitis

Speaker 1:

Is that when you were bent, you were doing the piping or something or the guttering?

Speaker 3:

I was cleaning the gutters out and I keeled over aye. Appendicitis.

Speaker 2:

I thought he was dying.

Speaker 3:

It was

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Did it burst? Because you die if it bursts.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) It's the worst pain I've had in my life.

Speaker 2:

He -- he was jumping off the bed

Speaker 3:

I was screaming. I was biting through my bottom lip.

Speaker 2:

He was jumping off the bed with shock

Speaker 3:

I was -- I went into shock in hospital

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Did it burst? (pause) Because if it bursts there's only a forty percent chance

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I was bouncing off the bed

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Peritonitus isn't it?

Speaker 3:

Well you get blood poisoning. Peritonitus. Aye.

Speaker 2:

I don't think

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I don't think it actually burst but it weren't f- it was leaking I think.

Speaker 2:

(unclear)

Speaker 1:

Em

Speaker 2:

Me. I can't remember. I mean I've had some things like. I've been in a couple of car crashes

Speaker 1:

Oh I remember that. And the car was all squished at the back.

Speaker 2:

Yeah but I've never. I don't even know

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Hence I don't sit behind the driver anymore. That's the reason for that.

Speaker 2:

Well I wouldn't say

Speaker 3:

I wouldn't call that near death experiences.

Speaker 1:

Well no. Just

Speaker 3:

I had a nasty accident at work, when I was a lot younger where I was actually working a big steam boiler. It burned us. What happened -- the pressure built up and spat the door out and it hit us on the arm (pause) The steam -- super heated steam just burnt all (pause) Luckily it was -- it's what you call a clean burn. It burnt all my arm (pause) and eh (pause) I was -- what I did I ran into the wash rooms and chucked my boiler suits off and just (pause) poured cold water over it. Had to go to the hospital for weeks. I had to get it dressed and everything. It's just

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Puss

Speaker 3:

Well it was. It was j- all the skin was just melted and hanging off my arm.

Speaker 1:

(unclear)

Speaker 3:

But it was a clean. It was clean.

Speaker 1:

Yeah so it had no bits or infection or anything.

Speaker 3:

It was -- it was clean. I had just to go and get it treated all the time.

Speaker 2:

No, I've never had anything like that.

Speaker 1:

Well you're boring.

Speaker 2:

I know

Speaker 1:

(laughter) Well car crashes. You had two!

Speaker 2:

Ah I had a good few me

Speaker 1:

The only one I remember was in the Metro

Speaker 2:

No. I had somebody come in the side of us. Do you remember that when we were in the car coming from Newcastle?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Oh that was in Newcastle

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Uh-uh and (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) This silly wife pulled out and (pause) straight into the side of the car. Wa- eh (pause) Out of Waterloo Street she was. We were outside The Barking Dog.

Speaker 2:

(laughter) It was barking as well

Speaker 3:

It was -- it was a woof experience. Har har.

Speaker 1:

Oh. Oh. Dad

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Get that in!

Speaker 1:

You had to get a joke in.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) De da de de da

Speaker 1:

Right em (pause) Do you remember any sig- significant social or historical events like since you've been alive like (pause) miners or anything like that

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Yep. I remember seeing (pause) I remember seeing Concorde take off from Heathrow Airport (pause) Eh (pause) We- well Concorde. It's maiden eh maiden flight (pause) Oh gosh.

Speaker 1:

Like like bad weather like if snow has been like ten foot high or something like that.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Oh wey-aye! When we were younger. Jesus.

Speaker 1:

Well I don't have any of that (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Well I can remember when I moved down south in sixty five and I've had the snow here and when they had the snow down in Surrey in the March. (laughter) And nobody had seen snow for years down there (laughter)

Speaker 3:

(unclear) I don't remember sixty five. I remember eh

Speaker 2:

(interruption) sixty five had some. (unclear) had some and you couldn't walk up the street.

Speaker 3:

I can't remember the year it was.

Speaker 2:

We had snow the week before we got married

Speaker 3:

We did aye. We did, that's right.

Speaker 2:

And it was a foot high

Speaker 3:

I'm trying to think of a bad winter we had here.

Speaker 2:

(unclear) sixty eight? (unclear)

Speaker 3:

No because I was working because I remember (pause) t- this (pause) I remember walking to Gateshead to work one morning

Speaker 1:

(interruption) From here?

Speaker 3:

Aye. I had to walk to work.

Speaker 1:

That's like three hours!

Speaker 3:

(interruption) The buses were all off (pause) Oh aye. I got there at God knows what time I got there. Actually walked past a person on (pause) eh (pause) when I was walking up Netherby Drive (pause) What's that road? Netherby Drive?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Fenham

Speaker 3:

Fenham. Through. I had to cut through Fenham.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Ah yeah

Speaker 3:

Was walking up Fenham. There was -- I walked past a guy on skis (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 2:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

I wa- I was ganen faster than him

Speaker 2:

(laughter)

Speaker 1:

On skis?

Speaker 3:

He was on skis. I'm telling you there was no buses that day. I -- I forget which day it was

Speaker 1:

(interruption) How do you walk to Gateshead from here?

Speaker 3:

Because you did you walked

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Three hours!

Speaker 2:

(interruption) You made the effort to go to work then

Speaker 3:

And some of the people that w- worked with us, lived in Gateshead didn't even come to work. The lazy swines.

Speaker 2:

I can remember the riots (pause) in Benwell.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I can't think of that (unclear)

Speaker 2:

Because we were sent home w- from work early (unclear)

Speaker 1:

When was that?

Speaker 2:

In the se- was it in the eighties the riots in Benwell? I was working with (unclear) Yeah would've been eighties (pause) There were riots in Benwell.

Speaker 1:

Why?

Speaker 2:

I can remember (pause) the bombings. The IRA bombings when I used to live down south. Because I used to live near Pirbright Army Camp when they had horse guards there in the September. And they threw a bomb in the eh tent. I can remember the security around it was horrendous (pause) Em (pause) When they had the Guildford bombings (pause) because it was an army based area.

Speaker 1:

(unclear)

Speaker 3:

I cannot remember. What like things like watching the bloke land on the moon and all that jazz?

Speaker 1:

Aye stuff like that. Y'knaa

Speaker 3:

Oh wey. It was on the telly

Speaker 2:

(interruption) I remember Winston Churchill's funeral

Speaker 3:

Sixty five

Speaker 2:

Yeah because then (unclear) at school there's a new building named after him

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Or when we won the world cup. Nineteen sixty six.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Sixty six. Yeah

Speaker 3:

Wey-aye.

Speaker 1:

Too young. missed all that

Speaker 2:

And then when Maggie Thatcher got out of parliament. Yes!

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Jesus hell

Speaker 1:

Got in

Speaker 2:

No. Got out. Got knocked out. Best thing ever

Speaker 3:

The eighties

Speaker 2:

(interruption) That woman's a killer. She killed

Speaker 3:

(interruption) People look at the eighties and say it was a good decade.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) It was       

Speaker 3:

I thought it was the worst decade in this (pause) country

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Maggie Thatcher (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Was that the three day week or was that the seventies?

Speaker 2:

Seventies

Speaker 3:

Seventies

Speaker 2:

That was Ted Heath era wasn't it?

Speaker 1:

Was that the Winter of Discontent and all that stuff?

Speaker 2:

Yeah

Speaker 3:

That was eh. Well er th- the seventies got off to a bad start with Heath didn't he? Aye

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Yeah

Speaker 3:

Then it was a Labour things where you couldn't get the people buried and oh God

Speaker 1:

(interruption) What? You couldn't get people buried?

Speaker 3:

Wey no because it was just terrible things happening in that, in -- in the seventies. I think that was -- I think the Labours were in power then

Speaker 2:

And then the silver jubilee in seventy seven

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Seventy seven. Aye

Speaker 2:

And we had the day off work for that

Speaker 1:

Did you do the whole lining the streets thing?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I don't remember getting the day off work

Speaker 2:

We did where we work

Speaker 1:

(laughter) Down south

Speaker 3:

Part-timers man

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 2:

I mean I can remember

Speaker 3:

I worked. When I work where I work, I'm work for the railways, you work -- work everyday every (pause) hour God sends man.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (unclear) fully paid. Yeah

Speaker 3:

You had to work. You work seven days a week and two half shifts

Speaker 1:

What's two half -- what's two half shifts?

Speaker 3:

Well you work from seven in the morning to seven at night

Speaker 1:

Oh I couldn't do that

Speaker 3:

(interruption) (unclear) That's a bad shift (unclear)

Speaker 2:

But when you think about it

Speaker 3:

We were never away from work man

Speaker 2:

The eighties. The seventies and the eighties weren't that great because

Speaker 3:

(interruption) The seventies were great. I thought they were good

Speaker 2:

The -- the eighties

Speaker 1:

(interruption) The music was good in the seventies

Speaker 2:

The -- the eighties

Speaker 3:

Excellent

Speaker 2:

The eighties -- the eighties were the horriblest time because people

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Everyone got rich and everyone got poor

Speaker 2:

Well no. The richer got richer and the poorer got poorer.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) You had the capitalists in power (pause) What I call the capitalists were in power

Speaker 2:

And Maggie Thatcher killed social housing (pause) Maggie Thatcher is to blame for all the problems we have now

Speaker 3:

They call her the milk snatcher divn't they

Speaker 2:

Yeah

Speaker 1:

I had a s- I remember having milk and they stopped doing it at school

Speaker 2:

(interruption) She stopped -- she stopped milk. She stopped a lot of things. Sh- she made this. (unclear) The Falkands War. She caused The Falkands war.

Speaker 3:

Oh divn't start me on about. Divn't start me on about that.

Speaker 2:

She -- she knew what she was doing when she moved the ships

Speaker 3:

Wey-aye.

Speaker 1:

Well do you remember the Jarrow marches and stuff?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Smokescreen

Speaker 2:

No that's too old.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) The what?

Speaker 2:

No. That was nineteen twenty something the Jarrow marches.

Speaker 1:

Well your parents ever told you about them?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) twenty six (unclear)

Speaker 2:

Ah no

Speaker 3:

Hey. How old do you think we are?

Speaker 1:

No I mean your parents might have told you about them

Speaker 3:

My parents. Well my mother was born in nineteen twenty two.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) She might've remembered it.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) No. (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) No my mum (unclear) was only a bairn (unclear) My -- well your grandma when she was younger she lived she actually was in the workhouse because her mum died when she was young and she lived in the workhouse where the General Hospital was because that's what used to be the workhouse.

Speaker 3:

See another funny thing is when I was born you didn't gan to hospital to be born.

Speaker 1:

You were born in the house weren't you?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) You were -- you were born at home then

Speaker 1:

Were you born at home?

Speaker 3:

Wey-aye

Speaker 1:

Were you?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Mm-mm. Yes

Speaker 3:

It wasn't. Hospital was only

Speaker 2:

(interruption) I only lived round the corner from the QE.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Was I?

Speaker 2:

No (unclear)

Speaker 3:

You only went to hospital if you thought complications were going to be in. But you just born at home (pause) Should be like out in the paddy fields man. Drop them and then gan back to work

Speaker 1:

No but I wouldn't like my child be born at home

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Well ask your gran. Y- your gran on my side. They actually operated on her on the kitchen table (pause) or something. Something to do with her neck.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Something on her neck

Speaker 2:

Like a em (pause) What's it called?

Speaker 3:

Something on her neck

Speaker 2:

Quincy or something?

Speaker 3:

They operated on. They just (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Quincy?

Speaker 3:

They just cleared the kitchen table and get down to it kidda (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Quincy

Speaker 1:

On the kitchen table?

