Posts: 4,232
Threads: 875
Joined: Apr 2002
Reputation:
0
Hi Stu, that's before my time but there's a few who go back further than me on here.
Martin ~
Posts: 9,242
Threads: 140
Joined: May 2002
Reputation:
0
Hi Stu, my mum worked in the nozzle shop and was shopsteward . apart from tales she told me about people she worked with, Eric Rawcliffe is one that springs to mind, my only recollection is visiting Spurrier works as a school kid seeing machines used in centurion tank manufacturing and held in mothballs should it be needed again.
Posts: 1,082
Threads: 76
Joined: Dec 2010
Reputation:
0
I worked at Spurrier Wks from 63 to 84 in the fab shop 4 years on nights no 8 shop 4 years on the con rod line fine boring, on staff in the chasers dept 5 years and finely in the new farrington assembly plant that was state of the art when it was built, vehicles build on a moving tracks and cabs built on an overhead moving track, the memory for me was the nick names we all had, like dads lad , brain damage etc, mine was didy after david hamilton, did 10 years on nights and was a shop steward then a staff rep when I worked in the offices, 1 year at chorley part stores as a parts analyst on engines, many nick names more than I care to mention, would welcome some more if any one can care to put them on here for a laugh.
djh
Posts: 3,079
Threads: 203
Joined: May 2002
Reputation:
0
Hello, Stu:
I'm a born & bred Leylander, but decided to go into airplanes instead of buses and trucks. My extended family owned the George Damp & Sons hardware store on Towngate. With British Aircraft Corporation assistance, I did a 7-year apprenticeship that ended up with a B.Sc. in Mechanical engineering. After a couple of low-paid jobs in the machine tools industry and then with Norton Villiers, I emigrated to the US in July 1968, about the time you finished your apprenticeship, to join Boeing.
I retired in 1998 after 30 years and we now live in a small seaside town in northwest Washington State. I'll only leave here in a wooden overcoat!
Frank Damp
Posts: 1,082
Threads: 76
Joined: Dec 2010
Reputation:
0
That was a good one Ecky.
djh
Posts: 3,079
Threads: 203
Joined: May 2002
Reputation:
0
Dave:
My uncle Ron Baker worked at the Chorley Parts Stores for many years. Don't know if your paths crossed. He started out as an apprentice in the same class as a chap named Donald Stokes, who went a bit higher in the company!
Frank
Posts: 9,242
Threads: 140
Joined: May 2002
Reputation:
0
Donald Stokes, that's a name I'd forgotten, he used to get chaufer driven many a time past our house on Stanifield Lane.
Posts: 3,079
Threads: 203
Joined: May 2002
Reputation:
0
I believe he eventually became "Lord Stokes" during the Thatcher years. Don't know if he's still with us. Uncle Ron isn't.
Frank