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Thursday, 9 April 2026

Memories of my Grandfatther's Home - Sepia Saturday

This week's Sepia Saturday prompt image shows a house .   Here I take a nostalgic look back at my grandfather's house  in Poulton le Fylde, Lancashire in north west England.  

My grandfather's home c.1950 - The Danson family home 1926-2001

 
Grandfather was William Danson (1875-1962), 5th son of James Danson and Maria Rawcliffe. In 1907 he married Alice English and they had five children - Edith, Kathleen (my mother), Harry, Billy, with baby of the family Peggy, born after the First World War. Alice died in 1945 and I never knew her.
 
Grandad was a taciturn country man  who,  when he was conscripted in 1916,  was working as a cattle man at the local auction mart.   In the First World War he was awareded the Military  Medal for "Conspicious gallantary and determined devotion to duty in action."  But  I was warned by my aunt that he would never talk abiut his experiences then. I have memories of him taking my brother and I to the auction marst and out on country walks,  of spotting rabbits in the field,s and gathering  wild flowers, berries and leaves for the nature table at school.  
         
 
Grandad in army uniform 1916,  and relaxing in between his brother Robert on the left and a friend. 
 
The Danson family moved into the semi-detached house in 1926.   I still have the receipt for the deposit of £67. It looks quite a big house in the photograph, but, with only three small bedrooms, it must have still been a squash for William,  Alice,  three daughters and two sons.
 
The front door had a round stained glass window which I thought was very posh - until it had to be replaced with clear glass.  Half way up the side wall  of the house  was a small hatch door which revealed the coal shute where the coal men emptied  their sacks down into a small cellar under the stairs. My uncle Harry (a joiner)  much later took on the hard task to clear it all out to create a much needed "glory hole" and utility room.   He also modernised the kitchen and installed French windows in the living  room at the back of the house. 
 
In the living room a  copper kettle stood in the hearth (open fire) and I was told that had belonged to my great grandmother Maria Danson, nee Rawcliffe (1859-1919).  
 
 
 
 
To the left of the fireplace was a cupboard where a shoebox was kept,   holding family photographs and memorabilia.  It was a big treat if I was allowed to look thorough this box and it was the photograph of my great grandmother Maria (below)  which was the  inspiration  to draw up my first  Danson family tree and set me on the ancestral trail.  I was  about 12 years old then  
 
 
 
My great grandmother Maria Danson, nee Rawcliffe. with her eldest granddaughter,  Annie Maria Danson, my mother's cousin.  
 
Pride of place in the front small room (kept for best) was the piano, complete with candlestick holders,  which I learnt to play on.  The  bookcase held the   family bible recording the marriage of my great grandparents Maria Rawcliffe and James Danson in 1877 and the birth of their first four  (out of ten) children - entries petered out after that.  Another favourite book which had belonged to my grandmother and was treasured by my mother  was an 1899 edition of "Pride and Prejudice" with delicate pencil drawings protected by flimsy paper. 
 
But there was one surprising feature about the house, though - it did not have electricity until the late 1950s, because my grandfather refused to have it installed. I remember my aunt standing on a chair to light the ceiling gas lights, and ironing with a  flat iron, heaed in the fire, whilst the flames from the gas cooker frightened me. 

Outside the side trellis gate was later taken down and a driveway created to take my uncle's motor bike and side car, and later a car.  Grandad's hen house at the back then became the garage.  

The large gardens were my grandfather's and later my uncle's pride and joy - with floral displays in the  front and  productive vegetables and fruit  grown at the back. The front garden was a regular setting for family photographs.


My dressmaker mother modellin  one of her outfits - late 1930s.   

 

A unique photograph as the only one I have of both sets of grandparents William & Alice Danson on the left  and Albert and Mary Weston, taken in the garden after my parent's wedding in 1938.  

  

Sisters Peggy, Edith and Kathleen Danson  with their mother, a rather frail looking Alice  c.1941

 

1941 and my father is setting out for war service in the RAF.  Here with Mum on the right and her sister, my aunt Edith on the left

                     My aunt Edith,  with a little podgy me c 1944.


 

My brother and I in my long dress for the local Gala Day, c.1951   

       Full circle  - my mother with my uncle  Harry, c.1990s.  

My  mother was the first of the family to marry in 1938, followed  by Billy, then her younger sister Peggy who emigrated to Australia in 1948.   Grandad, William Danson died in 1962.     Edith and Harry lived in the house  nearly all their lives (apart from short term marriages)  until their deaths in 1995 and 2001.  This  marked the end of the house that had been a family home for nearly 80 years.  

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Sepia Saturday gives an opportunity for genealogy bloggers  
to share their family history and memories through photographs
 
 
 
Click HERE to see  posts from other Sepia Saturday bloggers.
 
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