Speaker 2:

Mm-mm

Speaker 1:

Were there no anaesthetic or nothing?

Speaker 3:

Wey. I don't know what they had. Probably a slug of brandy.

Speaker 2:

I can remember. You know when you can remember certain things and that. I remember when I was little going to the hoppings.

Speaker 3:

The Town Moor aye

Speaker 2:

But we never used to take our parents. The parents never went with you. You used to go with (unclear) your mates

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Yeah. You never went with me.

Speaker 2:

No. We were only six and seven at the time man. All used to go (unclear)

Speaker 3:

Hold on you lived on the doorstep

Speaker 2:

No but there was the little hoppings in the Leazes Park and it was there. Then there was the big Hoppings in the em Exhibition Park.

Speaker 3:

We had things like that in Westerhope when I was a kid. Because Westerhope was a village you used to have a big eh. The big top came here.

Speaker 2:

The funfair. Th- the (interruption) Circus

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Circus. The- they had a circus on (pause) I'm sure they had a circus once on

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Newbiggin Lane

Speaker 3:

No. They did have it there but they had it once where the bakery is.

Speaker 2:

Ah right

Speaker 3:

Before they built the bakery (pause) Whitfield Road. There was a big bit of wasteland there and I'm sure they had a circus there

Speaker 1:

(interruption) There's a big bit of wasteland now. They knocked down that building.

Speaker 3:

And they had the circus where (pause) What's on the corner there now?

Speaker 2:

Cobbler's Corner?

Speaker 3:

The other corner. (unclear) That was

Speaker 1:

(interruption) The special centre?

Speaker 3:

That was

Speaker 2:

Yeah and the houses

Speaker 3:

That was just a bit of wasteland. I think it had been greenhouses because it -- it was Harris' Greenhouse.

Speaker 2:

Yeah

Speaker 3:

And they were famous Westerhope for tomatoes. Harris' Greenhouse. But anyway on that bit of wasteland there was eh a big circus (pause) I remember going to that. I must've been a babby

Speaker 2:

(interruption) You remember you used to go to the Orion on a Saturday morning and I used (unclear) to shut you up

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Aye. (interruption)

Speaker 1:

What? That the bingo hall?

Speaker 2:

Your dad (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Used to be the picture. That was our picture house

Speaker 1:

Oh it used to be the cinema I know. Yeah

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Used to go on Saturday mornings and see all the (pause) the old Flash Gordon

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Gordon

Speaker 3:

And Ming. You know the eh Ming The Merciless

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Flash Gordon?

Speaker 3:

In black and white. De de de daa

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (unclear)

Speaker 1:

Oh that's sad

Speaker 3:

And the spring used to come out the seat right into your backside

Speaker 2:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

Gordon Bennett man the seats were disgusting

Speaker 2:

And they were still there for many years to come I tell you

Speaker 3:

Aye. The Saturday matinees. Great stuff. See the Three Stooges. Born and bred on them man. You'd laugh your head off.

Speaker 1:

Is that why you've got a rubbish sense of humour?

Speaker 3:

Lar La Larry, Curly and Moe. (unclear) Great stuff man (pause) Excellent man

Speaker 1:

Right eh. What was your upbringing like? Was it strict or were your parents quite easy going?

Speaker 2:

mine were easy going really. (unclear) yeah.

Speaker 1:

And like what kind of punishments did they give you if you were bad?

Speaker 2:

(laughter) I never got any, I don't think (laughter)

Speaker 3:

Fairly strict I would say

Speaker 2:

Ah I mean I was -- my dad was firm but fair. You knew where your limita- you know where your boundaries were

Speaker 3:

You daresn't get smacked off my father. I'll tell you, he had a hand like a sledgehammer (pause) And he was only a short       . That's funny, all the lads are big. He was only five foot four.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah I remember you saying he was really short.

Speaker 3:

Do y'knaa what his nickname was at work was the little bowler because he used to bowl along.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

He was five foot four and bald as a coot.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(NAME)'s not five. He's five eight man.

Speaker 2:

No but (NAME) (laughter) bowls along

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

So we must get our height from my mother because my mother was five foot eight.

Speaker 2:

She's not anymore though

Speaker 3:

(interruption) My my mother used to be able to bend over and touch the floor with a full hand. Couldn't do it now because she's eighty six.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

Doubled over now

Speaker 1:

So you were quite easy going?

Speaker 2:

Yeah

Speaker 2:

And like how (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Well we didn't have

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Yeah. We didn't. I -- I knew my boundaries. And I had respect

Speaker 3:

You didn't have nowt then though did you?

Speaker 2:

No

Speaker 3:

You didn't have

Speaker 2:

I shared a room me. (unclear) When I was younger we lived in -- in when I lived in Newcastle, there was my gran, my aunty, my two uncles in the house. We had one room. So there was my mam, my dad and my me and (NAME) (pause) In the one room.

Speaker 1:

Where was (NAME)?

Speaker 2:

(NAME) was married by then

Speaker 1:

Ah right.

Speaker 3:

We lived in eh where my mam is now

Speaker 1:

(interruption) I know there was about seven of you

Speaker 3:

Wey-aye there was

Speaker 1:

(interruption) in one house

Speaker 3:

(interruption) my mother and father and five lads (pause) In a three bedroom house

Speaker 2:

In the small room there was only -- there was two of them. Him and (NAME) (unclear)

Speaker 3:

No no. In the back room there was three of us

Speaker 2:

But the small room was you and (NAME)

Speaker 3:

(NAME) and (NAME) (pause) slept in the little room at the front

Speaker 2:

I thought you (unclear) you and (NAME) slept in the little room

Speaker 3:

Me, (NAME) and (NAME) slept in the back room

Speaker 2:

Ah right

Speaker 1:

Was that the one. Is the small room she's got the front room?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Aye

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Uh-uh

Speaker 1:

And that's the one where Uncle (NAME) and Uncle (NAME) slept?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I -- I slept in bunk beds in there

Speaker 1:

Tiny. It's like my old room

Speaker 3:

(interruption) It's -- it's. Wey it's a box room. Kids now they want their own space and everything now.

