• Thank you very much | Diolch yn fawr

    All at JackArmy.net would like to thank everyone who has played a part on this site over the past 25 years whether that is through writing, contributing, moderating, posting or just visting and reading.

    Without any of you the work that has gone into the site would have been pointless and we will always be proud that we built, generated and managed a community that was such a big part of the Swansea City supporting life for so long.

    It has been a pleasure to bring to you the site for so long but the time is now right to turn the lights out for the last time but we do it both with a heavy heart and a sense of pride driven by the so many messages received since we announced the closure.

    The site will remain here for a period until we archive and mothball it for the last time later this summer but all aspects are in a read only format.

    Thank you though for all the memories

    Phil Sumbler
    Owner, jackarmy.net

Sayings from back in the day you rarely hear...

  • Thread starter Thread starter Swanjaxs
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies Replies: Replies 104
  • Views Views: Views 10,991
My dad used to refer to the Halifax Building Society in Port Talbot as the rowing boat club.

Because your money went "in, out, in, out".

Still on the subject of money, my grandfather always used to recommend investing in "savings sirstificates".
I walked through part of Neath around 3 ish today, Halifax is now closed in Queen St and so is everything else from what I could see, when I moved up here 40 odd yrs. ago it was a vibrant little town, what a difference these days M&S has gone and there's just nothing there anymore, place is like a ghost town.

I've had a titful of the place, I'd move tomorrow if I could.
 
My Nan used to call the kitchen of her two bed Victorian terrace "the scullery" which I always thought was weird.
Aye, we had a scullery as well but it wasn’t the kitchen it was a small room just off it. Then the council refurbished the house and it lost that name and became known as “out the back room”. These days it would be called a “utility room” I suppose.
 
A scullery is the adjoining room to the kitchen in posh houses where the washing up and other menial tasks are done. Those tasks are performed by the scullery maid.
 
I walked through part of Neath around 3 ish today, Halifax is now closed in Queen St and so is everything else from what I could see, when I moved up here 40 odd yrs. ago it was a vibrant little town, what a difference these days M&S has gone and there's just nothing there anymore, place is like a ghost town.

I've had a titful of the place, I'd move tomorrow if I could.
Llanelli is pretty horrendous these days too. I think there needs to be a rethink on business rates, maybe tax the monster out of town sheds at a higher rate and lower the taxes on high street properties to try and encourage business people to open shops etc in our town centres. I’d also look at making car parking really affordable.
 
A scullery is the adjoining room to the kitchen in posh houses where the washing up and other menial tasks are done. Those tasks are performed by the scullery maid.
Actually this was one of the things that I thought was weird about my Nan calling her kitchen the scullery.

In her teens and twenties she'd been a scullery maid. She ought to have known the difference.
 
Llanelli is pretty horrendous these days too. I think there needs to be a rethink on business rates, maybe tax the monster out of town sheds at a higher rate and lower the taxes on high street properties to try and encourage business people to open shops etc in our town centres. I’d also look at making car parking really affordable.
When you consider places like Aberdare and Treorchy and down west you got Carmarthen and especially Narberth are bustling and then look at Bridgend, Neath and Llanelli's ghost towns, yes you can perhaps blame the out of Town areas, but you need to travel if you're based in Neath M&S closing is a massive loss, yes Llantrisant as a big shopping centre and Merthyr has for those in Aberdare and Treorchy but they are still busy.
 
Parlour , the posh front room for guests on a Sunday Afternoon tea gathering .

Scullery yes , seem to recall it being called the back kitchen when I heared my parents talking .

Coalman tipping a cwt of coal into the outside bunker and I had to shovel it into a tin bucket to get to the fireplace .

Slave labour these days I suppose .
 

Members online

Back
Top