The year was 1948. Clement Attlee was the Prime Minister, the National Health Service had just been launched, and Salford teenager Mary Jones was moving into a new house on the Duchy estate, which was to become the place she would call home for the next 76 years. Following the Second World War, the country was experiencing an intense housing shortage and the Government had announced a major home building programme, which prioritised social housing. In Salford, the old terraced ‘slum housing’ was being cleared to make way for new, modern housing, which included the new Duchy estate, which was built during the 1940s. A then 18-year-old Mary Jones was amongst the first to move into the new homes on Duchy, along with her mum Ellen and older brother and sister Eric and Agnes. The youngest of seven children born on 3 February,1929, Mary’s father died when she was just two-years-old. The family had lived in Ordsall, but had been staying with relatives in Kersal before they were given the keys to their new, three-bed, semi-detached council home on Central Avenue in Duchy. Today the homes on the Duchy estate are owned by housing association Salix Homes, and Mary, now aged 95 and a great-grandmother of four, is one of their longest serving tenants. She recalls: Over the next eight decades, the house has provided a safe and happy home for three generations of the Jones family. When she turned 21, Mary became a ‘WREN’ joining the Women’s Royal Navy Service and was stationed in Plymouth and Portsmouth. She returned home to Duchy and had her son Michael in 1955. With her older sister Agnes also having a son, John, the house was now home to three generations. Mary’s son Michael, now aged 69, said: Mary worked as a machinist, while her brother Eric was an engineer and sister Agnes worked as a cotton spinner. With her skills on the sewing machine, and being a keen knitter and crocheter, Mary would always make clothes for the family, and would often make crafts for the local churches, including St Lukes, St James’ and St Thomas’, to help with their fundraising efforts. Michael moved out of the house when he got married, aged 22, to his wife Christine, but it always remained a place for the Jones family to call home. Michael added: Mary’s mum Ellen lived there until she died in 1970, as did Agnes who passed away in 1993, and Eric who died in 2020, leaving Mary living alone for the past four years. After almost eight decades of calling the ‘house with the red roses’ on Central Avenue her home, Mary has moved into an extra-care retirement village in Salford, where she can still live independently, but also has support on hand if she needs it. Michael explained: Sue Sutton, Chief Executive at Salix Homes, added: