A BTH Apprentice

                                                                                             1947/1952

                                                            By Trevor Sidaway

 

 

     into the Millwrights, the Toolroom and the Cannon Dynasty

 

Out of the main factory block for the first time and into the Millwrights and I spent twelve happy months

in this Department.

It was located in the bottom end of the self contained Toolroom building sited behind the main factory block

The Toolroom had about thirty fitters and machinists, a full range of machine tools including a Genevoise

Jig Borer, sited in a temperature controlled room, and a small Drawing Office

Most of the younger staff members were ex Toolroom apprentices and were a very loquacious bunch,

none more so than Ken Tipton, a bench fitter, who insisted on occasionally addressing his best friend

and fellow fitter, Alan Bate, rather formally by his surname—Master Bate!

Ken was an accomplished musician playing for many well-known midland bands and in backing groups

for a number of the stars from that era including Bruce Forsyth, Max Bygraves and the Australian

singing phenomenon of the 60’s—Frank Ifield 

He also appeared in a very short clip in a film featuring Sammy Davis Jnr and Peter Lawson

 

                       Ken’s wife Betty claims that it was an unmitigated flop

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Ken’s speciality was the double bass and as can be seen he was also a vocalist. For many years he was a regular

 in the band at the Queen Mary Ballroom in the Dudley Castle grounds and played in orchestras at Birmingham’s

Hippodrome and the Grand in Wolverhampton.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 Ken, on the right, at the Queen Mary Ballroom, Dudley and in later years,  playing the bass guitar, with the

John Gibbons Jazzmen

                                                                                                                      Inset, Ken in the Fleet Air Arm

 

He was also a gifted tennis player and a regular player in the BTH second eleven soccer team, occasionally

making it to the first eleven

 

Some of the other Toolroom characters were; Bill Hanke, Ken Cartwright, Fred Hodgkiss,

Alan Marklew, Ron Schofield, Teddy Detheridge, Angus Peel and Ron Hemmings

The last three were regulars in the first eleven and by this time I was well established as the first eleven

outside left

Angus was an ex Scottish Schoolboy International and played at right back

Ron was center half, was a cultured player, who would have made it in the pro ranks but for his lack of

pace.

His Dad, Bert Hemmings worked in the Personnel Dept and did all the organising and secretarial work

For the Football teams

Teddy (Dither Detheridge) was left half

Bill Hanke left sometime before I transferred into the Millwrights to join the family engineering business

William Hanke & Sons—he married Brenda who was one of the secretaries to the Dudley Tech principal,

Mr Gibson

 

The Millwrights benches were sited against the side wall at the bottom end of the toolroom and opposite

 them was a middle-aged centre lathe operator. He was shortish, very rounded and had a melodious

 basso profundo voice that he exercised daily.

His name was Fred Richards, he was a long time member of an Old Hill Operatic group and I recently

discovered from his daughter that he also ran the dance band in the Old St James Mission Hall in

Waterfall lane

 

 

                                 Bert Garland, the Millwrights Manager

The Millwrights manager was a Bert Garland and what a no nonsense character he was,

and he needed to be to keep all the plant working all of the time, he had an office in the

Toolroom building

Trained as a marine engineer he was dedicated to the job and kept everyone on their toes,

he lived in a house in the factory grounds so that he was always on tap for any emergency.

He had ten millwrights working for him—One of them worked in the first of the seven out

buildings located between the main factory and the Toolroom and he repaired all the

conveyer rollers used throughout the factory

There were four other teams of two; they had specific parts of the plant to maintain and a “belt man.

David Saunders. He repaired and replaced all the flat belts used throughout the factory his son ,Ray,

worked in the Toolroom Drawing Office and he may have been one of the few remaining Toolroom

apprentices

 

                I spent most of my time with the team that looked after a large range of the machine tools

                             Caleb Martin (Cale) and Cyril Hope (Hopey Dopey)

 

Cyril was about 5ft 4” and Cale stood a giant 6ft 7”

Towards the end of the War Cale was conscripted into the Navy and he claimed that he was so tall that

the largest uniform was far too small and he had to wait about six weeks, wearing civvies, while a special

uniform was made for him

He was the proverbial gentle giant and I never once heard him raise his voice

 

In between jobs we would spend time in the conveyor repair shop and it was here that he told his tales

and taught me how to create a miniature Scimitar sword from a six-inch nail, a stainless dowel and a few yards

of fine copper wire

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The bottom 5” of the nail was bent, hammered, filed and finely polished into a gleaming curved arc

The stainless steel dowel, 3/32”dia x 1” long, was inserted into a cross-drilled hole to make the cross

 guard and the fine copper wire was wrapped to form an attractive grip--there was no shortage of

 copper wire!

 It was wrapped in a clever way so that the wire ends were concealed and then carefully varnished”

The head of the nail was also polished to form the pomme

 

Other regular visitors to the repair shop were one of the older millwrights who ran an illegal shop,

 selling contraband cigarettes from the corner office (for some reason, he seem to spend long periods in

there with the flighty ex ATS girl from the machine shop!), and Wally Hampton, the recreation field

groundsman--he ate his lunch in there.

 

Wally was an enthusiastic member of the first eleven-cricket team

 

One of the very pleasant routines that I did with Cale was to test the fire hoses that were fixed in

 strategic points on the factory roof. They were gun type hoses, swivel mounted, and they had quite

a range. The “firings” were always done on Friday afternoon and made for an exiting end to the

week—especially on sunny day

We also cleaned out the filters from the dust extractor units on the roof and could get a free haircut

up there from Paddy—a millwrights mate!

 

 

 

 

 

 


                                                                                       

 

 

 

 

 

 

                  Pictured almost 50 years later, in 2006, the roof mounted fire hoses are still there

 

                                            Blotting my copybook with Hopey

There had been a problem with an internal gearshift mechanism on a large radial drill, I think a Richmond,

and Hopey had ordered a replacement cylinder type cam to fix it

 

The vertically mounted cam had an inclined rectangular cam slot into which a roller follower engaged.

Rotating the cam, with an external gearshift handlever, caused the follower to move vertically in the

inclined slot and take a train of gears with it

Having waited a couple of weeks to get the replacement cam the pressure was on to get it fixed and

Hopey was about to dismantle the cam assembly when I had an uncharacteristic flash of inspiration—I

 fished around in the oil filled bottom of the gearbox sump and came up with the he real cause of the problem;

 a sheered off cam followerthis effectively isolated the gear train from its shift mechanism

Cale roared with laughter, fair skinned Hopey turned a bright puce and I purred like a Cheshire cat

Hopey had some explaining to do with the Manager Bert Garland and I let the truth be known in my

typical modest style

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


                 A large radial drill still in operation in 2006, could it be one left over from 1950’s

 

Hopey eventually forgave me but I did get a glowing report from Bert and a little later on Bert took

me to the Conveyer repair shop to collect his treasured bowls, soaking in a linseed oil bath, then on

to the Bowling green for a quick game—the first and only time that I’ve played bowls

It was no concern to him that this was in Works time as no one, including the Boss Man himself,

Alf Cannon, would dare say a word

 

Cale suffered from some genetic disorder, which in part accounted for his stature, and he tragically died

 a relatively young man. His sister worked in the Winding Dept and his Dad worked on a large planer

in the machine shop

                                                        An Aston Villa Amateur

During this time I was selected to play for the Birmingham Works AFA select eleven and was signed as

an amateur by Aston Villa

                                                             The Hammer Man

Another Millwright looked after all the cranes—mainly overhead cranes—I think his name was Mullins

and he came from Netherton. He was known, rather facetiously, as the “Hammer Man” and he got this

nickname by having the reputation of regularly dropping his hammer from the top of his ladder on to the

 head of his mate whose job it was to stand at the bottom of the ladder (to prevent any accidents!)

Fortuitously his mate always wore a thick cloth cap and had a rather insensitive physiology

                       He also had the worst case of halitosis that I have ever experienced

 

                                                          The Cannon Dynasty 

The Canons, Father and son, presided over the BTH for many years during a sustained period of growth;

 the place seemed to run well which must have been a reflection on their Managerial qualities

I didn’t know Canon senior but, as a regular in the first eleven, I got to know his son fairly well—he

 turned up at most home games—he also taught Engineering Drawing at Halesowen Tech in the 1940’s

They were both passionate about the Works Fire Brigade and all major Companies had their own

auxiliary Brigades.

Competitions between the brigades was taken very seriously and at the BTH practice runs were

commonplace events in the sports field

It was claimed by some that established Brigade members were treated preferentially by the Canons and

by the 1950’s the brigade had grown to eight, three of them from the Toolroom

 

 

 

 

 

 


                   

 

 

 

 

 

      A very early picture of the BTH Fire brigade with their competition trophies and ceremonial helmets           

    In the Centre is Alf Cannon Snr, the Chief Fire Officer, on his left, Alf Cannon Jnr, deputy Chief Fire Officer  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


                              Sited just off the main drive the water reservoir, built to provide a

                                    supply of water for the BTH Fire Brigade—pictured in 2006

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


                                                                                                                                                                                   

 

 

                                Pictured in 2006, a sorry looking Dennis fire fighting pump,

                                 used by the fire Brigade in later years. It was found in the

                                    old cycle shed building alonside the Gate House

 

                          A Dudley Tech Junior and early days at the BTH

   The Apprenticeship Schemes, into the Machine Shop and the vision Mary Gadd

                                            Girls Girls Girls

                      The Planning Department, Final Test and Sport

                         Dudley Senior Tech and my fellow apprentices

 

                                                     Home