For me it was my Mother.
me
i have been homeless before for months
Sorry to hear that, how’re you doing now?
We’re going back to at least my great grandparents, if not further, it’s very likely we’d be looking at some long-forgotten relative in “the old country”
My dad once worked in a steel mill, on his first day on the job they gave him a broom and told him to sweep the floors. After a sweeping for a while while with no obvious progress being made he eventually realized it was a dirt floor.
To bw honest, no clue, both my parents didn’t have dirt floors and they were born in '43 and '48. Maybe my grandparents, but I can’t check anymore, as all family members at my mother’s side are dead, as well as the oldest ones at my father’s side. (Including both my parents)
I guess dirt floors were for the very poor pre WW2 in the Netherlands.
This has to be a Yank centric question. Very few places in Europe in the last 120 years would have had dirt floors unless they were very poor and rural.
It’s my kids. We bought a 1880 cottage and it still has a dirt floor cellar.
Interesting technicality, didn’t see that coming.
I only count it because it was partially converted to a basement in 1926-9 and we do laundry down there as well as keep all the catboxes there. So my kids go down there for chores all the time. I have to keep reminding them to either put on shoes or go barefoot, though; they’ve ruined a lot of socks.
My family disappeared into white trash before we know that answer.
Meanwhile, my wife can trace her family back to an early 19th century vice president and actual slave owners.
Edit: to be fair, I did my genetic analysis and do now know of distant relatives (whom I will probably never contact). I don’t think that counts though.
My mother did. She also had a dirt floor one room elementary school. Grew up in the US south.
Does it count if I looked at a couple houses with dirt floors while trying to buy? Prices are pretty high here and we have a lot of older houses. However I decided it must have concrete basement floors and no fieldstone walls, which eventually landed me in a “modern” 1946 house
Im talking about a scenario where the person has to walk on dirt floors to get around their home.
My maternal grandparents in New Britain, CT.
Me. There are some benefits, and you can sweep it clean. Still dirtier than wood though.
My wife’s parents had dirt floors before they moved to America.
I think that would be my great grandmother
Just asked my dad, an uncle in my grandfather’s generation. Right outside of the Omaha, Nebraska area.
My grandparents on both sides
My mother currently has dirt floors.
Does a basement floor count?
I was thinking more like literal dirt floors
That’s what I mean. I mean as opposed to the ground floor being a dirt floor.