I was a war time baby, so some of your memories apply more to my sons born in the sixties.
Our school milk was brought inside out the of the sun in the summer. I liked milk, so swapped my empty bottle for full one from a classmate who hated it. There was trouble if we got caught.
Polio vaccine hadn't been invented, I had Polio. The ‘nit nurse’ was never part of my school life.
The house we lived in until 1948 had an outside toilet, but we also had an indoor one upstairs. We had a Ewbank carpet sweeper, a vacuum cleaner came into our house some years later. Two luxuries, a telephone, I still remember the number 323, my father needed it for his job. We also had a car for the same reason, a 1936 Morris 8 (BRU641). I remember it in the garage with the wheels off and up on blocks until the war ended, so it was a good ten years old before I got to ride in it.
My mother never had a washing machine, it was the washboard and mangle. (Not sure why you needed a mangle with a twin tub, the whole point of the twin tub was the spin drier that did away with the need for a mangle). My first twin tub was similar to the one illustrated, my first machine was a single tub with an electric mangle attached.
I remember my mother ironing with a flat iron. After we moved house it was an electric iron plugged into the light socket as per you illustration.
In your second school photo, the lederhosen remind me of those my sons had when we lived in Germany.
How different our lives are today.