Speaker 1:

Well mines not. My rooms not that big.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) (unclear) The trouble is youngsters now is that they're not into sharing

Speaker 1:

Well I'm not. I'm an only child

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Well (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) I -- I no. I think -- I think people. No the biggest problem is people expectations are so much higher than the used to be many years ago.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) You didn't have central heating

Speaker 2:

(interruption) And they never settled. No you didn't have central heating. Your mother didn't have central heating when I was there.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) No. We had a coal fire. Was only in later years we had gas fires. We had coal fires

Speaker 2:

But the trouble is now they want everything now

Speaker 3:

Jack Frost used to be on the inside of the window then not the outside

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Not the outside (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

Jesus

Speaker 2:

Used to have a -- Used to have a coat over your bed to keep you warm

Speaker 3:

Exactly

Speaker 1:

That sounds fun. Eh

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Hot water bottles eh

Speaker 1:

What did you want to be when you were a child? (pause) What was your -- what was your -- what was your goal as a child? What job did you want to have?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (unclear)

Speaker 3:

I didn't really (pause) have a goal and that. Well when I as younger (pause) How old are you talking about? Well

Speaker 1:

Just when you were at school you know what I mean

Speaker 3:

I just we- well a lot of my time was taken up because I joined the church choir. I wa- actually I wasn't in the choir first, I was altar boy at church. Haha you may laugh. But I liked church. It was -- it give (pause) I don't know it just (pause) must've been something I liked about it. Didn't always listen to what the priest said like.

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

All the talked about was money. Everything was about money (pause) But anyway what happened was (pause) me and you -- me and your Uncle were altar boys

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Which one?

Speaker 3:

(NAME)

Speaker 1:

Right

Speaker 3:

And eh

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Was Uncle (NAME) not one?

Speaker 3:

No I don't think so. I'm not sure

Speaker 1:

(unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) He's a vicar now like (laughter)

Speaker 3:

I'm not sure but what happened was (pause) I forget what we doing. We used to have a cup of tea or something after church and this lad come over and (pause) sequestrated us

Speaker 1:

What's that?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) That's a good word to use. I bet you divn't know what that (pause) He got a hold of us and (pause) got us to join the church choir because they were must have been (pause) a day for eh. What do you call it where you're recruiting? A recruiting drive.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) A recruitment drive

Speaker 3:

For the -- for the church choir. I mean it was a big choir then, St John's. Jesus

Speaker 1:

What?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Oh!

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Down there?

Speaker 3:

You had about thirty people in the choir man. A lot of all old blokes and lasses. You meet all sorts of different var- and I got joined into that because it was the money and you got paid. Yippee!

Speaker 2:

(interruption) And what you -- you used to go to the AYP or something

Speaker 3:

Used to get

Speaker 1:

(interruption) What's that?

Speaker 3:

Anglican Young People's Association. Just like a youth club. I used to row with the priest about that because he says you had to go to church to join it. I says 'Why don't you get people to come to the youth club first then

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Then they go to church

Speaker 3:

Do it that way.' And he hummed and hahhed about it y'knaa

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter) (pause) So what did you want to be when you were younger?

Speaker 2:

I cannot even remember now. Just finish school and get away and go

Speaker 3:

But what I was saying is I got paid you got paid a little (pause) I forget how much it was, it was only coppers, to be in the church choir

Speaker 1:

(unclear)

Speaker 3:

And you got two and six if you sang at a girls wedding

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter) Pick me for it

Speaker 3:

(interruption) And one weekend -- one weekend there was eight weddings

Speaker 1:

So how many? How much?

Speaker 3:

Well eight two and sixes

Speaker 1:

What's that?

Speaker 3:

A quid. We were rich! A quid. We were running down the street, 'We've got a bin lid, a quid'

Speaker 1:

What did you buy?

Speaker 3:

I forget

Speaker 2:

He went to the pub (laughter)

Speaker 3:

Aye. Ah no that was well aye when I was later on sixteen. We used -- we used to have to go (pause) on Wednesday night you had to go to choir practice and we used into sneak in the pub for a pint because before choir practice

Speaker 2:

(interruption) At sixteen. And all the talk about youngsters today

Speaker 1:

(interruption) No no to be fair

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Things are a bit. You weren't daft you had a pint of shandy or something.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) You weren't getting (pause) Yeah

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Yeah

Speaker 3:

Just to loosen the throat because it was a hard game singing y'knaa

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 2:

(laughter) Any excuse

Speaker 3:

(unclear) wings of a dove

Speaker 1:

(interruption) What made you (laughter) What made you go into the job you're in now? Ease or just money?

Speaker 2:

I left school at fifteen and that was the first interview I had and that was the job I got (pause) And I was good at maths. I was a wages clerk

Speaker 1:

(laughter) Yeah you're not that good at maths mam howay. Well you're better at maths than you are at English. I've seen your English. It's quite poor.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Poor. (laughter) I'm very poor at English

Speaker 1:

So what made you get into your job?

Speaker 3:

Well when I left school I didn't really I just wanted to fix things and I actually wanted to be an electrician and eh (pause) I remember going for a job interview in the town and obviously wanted someone with experience and I turned up. I looked like a lost sheep. I don't think I've ever told anybody about this. It was a bit embarrassing actually. Anyway I had (pause) I had two job interviews at the time and one was at the shipyards (pause) and one was with the railway. But the one (pause) the none of them were electricians, they were both like engineering fitters. And I just sort of says that's going to be. So I had the choice (pause) of going to the shipyards or going on the railway at the time (pause) And I plumped for the railway

Speaker 1:

Probably the best thing to do everyone's lost their jobs on the shipyards

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (unclear)

Speaker 3:

Eh (pause) I don't know (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) You could get a bus to Gateshead then couldn't you?

Speaker 3:

Aye the bus used to go all the way there. But I (pause) that was it. I got into the railway

Speaker 2:

And he's been there ever since

Speaker 3:

And the first thing they asked us was have you got any family that works on the railway. I says 'Aye my uncle blah blah is a train driver.' 'Oh aye uncle (NAME) aye. Knew him very well.'

Speaker 1:

So what do y- what -- what does your job entail and do you actually enjoy it? And has it changed since you've been there?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Oh!

Speaker 1:

Yours has. I know that much

Speaker 3:

My job's just changed out of all proportion. Because I -- I mean (pause) engineering's kaput now in this country (pause)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) You can blame Maggie Thatcher for that as well

Speaker 3:

(interruption) What I used to work on, they've all gone the stuff I used to work on. The big eh locomotives and that. No longer exist. All the diesel stuff it's (unclear) gone (pause) It's all eh high what?

Speaker 2:

And who do you blame for that?

Speaker 3:

Well it's just changes isn't it. We've gone electrified now haven't we (pause) Everything's electrified

Speaker 2:

Oh I know. But who do you blame for that? Who denationalized? Who d-

Speaker 3:

Ah well them them who come done that with the railways, it's a pantomime now. You got

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Who denationalized the railway?

Speaker 3:

The railway now

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Maggie Thatcher

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) What's it? Ten years ago. Nineteen

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter) That woman's the bane of my life (laughter)

Speaker 3:

Nineteen ninety six

Speaker 2:

(unclear)

Speaker 1:

Ninety six was John Major.

Speaker 2:

(unclear) was already in process with Maggie Thatcher. She denationalized everything

Speaker 3:

(interruption) You've got about a hundred companies. You've got about a hundred companies (pause) got their finger in the pie of the railways. And none of them know what each other are doing

Speaker 1:

Yeah

Speaker 3:

And it's all a farce. It's totally a pantomime. That's all I can put it down to (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Has your job changed much? Is it enjoyable? What does it entail? (laughter)

Speaker 2:

(unclear) it's enjoyable. Sometimes we have a laugh and sometimes it's really sad (pause) because you deal with lots of different issues with people

Speaker 1:

Strange people

Speaker 2:

Well you get the good, the bad and the ugly (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Are there any stories about any people you can actually put on tape or would that be? (pause)

Speaker 2:

If I told you (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Without names, without names because I know you would get in trouble

Speaker 3:

I could tell you a story. A big story. It would make you laugh your head off

Speaker 2:

(unclear)

Speaker 3:

Yes. A certain I'll not mention any names. But eh I was there when it happened. I had to turn away

Speaker 2:

Go on then

Speaker 3:

A certain chap took a lamppost through a -- through the train

Speaker 2:

(laughter) Yes (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) What?

Speaker 3:

Exactly. That's all I'm going to say

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 1:

What do you mean he took a lamppost through a train?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Well he had to move from one (pause) platform

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Platform to the other so he went in one door and then out the other door onto the track with a lamppost

Speaker 2:

He opened the door, put the lamppost in

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I was looking for the camera

Speaker 2:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

If the station master had seen it he would've got sacked. That's all I'll say

Speaker 2:

(laughter) That's terrible

Speaker 3:

It was a pantomime. I've seen -- I've seen some absolutely idiotic things in my time

Speaker 2:

What about (NAME) when he got he was working on the eh boiler and

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Oh the boiler blew back on him aye. He come out like eh Al Johnson singing Mammy. He was black as the ace of spades. Aye all the soot. Like Mammy! Ee I've seen -- I cou- I could write a book

Speaker 1:

(laughter) Well you should write a book

Speaker 2:

Well I could write a book about what's happened

Speaker 3:

(interruption) (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Yours yours sounds horrible

Speaker 2:

No no. You get a good laugh though

Speaker 3:

But if you're ever on the train having a cup of tea think of me. I've probably fixed the boiler that's making the cup of tea

Speaker 1:

Fair enough (pause) Em if you could change your job to something else what would it be and why? (pause) If you had the option to do something new

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Do something different

Speaker 2:

I wouldn't work with the public

Speaker 1:

I don't think anyone would.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Aye they are a pain in the neck

Speaker 2:

They're a pain in the proverbial

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

They're always wanting something for nothing

Speaker 2:

They always want more than you can give. They're demanding

Speaker 3:

Mm-mm

Speaker 1:

So what would your ideal job be then (pause) now?

Speaker 2:

What would my ideal job be?

Speaker 3:

I couldn't

Speaker 2:

(interruption) What I always wanted to do is run a little tea thing

Speaker 1:

A little tea cafe type thing like Hartside.

Speaker 3:

What like your friend?

Speaker 2:

No no no no nothing like that

Speaker 3:

There's a one for sale in Northumberland or something

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Well no with little -- with little em table and rooms where you can have a nice little cup of tea

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Honestly (NAME), I think you're a bit of a dreamer

Speaker 2:

I know

Speaker 1:

That's a nice idea. She could if yous save up. You could

Speaker 2:

No I don't want to do that now. Years and years ago but (pause) I think if we had of foreseen what England's like now I think we would've moved (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) We wouldn't be here. We would've emigrated

Speaker 3:

This country's sliding into obscurity I'm afraid to say.

Speaker 1:

I think it's all right (laughter)

Speaker 2:

Oh I love England don't get me wrong. It's just some of the people that em who -- who -- everything's so politically correct. We're too PC. They haven't got an opinion. You've got to have somebody else's opinion.

Speaker 3:

I was going to say something before but I can't remember

Speaker 1:

(laughter) Shall I move on? What is your fondest childhood memory? Like if you had a favourite em holiday or anything like that or just a memory from your childhood that you really like.

