Hello alan,
My grandparents house, a bit nearer the East coast, used to have a hand pump from a bore hole...and trips there on a Saturday included pumping buckets of water to stand in the pantry ready for use the next week...latterly they could pump water for the tenants cattle but couldn't easily carry the water buckets for their own use..
The hand pump could be linked to a trough in the yard with a second linked tank at the same level in the field for the cattle...a simple balance pipe transfer system..
The hand pump was used for drinking water up to 1980...and continued in use for cattle subsequently until the property was sold in 1989?...the new owners utilised the bore but came a bit more up to date with the pumping/storage system...it is still in use.
The water was tested periodically, latterly by Anglian Water Authority..and was very different to most water in this area which gives hard white scale in the kettle etc. The water there left a soft orange iron deposit which formed in the kettle...I used to think it looked like a jellyfish in the kettle
In my grandparents day soft water for washing was collected in an open tank from ther roof of "the pig places"... galvanised corrugated sheet roof area of the pig pens...which was a redundant building in my time of knowing the property.
..and during my grandparents time there up to 1980 there was no possibility of mains water, no flush toilet/sewer drainage...no dustcart collection, no made up road, etc, etc.... and it did not go down too well when a large rates demand came in from a newly formed local authority.!!..a reduction was eventually agreed I seem to recall...
The only mod-con that arrived in the last few years of my grandparents residence was the telephone...so Mum could keep tabs on their well being...and that initially was only by walking up to the phone box at this end....it doesn't seem that long ago....'cept I have just added it up....and perhaps it is

Clive.