It was a requirement, to have metal light fittings and fixtures earthed though.
If electric, of course
these don't need an earth. When I was a lad, still some homes with wall gas or oil lamps, easier to reach on the wall to either light them or lift them off their spigot, but the oil and gas lamps were not used, by my time there was electric in most homes, even if 110 volt DC.
Abergeirw is a hamlet located in Gwynedd, North Wales.
The village of nine properties is located between Dolgellau and Trawsfynydd.
On 19 December 2008 National Grid plc connected it to the UK national electricity power grid, making it the last village in Wales to be supplied with mains electricity.
It does seem odd when Trawsfynydd had one of the early nuclear power stations. But when a lad, Llwyngwril had its own generator by the side of the river, and the local farm had a line from it, mainly to work the water pump to bring spring water to the farm. At 110 volt DC, so everything had to be special for that supply. I would guess they got national grid when I was around 7 so around 1958-62.
The caravan site, used a wind generator to light the toilets, but there was a petrol station on the main road, and I can't recall how they got power. I went there on holiday every year.
Much latter, worked on the Falklands, most settlements had generators, but not running 24/7, so oil lamps and candles still used a lot, earths seemed to be unknown to them. And my attempts to fit earths were to no avail as somewhere in the inaccessible loft space there must have been a junction box.
And this seems to be even in the UK a big problem, as one simply can't access many junctions. In theory, we don't really need an earth to stop shocks, birds can land on the power lines without a problem, so what we need is bonding, it does not matter if the whole house is 230 volts in relation to true earth, as long as it is all the same voltage, and entrances are so you can't touch house bonding and true earth at the same time.
OK, it would mean that a RCD may not work, and a line to bond fault may not blow a fuse, so not something we want to do, but in real terms only premises made of metal are really a problem. So caravans, narrow boats, and mobile homes have a problem, and are not permitted to have a TN-C-S (PME) supply, but in a brick, stone, or wood home, as long as all is bonded there is no problem with shocks.
The problem is a sink with a waste disposal unit, a washing machine, and dishwasher may be where you can touch all three at the same time. And if the sink has not been bonded, it may become a different voltage to the washing machine, and dishwasher, and the sink due to pipe work, likely will mean more items are it its voltage to the washing machine, and dishwasher, so we get a shock when touching the washing machine, and dishwasher, but the fault is down to the sink. Clearly, the waste disposal unit should have been bonded, but also a central heating pump, or motorised valve, cylinder thermostat, or immersion heater, could all cause the sink not to be at the same voltage as the washing machine, and dishwasher.
So we bond, not necessary to earth, but all should be same voltage, even with
a loss of PEN.