Speaker 3:

Holidays? Holidays was a caravan holiday when I was a kid.

Speaker 1:

I used to go on caravan holidays with you.

Speaker 3:

Aye you did. That's true.

Speaker 1:

I did so (unclear)

Speaker 3:

All this thing about going abroad when I was young was just -- just couldn't afford to do it.

Speaker 2:

I think sitting on my nana's knee watching the telly because I'd just got a telly. And the two budgies were going mad

Speaker 3:

Aye

Speaker 1:

What? At the television?

Speaker 2:

Yeah because they'd never seen (unclear) in the corner

Speaker 3:

I remember yours. It was a little Murphy.

Speaker 2:

(unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) A little Murphy set. (unclear) (pause) I think it only had eh

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Two channels. BBC and ITV

Speaker 3:

(interruption) ITV aye.

Speaker 2:

(laughter)

Speaker 1:

Is that it?

Speaker 2:

That was it (laughter)

Speaker 1:

Did you not have BBC Two or nothing?

Speaker 3:

Nope

Speaker 1:

Just two channels (pause) It's not much option is it?

Speaker 3:

Mm exactly.

Speaker 1:

When was this? Seventies? (pause) Sixties?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) sixties

Speaker 3:

Aye. When we were kids. Fifties and sixties. Watch With Mother har har.

Speaker 1:

I watched that

Speaker 2:

Andy Pandy.

Speaker 1:

I watched that as well

Speaker 2:

Oo I can remember coming home from school at dinner time because we lived that near and watching the one o'clock show with Mr Pastry and mike Neville

Speaker 1:

What?

Speaker 3:

Er what's his name? Richard Hern. Mr Pastry.

Speaker 2:

Mr Pastry

Speaker 3:

That was all slapstick wasn't it?

Speaker 2:

And I remember seeing you- your nana on television because she was watching the em th- the wrestling a- at- at- the theatre in Newcastle and

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Hold on. Your nana?

Speaker 2:

(NAME)'s

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Divn't say 'your nana'. I divn't like (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Your gran.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) grandma

Speaker 2:

Your grandma

Speaker 3:

Your grandma

Speaker 2:

Sorry your grandma

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I divn't know where this nana bits come from

Speaker 2:

Your grandma was watching th- th- the eh wrestling and Mick McManus was on the wrestling. (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Who's he?

Speaker 2:

He was -- he was a wrestler

Speaker 3:

(interruption) St James wrestling?

Speaker 2:

No no this was down south and it was on television and there was your grandma hitting Mick McManus with a handbag

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Who was Mick McManus?

Speaker 2:

He was a -- he was a wrestler. A famous wrestler

Speaker 3:

(interruption) An old -- old -- he was a wrestler of old

Speaker 2:

(unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Ah. Why'd she hit him with a handbag?

Speaker 2:

Y- your granddad said 'It's your gran- It's your mother.'

Speaker 3:

On TV.

Speaker 2:

On TV. 'Oh! I hope nobody's seen it

Speaker 1:

(laughter) That's embarrassing

Speaker 3:

She's a loony. She did not gamp somebody once?

Speaker 2:

Because they tried to steal something off her.

Speaker 3:

She gamped them aye.

Speaker 2:

Yes somebody tried to steal something off her and she hit him.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Gamped. Gamped. Brolly.

Speaker 2:

With her brolly

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) That's a gamp.

Speaker 1:

Well I wouldn't mess with my grandma then

Speaker 3:

Aye. She was a bit of a

Speaker 2:

(interruption) She was only (unclear)

Speaker 3:

Was it not when she went (pause) when she went at somebody because they spat.

Speaker 2:

Yes

Speaker 3:

I remember that

Speaker 2:

She got hold of him and give him a clip.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Did he spit (unclear)

Speaker 2:

He spat at her

Speaker 3:

Aye. Aye

Speaker 1:

Oh I would've give him a clip

Speaker 3:

She stood up. I mean she was -- she was two stone wet through but she'd stand up for her (pause) cause

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Ballsy

Speaker 3:

She had balls aye.

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 2:

Oh when she worked in a cafe (pause) when she worked in the cafe this man wouldn't pay his bill and he threatened her so she said 'you threaten me again' she says 'and I'll knock you out.' And he did it again so she knocked him out.

Speaker 1:

(laughter) She knocked him out?

Speaker 2:

She knocked him out

Speaker 1:

Ee! Was she aggressive? Did she have an aggressive nature?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) No no no no she wasn't of aggressive nature but (pause) I'll tell you what because of her background she'd had to stand up for herself

Speaker 3:

She had numb feet

Speaker 2:

Ee she did

Speaker 3:

When I used to come down (unclear) I used to come to your house

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Her feet were in the fire

Speaker 3:

She had her slippers on the (pause) toasting her feet

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter) (unclear) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

They were bloody singeing

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

She had a. Y'knaa the grill of a fire, she had her feet in

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 1:

In the grill of the fire?

Speaker 3:

I had to take the fire to bits

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

Because the fire wasn't burning properly I took all the elements out -- out the gas fire. Was full of matchsticks and bits of (pause) crud.

Speaker 2:

(laughter)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

What she'd been lighting her cigarette's from

Speaker 2:

Ee (laughter)

Speaker 3:

Her only bit of pleasure. (laughter)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter) (pause) What's -- what's your worst childhood memory? Very unpleasant memory.

Speaker 3:

When my dad died

Speaker 2:

Well h- how do you mean by child?

Speaker 1:

Childhood like you know like from zero to eighteen. Pretty much

Speaker 3:

Aye. When I started work I went to work and (pause) dad died.

Speaker 2:

Yeah (unclear)

Speaker 1:

It's not very nice. Sixteen and not having a dad and not very (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) It upset us because I had an argument with a kid in the pub a few years later about it. Because he was moaning about his father.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) You mean (NAME) (NAME). And then he lost -- he lost his dad and then he lost his daughter

Speaker 3:

Yeah. He was moaning about his father (pause) because he says 'I'm working too hard'. H- His father had a business. A garage business. And he's working in the (pause) in the -- in the garage business and he says 'Ah my father's a pain the        which is

Speaker 1:

(interruption) You didn't get a chance

Speaker 3:

No.

