The thing that often surprises me about some of these old photos of Sheffield is that they look "busy". It seems there is a lot going on, people out in the street, shopping, working. They give me a feeling that things were prosperous, people engaged. Look at how many different businesses there are in that one picture alone. And not a charity shop, nail bar or vaping store in sight!
That chap carrying the sack of something on his shoulder...he'd be stopped from doing that now. His employer wouldn't want the liability of him injuring himself by doing so. That would be a 2 man job now and they'd probably have a little trolley to put it in.
A bit like when I was a kid... this was a common sight...
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Dustbin men, carrying metal dustbins, often filled with hot ashes from the coal fires which everyone used to have. They'd sling off the lid, then hoist the bin up onto their shoulders and walk them to the dustbin lorry, which looked like this...
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(That looks like a Bedford O series to me btw)
The sides of the dustbin lorry used to lift up (you can see the handles on the sliding panels) and the contents of the bin were manually tipped into the lorry.
Years later, the depositing of hot ashes into dustbins became illegal? I certainly remember a new type of dustbin lid which had "No hot ashes" embossed on it. And then of course, the manual tipping disappeared with the advent of these...
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The Seddon dustbin lorry - which did the heavy lifting and spawned a new generation of dustbin men, who were prized not for their ability to lift heavy things, but to push wheeled dustbins as fast as they can and then leave them randomly along the pavement for the general public to work out which belonged to whom?