Emily Robinson
Emily belongs to: Cullercoats Community Centre
Emily was born in Front Street, Cullercoats. Her father was a plasterer and her mother sold fish. Emily worked in London during the war and returned to Cullercoats when she was demobbed.
Emily was interviewed by Kylea Little on 1 March 2006. The interview took place at Cullercoats Community Centre and lasted 23 minutes and 45 seconds.

Mother going away with fish
"Well, my father was a plasterer on buildings, and my mother was a housewife, of course, with a large family, until I went to school, and then she began to sell fish"
Well, my father was a plasterer on buildings, and my mother was a housewife, of course, with a large family, until I went to school, and then she began to sell fish. She used a creel and travelled to about Cramlington three times a week and sold fish.
I remember the days that she had to go to the Fish Quay and order the fish, she and a lady neighbour. And then, it used to be delivered- we had a large back yard, it used to be delivered in boxes with lots of ice. And then, the next morning they would pack their creels and off they went. Heavy work.
A lot of ladies did that- I don’t know all their names now, of course, but a lot of ladies did that, and then later, I think after the war, when things began to be, we say, a little more modernised, one or two of them got little vans and did the selling of fish that way. But my mother used a creel.
Emily has 13 memories in the memorynet:
Emily's memories with a Roles and Routines theme:
Mother going away with fish
London during wartime
Emily's other memories:
Leaving school and the war
Leaving Cullercoats for London during the war
Thoughts on leaving Cullercoats
Being away from Cullercoats
Community spirit in Cullercoats
Changes in Cullercoats
Cullercoats beach
Sand Competition at Tynemouth
The lifeboat
Lifeboat Day and Polly Donkin
Cullercoats Community Centre
This memory has these themes:
Childhood | Roles and Routines | The North East | Women | Work

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