Thought you might like to hear about my apprenticeship and life in the glass trade. I am no William Shakespeare but I will try my best.
Stuart Norton. A Brief History of my Time.
Part one.Easter 1966 and 14 years old 15th birthday to come in June the summer of love was to come the following year so this was to be my summer of get a job boy! Until I started to think about this time I did not realise what an influence my older brother had on my choices I was trying to make.
At this time he was a ships engineer via drawing office and pattern maker with a ship builder Hawthorn Leslie. I also want to be a ships engineer and see world. The only way this was open for me was to do the same as him but I was to be a fitter and turner. Best bib and tucker on and off to interview.
Good and bad news I would be offered job, but this was to be the first year they would not be taking 15 year old on, so job would be on offer in august 1967.
So to the rescue. Later to find out I was to continue the family tradition... My Uncle Bill, Glazing manger pulled strings for an interview to be a glass worker.
I found myself, me 14 being interviewed by works manager and an ex Sergeant major who was to become my foreman and nemesis. Office interview over, Mr Millburn foreman who later in no certain terms after I started I had to work for him twenty years before I could call him George. Showed me round the department I was to work in.
Oblong, about 2000 sq feet. His desk centre top wall with big red stop button and small green (his get back to work now) start button. This was connected to a very large electric motor which powered a long shaft up the middle of the workshop. With all the machine belts powered from this bevelling on the right, brilliant cutting on the left. The shaft when set up here after the war was considered safer 2ft from ground rather than a ceiling height in their eyes less likely to lose an arm. Quick tour over I was out and on the way home.
A week later, job offered I was to become an indentured apprentice Brilliant cutter, and Beveller the first. At this time there was strict demarcation lines you where brilliant cutters full stop. You learnt one trade and did not cross the lines. The flat glass association Employers negotiation group wanted rid of demarcation lines. At first there what'd to combine pay groups together so Brilliant cutter with acid embossers same pay scale, Logical but embossers held out so no go.
Bevellers were easier quarry, so I was to be brilliant cutter beveller.
Part two February 2010
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