Alan Edgar (Eggy1948) Posted July 5, 2021 Posted July 5, 2021 Â @Kevin1956Â - I'll have to have a read of that
lilbill15 Posted July 5, 2021 Posted July 5, 2021 1 hour ago, Kevin1956 said: OMG! So nothing has changed in Bedlington since 1873!? Â âNarrow minded and puritanical â, eh? Whatâs new? đx
lilbill15 Posted July 5, 2021 Posted July 5, 2021 10 minutes ago, lilbill15 said: OMG! So nothing has changed in Bedlington since 1873!?  âNarrow minded and puritanical â, eh? Whatâs new? đx However @Canny lass @Alan Edgar (Eggy1948)etc.  ?? Where does this come from? Did typewriters exist in 1873, please? Itâs beautifully written, extremely descriptive and Iâd love to believe this document, but I donât until itâs provenance is provided, please! I really want to believe this account but currently donât trust it, sorry đxx
lilbill15 Posted July 5, 2021 Posted July 5, 2021 N.B. Of course, it could be a transcript of an earlier written document but Iâm not convinced without some verification đx
Canny lass Posted July 6, 2021 Posted July 6, 2021 @lilbill15Â I can vouch for the authenticity of this text. Iâve seen the original (National Archives). It is, as you suggest, a transcript of the original. This is evident in the transcriberâs use of the Latin âsicâ indicating that he/she has quoted the text verbatim to include even the authorâs non-standard language use. âand away to the south east firey (sic) heapsâ (p8) âAway from the old pit is what is what (sic) is very appropriatelyâ (p8) The article is one in a series, Our Colliery Villages, published in the Newcastle Weekly Chronicle 1872 onwards. There are a few transcripts floating about on the internet if you don't want to subscribe to the NA. 1
Canny lass Posted July 6, 2021 Posted July 6, 2021 PS. Yes typewriters did exist in 1873 - but only just, having been invented in the 1860's. 1
lilbill15 Posted July 6, 2021 Posted July 6, 2021 7 minutes ago, Canny lass said: @lilbill15Â I can vouch for the authenticity of this text. Iâve seen the original (National Archives). It is, as you suggest, a transcript of the original. This is evident in the transcriberâs use of the Latin âsicâ indicating that he/she has quoted the text verbatim to include even the authorâs non-standard language use. âand away to the south east firey (sic) heapsâ (p8) âAway from the old pit is what is what (sic) is very appropriatelyâ (p8) The article is one in a series, Our Colliery Villages, published in the Newcastle Weekly Chronicle 1872 onwards. There are a few transcripts floating about on the internet if you don't want to subscribe to the NA. @Canny lassthanks, Iâm delighted that youâve confirmed this. I already use the National Archives (at your suggestion) am finding tons of stuff, thanks again. Iâll delve for the rest of these articles đxx
Alan Edgar (Eggy1948) Posted July 6, 2021 Posted July 6, 2021 (edited) @Kevin1956 thanks for that interesting read, never thought that Netherton would get such a write upđ. I can't remember ever hearing the term - Bob an Joan (page 2). Enjoyed the description of the 'old colliery caller' (page 3) I'm please by the time I was delivered into this world the '...narrow minded and puritanical folk of Bedlington..' (page 8 ) had slightly eased.  I see Netherton is numbered XLV = 45 in 'OUR COLLIERY VILLAGES'. Not that I want to read them all but does anyone know if there is a full list of the Colliery Villages that the author has written about? Edited July 6, 2021 by Alan Edgar (Eggy1948) 1
lilbill15 Posted July 6, 2021 Posted July 6, 2021 @Kevin1956& @Alan Edgar (Eggy1948)Â Iâm echoing Mr Eggyâs comments, dead interesting reading đ, @Canny lasshas pointed me to the National Archives for more. What better to do on such a soggy day as it is here? A bowl of mutton pilaff, a full teapot and a rummage in historical documents, bliss! đđx
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