Sirnormangall
Well-known member
- Sep 21, 2017
- 3,182
Started my round at age 13 in the 1970s. Up at 6am in all weathers developed a strong work ethic and early interest in page 3 of the Sun.
13 - blimey you start them young . I got a part time sat job I remember but I was 17 I think .Two of my kids have one. Takes on of them 45 mins and the other 50 mins. Get about 30 quid a week. They are 13 and 15 so learning about work.
Now I think about it, I was 13 or maybe 14 when I stared my paper round. At around 15 I started working in a kitchen.13 - blimey you start them young . I got a part time sat job I remember but I was 17 I think .
I don’t personally think children should be employed as such until 16 even part time . Let them be kids and enjoy themselves .Now I think about it, I was 13 or maybe 14 when I stared my paper round. At around 15 I started working in a kitchen.
I really liked my paper round. It gave me a bit of purpose, independence, some money I could spend on myself any way I chose. I used to like stitting on the old-people's home and reading for a bit, I used to call for a friend on the way and we'd walk to the shop together. The round itself was only 50 minutes and was before school. And the chance of getting eaten by a Bully XL are probably almost nil.I don’t personally think children should be employed as such until 16 even part time . Let them be kids and enjoy themselves .
Especially nowdays with stories of killer dogs (xl bully’s etc ) etc it’s a potentially dangerous world out there especially when you’re still a child .
I think it was much safer 30-40 years ago , or at least it felt it , even in a big city like NY .I really liked my paper round. It gave me a bit of purpose, independence, some money I could spend on myself any way I chose. I used to like stitting on the old-people's home and reading for a bit, I used to call for a friend on the way and we'd walk to the shop together. The round itself was only 50 minutes and was before school. And the chance of getting eaten by a Bully XL are probably almost nil.
On the subject of hills, one of my rounds took me down Millers Road then up The Drove, which surely must be the steepest road in Brighton?!I did a round in Kemp Town and when we moved to Westdene I did 7 days a week there.
My later round was tough as Westdene is quite hilly and the round started a long way from the shop and all uphill with a bag that was really heavy.
This reminds me. As young kids we would often rummage around in the bushes of Peacehaven golf course for lost balls and sell them to golfers. It was quite lucrative.Started doing a paper round 7 days a week in Mill Hill, North London in 1973. Then found the local golf club was paying a lot more money for a single round of 4 hours. Soon got a regular who booked me every week for £5 a round. Relatively easy money for a single session instead of every day. Got me thinking as to what the value is now. Seems £50-70 depending on which measure used. I knew inflation was bad, but not that bad. Definitely a Four Yorkshireman moment but 25% back then puts the current whining in some perspective!!
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Then when we moved to Eastbourne it was back to a paper round along Seaside and Langney. As I got into my mid teens it was the bright lights of the hotel trade. Kitchen porter, waiter, barman. Funded me through my University years with guaranteed holiday work Christmas, Easter and Summer. It was opposite the pier and the breakfast / lunch / dinner shift meant I could spend 5-6 hours a day on the beach on a work day
Quite normal for kids to do paper rounds at that age - (at least back in the 60s/70s when kids weren’t so soft and didn’t think everything grew on trees and when most of the population had a hard copy newspaper shoved through the door )13 - blimey you start them young . I got a part time sat job I remember but I was 17 I think .