Speaker 1:

Neither did Uncle (NAME) and Uncle (NAME) did they?

Speaker 3:

You're right. No they didn't

Speaker 1:

Was Uncle (NAME) moved out by then?

Speaker 2:

Mm-mm

Speaker 3:

(interruption) He was in the Merchant Navy.

Speaker 1:

Was he in the Navy?

Speaker 2:

Merchant Navy

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Merchant Navy

Speaker 1:

I cannot imagine him all camped up in a Navy uniform.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Aye (unclear) kidda (pause) Bit of a hat rack.

Speaker 2:

And the best laugh we had was when your Uncle (NAME) was a Franciscan Friar and he came home one night.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Aye (pause) (unclear)

Speaker 2:

(unclear) We went to the pub and this guy asked him if he was going to a fancy dress. He had his habit on.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) (unclear)

Speaker 2:

How we kept (pause) We were on the floor laughing weren't we?

Speaker 3:

I remember that.

Speaker 2:

It was hilarious

Speaker 1:

Aw. Bless him.

Speaker 2:

Bless him? He didn't mind

Speaker 1:

So was he

Speaker 3:

(interruption) It was all right. He had good times. He went with a pub in Allenmouth

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (unclear)

Speaker 3:

They invited him to eh invited to be the eh judge at the wet t-shirt competition

Speaker 1:

What? Because he was a friar? (laughter)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter) One of them looked like Friar Tuck didn't he?

Speaker 3:

Lecherous toad

Speaker 1:

(laughter) So do you get along well with the rest of your family or is there a bit of meh?

Speaker 3:

What do you mean 'get on'?

Speaker 1:

Well you know (pause) there's no (unclear) or nothing, whereas if look at you know certain other people that we know some of their family (unclear)

Speaker 3:

Well w- it's like well everybody's not the same are they? Everybody has different em (pause) priorities and that.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) I got the best one

Speaker 1:

What? Best what? What do you mean?

Speaker 2:

I got the best one

Speaker 3:

The good egg

Speaker 1:

(laughter) (pause) Sly dig (pause) No no no

Speaker 2:

(interruption) I did get the best one

Speaker 3:

When you look at some of my brothers, they've got themselves into such a state. I just

Speaker 2:

I think we've been very lucky. (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Good management. I've always been (pause) I've always managed my money properly. Some people ca- some people just. No well some people can't manage things and can't manage money.

Speaker 2:

But that's not the point. What she was saying was I mean we- we're we- when you look at y- y- your brothers I mean

Speaker 3:

(interruption) It's all about prioritizing

Speaker 2:

Yeah prioritizing. I mean we've been lucky but y- y- you get on with your brothers. When you see them you get on.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Oh aye

Speaker 2:

But you're all individuals and no matter what you're all different

Speaker 1:

And you get along with your sisters?

Speaker 2:

Yeah I do yeah. But I don't

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Phworgh! Some most of the time

Speaker 2:

Yeah (unclear) but I think (pause) You're going to have special friends around like I've got. Fortunately I've got (pause) quite a few three or four good friends

Speaker 1:

Like (NAME) and all that

Speaker 2:

Yeah

Speaker 3:

I haven't got people like that have I? I suppose

Speaker 1:

You've got (NAME)

Speaker 3:

What?

Speaker 2:

You used to have that when you were in the eh

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I got married and lost it all

Speaker 2:

No you didn't

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter) No British Rail

Speaker 3:

Ah I've got a lot of associates and all that

Speaker 1:

You used to like (NAME) and that horrible guy who used to have the calendars up with the dirty women (pause) in the mess -- in the mess room you used to have. (NAME) or whatever he was called. He's a Mackem I think

Speaker 3:

He's a councillor I think now.

Speaker 1:

And he used to have that

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Shh!

Speaker 1:

(interruption) What?

Speaker 3:

Divn't put this on the tape.

Speaker 1:

Tough! It's on now. Used to have them dirty calendars up with the        out.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Ah right well

Speaker 1:

(interruption) I remember him

Speaker 2:

Anything else then?

Speaker 1:

Em. What? Em. The proudest moment of your life and why?

Speaker 2:

Proudest moment of my life? Was you.

Speaker 3:

When she was born

Speaker 2:

(interruption) When you were born

Speaker 1:

Ahh. Thank you

Speaker 2:

(interruption) No it's true! It was

Speaker 3:

(interruption) It was

Speaker 2:

It was

Speaker 1:

Not getting married. Not (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) The best thing since sliced bread

Speaker 2:

No no. No no no no

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I cannot remember getting married. It was a blur

Speaker 2:

No no (unclear) We knew when you went when you left (pause) col- em school (pause) and you had your em (pause) you had your em. No. The proudest moment well one of the proudest moments

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Is this when I was in the play?

Speaker 2:

Yeah. When you were Princess Alice the Newcastle United supporter.

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Oh

Speaker 2:

I have never been so proud in all my life and I've never laughed so much either.

Speaker 1:

I was -- I feel

Speaker 3:

(interruption) You were. You're too much like me. You always undermine your abilities

Speaker 2:

Yes

Speaker 3:

Because I tell you something (pause) I've heard you singing

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Shh!

Speaker 3:

And you're a good bloody singer

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Shh!

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Shh!

Speaker 3:

You tell porkies

Speaker 1:

Shut up man

Speaker 3:

Why? I'm telling the truth (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Shh

Speaker 2:

(interruption) But y- you don't have any faith in yourself.

Speaker 3:

That's (interruption) (unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Ma! This is not a therapy session for me. You're meant to talk about yourself.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Not but you asked. (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I know what I

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (unclear)

Speaker 3:

I know what you're like because I'm like that as well.

