Jump to content

Recommended Posts

This picture is of the actual fog.

To help in the dense fog three white lines were painted around roadside trees, and lamposts and the poles that carried the overhead Tram cables.

I knew that my house was fourteen gates from the corner from one end and sixteen from the other corner at the other end, in the dense fog I fumbled along counting the gates and entered into my familier gate we always went into the house round the back I went down the side alley to the back door entered and turned on the light. As the light showed I was not in my home but had counted from the wrong end corner, I turned out the light and made my way along two gates to find I was home.

At this time in the War there were no street lights, and vehicle lihts were just a small slit in the cover over the the main light, this was not to show the way for the driver but to show the pedestrians that a vehicle was coming.

If you went on a tram the windows were covered in a fine close net curtain that was glued over the glass, this was to protect the passengers if the glass got shattered by bomb blasts, there being no light inside the tram only very dim shaded lamps. Looking out through the glass window you had to spit on your finger and try to clean the ciggarette smoke stained glass through a minute hole in the netting, to see dim figures outside.

The trams could continue to run as they were guided by the rails that would take the tram to its destination.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/19488-london-fog/
Share on other sites

Interesting report about London Fog in East Dulwich in the 1940s.


I can only remember the East Dulwich London Fogs of the 1950s. There were pea-soupers like you see in the movies but I can only remember visibility going down to about twelve feet. The clean air act must have been starting to bite by the end of the 1950s. I think they were also becoming quite rare. Perhaps one a year at most?


Can you remember which East Dulwich coal merchant your family bought its coal from?


John K

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/19488-london-fog/#findComment-473814
Share on other sites

I cant remember the Name of the Merchant but it was from his shop at number 8 Whatley Road corner of Ulverscroft Road, he kept the horse and cart in the back. The coal was trained into East Dulwich Goods yard beside the station, it arrived in open top trucks, a side flap was opened and the coal weighed with his scale on a scoop style apperatus that tipped it into the heavy black Tarred one hundred weight sacks, these were moved across to the level cart that had backed onto the Wagon.

The cart being so heavy was driven via Crystal Palace Road ? Goodrich Road to the upper parts of Lordship Lane.

Most houses had a circular opening in the front door step with a cast iron cover the cellar being below it was tipped down the hole. Our Cellar was in the house so he had to bring the sacks into the house, mum used to count the sacks as 10 were broght in.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/19488-london-fog/#findComment-473830
Share on other sites

I lived in Forest Hill as a boy and it was always my job to count the sacks of coal for my mum's Aga.


In the sixties the Aga was ripped out and central heating installed.

It was then my job to smash the Aga into small enough pieces (and loads of clay) to get rid of.

Can you imagine a six or seven year old solid fuel Aga being dumped today?

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/19488-london-fog/#findComment-473860
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • He seemed to me to be fully immersed in the Jeremy Corbyn ethos of the Labour Party. I dint think that (and self describing as a Marxist) would have helped much when Labour was changed under Starmer. There was a purge of people as far left as him that he was lucky to survive once in my opinion.   Stuff like this heavy endorsement of Momentum and Corbyn. It doesn't wash with a party that is in actual government.   https://labourlist.org/2020/04/forward-momentum-weve-launched-to-change-it-from-the-bottom-up/
    • I perceive the problem.simply as spending too much without first shoring up the economy.  If the government had reduced borrowing,  and as much as most hate the idea, reduced government deiartment spending (so called austerity) and not bowed to union pressures for pay rises, then encouraged businesses to grow, extra cash would have entered the coffers and at a later stage when the economy was in a stronger position rises in NI or taxes would have a lesser impact, but instead Reeves turned that on its head by increasing ni which has killed growth, increased prices and shimmied the economy.  What's worse is that the perceived 20 billion black hole has increased to 30 billion in a year. Is there a risk that after 5 years it could be as high as 70 billion ???     
    • That petition is bananas.   If you want a youth centre there pay the landlord the same rent a Londis would and build it yourself or shut the f**k up to be honest. Wasting our MPs time with this trivial nonsense is appalling. If your kids are still out at 1am on a school night you've got bigger problems than vapes and booze and hot sausage rolls. 
    • There used to be a better baker than Gail's on the same site immediately before Gail's pulled their financial muscle.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...