The Classic Kitchen Maid's Memoir
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I was born in 1907 in Hove, the second child of a family of seven. My earliest recollection is that other children seemed to be better off than we were. But our parents cared so much for us. One particular thing that I always remember was that every Sunday morning my father used to bring us a comic and a bag of sweets. You used to be able to get a comic for a halfpenny plain and a penny coloured. Sometimes now when I look back at it, I wonder how he managed to do it when he was out of work and there was no money at all coming in.
My father was a painter and decorator. Sort of general oddjob man. He could do almost anything: repair roofs, or do a bit of plastering; but painting and paper- hanging were his main work. Yet in the neighbourhood where we lived, there was hardly any work in the winter. People didn’t want their houses done up then; they couldn’t be painted outside and they didn’t want the bother of having it all done up inside. So the winters were the hardest times.
My mother used to go out charring from about eight in the morning till six in the evening for two shillings a day. Sometimes she used to bring home little treasures: a basin of dripping, half a loaf of bread, a little bit of butter or a bowl of soup. She used to hate accepting anything. She hated charity. But we were so glad of them that, when she came home and we saw that she was carrying something, we used to make a dive to see what she’d got.
It seems funny today, I suppose, that there was this hatred of charity, but when my parents brought us up there was no unemployment money. Anything you got was a charity.
I remember my mother, when we only had one pair of shoes each and they all needed mending, she went down to the council to try to get more for us. She had to answer every question under the sun and she was made to feel that there was something distasteful about her because she hadn’t got enough money to live on.
It was very different getting somewhere to live in those days. You just walked through the streets, and there were notices up, ‘Rooms to let’. When we were extra hard up, we only had one room or two rooms in somebody else’s house. But when Dad was working, we would go around looking for half a house. We never had a house to ourselves. Not many people could afford a house in those days, not to themselves. As for buying a house, why, such things were never even dreamed of!
I know I used to wonder why, when things were so hard, Mum kept having babies, and I remember how angry she used to get when a couple of elderly spinsters at a house where she worked kept telling her not to have any more children, that she couldn’t afford to keep them. I remember saying to my mother, ‘Why do you have so many children? Is it hard to have children?’ And she said, ‘Oh, no. It’s as easy as falling off a log.’
From: BELOW STAIRS by Margaret Powell, copyright © 1968 by Margaret Powell and Leigh Crutchley, and reprinted by permission of St. Martin’s Press, LLC.
Margaret Powell was 15 when she arrived at one of the great houses of 1920s London to begin her life as a kitchen maid. Work started at 5:30 a.m., went on until after dark, and consisted of scrubbing vegetables, appeasing mistresses and even ironing bootlaces.
In Below Stairs, Powell tells her tales of service with wit, warmth and a sharp eye. From the gentleman with a penchant for stroking housemaids’ curlers to the heartbreaking story of a pregnant maid who’s fired for being seduced by her mistress’ nephew, it brilliantly evokes the long vanished world of masters and servants. At its heart, however, it’s the remarkable and uplifting true story of an indomitable woman, who, though her position was lowly, never stopped aiming high.
Hardcover : 224 pages
Publisher: St. Martin's Press Inc. ( January 03, 2012 )
Item #: 13-505899
ISBN: 9781250005441
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 0.56inches
Product Weight: 11.0 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

I liked this book. Because of Upstairs Downstairs and Downton Abbey I really wanted to read this book. I enjoyed it and had a hard time putting it down. I actually finished it in 2 days. This girl was intelligent and didn't let anyone walk all over her. She wasn't quite the submissive maid as portrayed in Upstairs Dowstairs and Downton Abbey. She planned to get out of domestic service and make a life for herself. She was a strong woman and held her head up.
Reviewer: Kathy A
The writing style is definitely from the 40's too. In its day it probably would have passed muster. However, the present writing style is much different. The description of the book leaves the buyer unaware that it is really a period piece.It cannot hold a candle to the below stairs group found in Downton Abbey!
Reviewer: Gerry S
Absolutely fabulous background to much of the narrative in Downtown Abbey. Made the TV servies even that much better.
Reviewer: Curtis B
Very slow and not very interesting information.
Reviewer: Kim R
Reviewer: Janice T
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