by GaryLockyer » Wed Sep 19, 2012 5:08 am
Using Google Maps you can locate 107 Duffryn Street, 5 doors south of the Ferndale Hotel.
It has a white front door. If you scan the houses on either side you will notice that the northern house has one grating outside and the southern house has two gratings in the pavement at the wall.
These gratings were to allow light down into the cellars.
Go along New Street and up the dead-end Rosser St - which is the road opposite Ayron Street and you will be able to have a view of the rear of Duffryn Street. There are lanes which run in both directions off Rosser Street and they were used as entrances into the cellars. Some of the houses were intact - i.e. they owned all 3 storeys. These had very narrow stairways inside the house leading down to them, I would guess-timate that they would only have been about 30 inches wide. A tight fit for one person and no chance of meeting and crossing with someone on the stairs.
I have been in both styles of these houses and it was a very eerie feeling when the only light that you could see was being filtered down from above through those tiny gratings.
The accommodation in them was also very tiny. Consider having to cook on an oldfashioned fire hob -no cookers in those days, and everyone seemed to live in that one room. There were usually two other rooms in them as well, but they were generally bedrooms.
(Just think of the family with 4 kids living down there).
They had outside toilets and hot water was boiled in kettles on the hob.
Washing day - which used to be a Monday in Ferndale, was conducted outside in an old tin bath or similar.
Every Monday all of the clotheslines would be a-flutter with sparkling whites and from a distance appeared to be a mass of bunting waving in the breeze. Pity the days when it rained and all of the washing was dried indoors on clothes horses ar even those pull-up hoists which lifted to the ceilings.
Another street that had cellars was Darren Terrace, however they had 'proper' entrances with steps going down to them and a small yard at the front, so they were a lot lighter inside.
You can also view these on the Google maps and see the entries and steps, plus if you go in Rhondda Terrace and look up to Darren you can view the 3 storey set-ups.
These are my recollections of the cellars.
Gary