The following description is of the Miner's Row Cottage that my maternal great grandfather Whitefield Watson was living in c.1881 at 10 Connel Park, New Cumnock, with his parents Joseph & Elizabeth, sisters Susannah & Catherine, and brother John, all named in the 1881 census. This description was kindly given to me by R. of Cumnock, Scotland. R. himself lived in this very same house during his early childhood, from 1950 until 1956. This is his recollection of the house. (Probably about 20 sq feet or so, but can't find the measurement right now).
"The house consisted of two rooms, one a living area and one a kitchen. The living room had two built-in beds in the wall, there would be curtains drawn across these through the day when not in use. There was a coal fired range where all the cooking was done and kettle boiled.
There was a door to the kitchen where you had to step down two steps to get to the floor level. It was just a plain cement floor with a drain at the wall. There was only a very small window on the back wall, with a big white sink in front of it, with one cold water tap only. In the corner was a large round boiler built into a brick surround, with an opening under it at the front for a fire, so as to heat the water. There was a big wooden cover fitted over it, so no weans would fall in and get scalded.
There was always a large tin bath hung on the wall near the back door. The water was boiled by the wife, who then paled it out into the bath, which was placed in the middle of the kitchen floor for her man to wash in when he came home from his shift at the pit. When he finished his bath, the water was poured out onto the floor to clean it, and then brushed down the drain.
I have always mind of, in the spring, you would go through into the kitchen in the morning, and there would be nothing but frogs jumping all over the floor, for they would have come up through the drain at night.
The wife would boil more water and wash the pit clothes in the large sink, using a scrubbing board and bars of soap. Then they would be dried in front of the fire, in winter, for her husband to wear for his next shift at the pit. That happened six days a week, only a Sunday off, what a life!
There was no inside toilet, you had to go to the communal toilets at the back of the rows. There was a small garden at the front, facing onto the main road.
The Clauchan was next door. This was a large room, where the men would play dominoes, cards, darts and carpet bowls - this was a place where the day's work would be talked about. I bet there was more coal shovelled there than was ever done at the pit".
Just slightly different from my paternal great grandparents, who lived in what is now a listed property
in the Conservation area of Stockwell Park in Lambeth, London