Speaker 1:

Talk about Princess Alice now

Speaker 2:

When she was Princess Alice. Do you remember that?

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Mm-mm

Speaker 2:

I've never laughed so much (pause) and I've never been so proud

Speaker 3:

Aye my proudest moment when she was born. Because you were handed to me

Speaker 2:

Yeah

Speaker 1:

Was it because I was your first?

Speaker 2:

No

Speaker 3:

(interruption) No just

Speaker 2:

(unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (unclear) before that

Speaker 3:

(interruption) It was an experience I would never, never eh have missed for the world.

Speaker 1:

And eh what's been the most embarrassing thing? (pause) Har- like you know anything really embarrassing that's happened to you.

Speaker 2:

Oh I walked into the men's toilet at Chelsea football ground. I didn't realise it. I just saw all these men in (laughter)

Speaker 3:

Embarrassing moment?

Speaker 2:

(laughter) It was embarrassing (laughter)

Speaker 1:

And you noticed there were urinals there.

Speaker 2:

Yeah

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

I can't think of anything. I've woke up

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Never been embarrassed?

Speaker 3:

What do you call embarrassed like?

Speaker 2:

Is it not when you knocked the chandelier down?

Speaker 3:

Oh God aye. At the party. (unclear) and she had a china chandelier. Next thing I know it was all round my feet (pause) Whoops.

Speaker 1:

(laughter) That's terrible

Speaker 3:

Aye I remember that. But what else do you call embarrassing? Waking up in somebody's house and you divn't know where you are like the next day after the party

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Ah that's just

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Behind somebody's settee or something. Where the hell am I?

Speaker 1:

(laughter) Yeah that's quite embarrassing

Speaker 2:

I'm always embarrassed because I've got no sense of direction.

Speaker 3:

Oh you're useless.

Speaker 2:

(unclear)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Going round in circles trying to find Middlesbrough swimming pool

Speaker 2:

(interruption) Your -- your dad once said to me when he goes on -- goes out with me in a car (laughter) it's an adventure in itself (laughter)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) It's an adventure.

Speaker 2:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

A total adventure

Speaker 2:

(laughter)

Speaker 1:

I remember when we went to go to Dalton Park. Where did we end up?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) North Yorkshire! Because we were on the A1 and then went North Yorkshire. I was like 'Where's Dalton Park?' and I -- she's like 'Ah it's near Washington or something.'

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter) Yeah (laughter)

Speaker 1:

I was like 'We're in North Yorkshire' and she said 'I think we've gone a bit too far.'

Speaker 2:

(laughter)

Speaker 1:

And she's on the wrong road. She's meant to be on the A19 and we're on the A1.

Speaker 2:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) You we- you weren't down the south with us the last time she went on a venture

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

We were on the eh what road was it?

Speaker 2:

(laughter) Going down towards Woking

Speaker 3:

The A31?

Speaker 2:

Something like that aye

Speaker 3:

(interruption) Aye. We were heading (pause) We were heading for em

Speaker 2:

Woking

Speaker 3:

Farnborough

Speaker 2:

Oh was it Farnborough

Speaker 3:

We were heading for Farnborough. I says 'Right ho (NAME)' I says 'We need to be off at this next junction (pause) so turn to the left.' So she turns to the left (pause) And instead of going round the roundabout and down (pause) over the top (pause) where we wanted to be off.

Speaker 1:

(interruption) Yeah

Speaker 3:

She goes off, round the roundabout, comes back and down onto the road we've just come up.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

We're heading in the same direction

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) And she starts arguing with me. 'We're in the -- we're going -- we're going the opposite way now. We're in the right lane.'

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) I says 'We're going exactly the same way we've just been going.' (pause) This is her sense of direction. None (pause) Does not compute.

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

And when I -- and another thing that narks when I'm in the car with her. I don't know how she ever gets anywhere

Speaker 2:

(laughter)

Speaker 3:

I'll be- she'll be saying 'Which way do I go now?' and I'll say 'Right when you come to the next roundabout just go straight up on, straight on.' (pause) She doesn't understand what that means.

Speaker 1:

She needs to know what number exit it is

Speaker 3:

Or you come to a junction and I'll say 'Ah turn left at the junction.' and we'll turn right for some reason.

Speaker 2:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 1:

(interruption) (laughter)

Speaker 3:

She did that when we came back with you from (pause) Stirling.

Speaker 1:

Oh I remember and we ended up on a bloody bypass somewhere

Speaker 3:

(interruption) (unclear) Instead of on wor way to Newcastle we were on our way to bloody Glasgow.

Speaker 1:

Yeah yeah I remember that

Speaker 3:

What's that all about?

Speaker 2:

Well I can't help I've got no sense of direction

Speaker 1:

Eh. Who are your idols and heroes like in your childhood or now and why do you like them and why they're heroic and idolise them and stuff? (pause) Mam?

Speaker 3:

Idols and heroes

Speaker 2:

My dad I think. Because he's been through so much in his life

Speaker 3:

Idols and heroes

Speaker 2:

No-one

Speaker 1:

Not even (unclear)

Speaker 3:

(interruption) What do you mean by idols and heroes?

Speaker 2:

(interruption) And he never got angry

Speaker 1:

Just a hero. Someone you look up to as an inspirational person

Speaker 2:

My dad. He never ever got angry even if. He was a gentle giant (unclear)

Speaker 3:

I divn't think I look up to anybody

Speaker 1:

(laughter) Just confident

Speaker 3:

Do you mean where I gain inspiration from?

Speaker 1:

Yeah. That kind of thing

Speaker 3:

I don't know (pause) I can't think

Speaker 1:

(laughter)

Speaker 2:

Your dad. My dad. (unclear) my dad

Speaker 1:

Not your parents? Not anyone like you know (pause) a famous electrician? (laughter) I don't know (laughter)

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