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Albert
Wright was born in December 1918. From 1934 to the outbreak of the
Second World War he worked at S.E.Stevens Wagon Works building and
repairing railway wagons. The works was on Stevens Road, Balby,
Doncaster.
In
2003, aged 84, Albert wrote an account of those days. Anyone wanting
to contact Albert can email his son on wrightsaerials@aol.com.
This
is Albert’s story.
My
brother Maurice and his wife came to stay with me for a few days at
Christmas time. Now one of Maurice’s interests is railways
and
anything connected with them. The conversation got round to the fact
that I had served my apprenticeship as a railway wagon builder. In
passing, I said I had helped to build what I thought was one of the
last twelve-ton standard wagons to be built, that is, timber built
coal wagons. I mentioned that these wagons were all hand built,
without the use of machines or power tools. He said, “When
your
generation are all gone nobody will know how you did these things.
Could you write down how it was done?” My response was
“Yes,
I think I could”, so here goes.
First
a bit of history. I left school at fourteen, worked as an errand boy
at a grocer’s shop for two years on wages of eight shillings
a
week. I heard through my Uncle Tom that there was the chance of a job
at the wagon works where he was employed. I went for an interview
and got the job. I was to be mate to a man called Harry Arnold. We
would work as a unit on a wagon and be paid on piecework for the work
we did. As the events of the next three years are not part of this
writing I will skip them, and begin to tell how we built a railway
wagon in June 1939. But first I must remind the reader that these
events happened over sixty years ago. So should I state the wrong
length of a bolt or a piece of timber I offer no apology.
To
start with obtain two trestles about seven feet long and two feet
high and position them fourteen feet apart directly across the
railway lines. We will build the wagon on these and put the wheels
under it when it is completed. Now we go to the sawmill and on a
handcart bring back a sole bar. This is placed flat down onto the
trestles and will be used as a bench on which other timbers will be
prepared. Then we do the same on the other side of the wagon. The
sole bar is the long piece of timber which runs along the side of the
wagon on to which the wheels and other things are fixed. This timber
is approximately sixteen feet long and twelve inches wide by five
inches thick and is of oak, as are the timbers in the wagon frame.
The
next things to come from the mill are the ‘middle
bearers’.
These are put one on each sole bar ready to be mortised and tenoned.
These timbers are approximately six feet six inches long by twelve
inches by five inches. They have two tenons at each end and mortises
on both sides. All the holes required for bolting things to them have
been already bored at the mill, so we don’t have that to do.
I
should add at this point that these wagons were built to a standard
pattern, and no matter where they were built they would all be
exactly the same except for possible minor differences in the
sheeting, dependent on the needs of the user. Now we will prepare the
middle bearers. The shoulders of the tenons can be hand-sawn down and
chopped off along the grain with a wood chisel. The piece between the
two tenons needs to be chopped out with a hammer and chisels. The
chisels are all steel and the works blacksmith has made most of them.
When
completed the tenons will each be two inches wide by five inches long
by one and seven eighths inches deep. Next we have to cut out the
mortise holes on the inside of the bearer to take the tenons of the
middle longitude, and the mortises on the outside to take the tenons
of the end longitude and the diagonals.
The
mortises on the inside of the bearers were four in number and each
would be approximately four and a half inches long by two inches wide
by two inches deep. These would be chopped out by hand. On the
outside the four mortises would have two tenons side by side in each
mortise, one longitudinal and one diagonal. The picture will be much
clearer when you look at the plan. The way we would be working was
that I would be on one side and my mate on the other. