Day 50
Halfway through our 100 days of Leith and as the weather remains wintry, we look back at previous cold snaps experienced by Leithers, in particular the Winter of 1947 recalled in these excerpts from a piece by Frank Ferri.
At the tender age of 12, I well remember one of the coldest Februaries on record, with some places in the country recording temperatures of -20 C, intricate patterns of frost forming on our widows, your breadth turning to steam and that was in the house, icicles a couple of feet long dangled dangerously from roofs of buildings and external water pipes.
I remember seeing these Clydesdale horses pulling these heavy loads (These poor beasts were used extensively to transport goods all over the city until the late 50s/60s).. they struggled with their load and in some instances inhumanely goaded by their driver, their nostrils flaring and belching steam, as they tried to keep their feet slipping on the slightest of gradients on the hard frozen compacted snow, the driver cracking his whip in aggressive encouragement.
Because of the fuel shortage, I used to wander all over the place for my mother, trying to get some form of fuel to burn such heavy duty cardboard or fruit crates from the Fruiters, grocers or wood from local sawmill and the cooperage in Ballantyne Road Leith, anything that was combustible.
It was a thought to get out of bed in the morning, and even worse, to think about having a wash with cold water at the only sink in the house in the living room… ([There were] no kitchens or bathrooms in these days of tenement living) having to hold your cold clothes above the open flame of the gas stove to take the chill from them before putting them on.
To the kids of the 21st century, in centrally heated houses, playing with your Wii’s, iPods, mobile phones and computers, have a thought of the amusements available to forefathers of the 20th century as THEY struggled to read their weekly pleasure, the Beano or Dandy comic, in the dim light of a gas mantle that was lucky to emit light in your living room further than six feet, in front of a lit fireplace if they could have one. No electric lighting in many homes in those days, we had gas light up until about 1948, even then we could only afford to have it installed in the living room, nowhere else, even the toilet was in total darkness.
-An Excerpt from Winter of 1947 by Frank Ferri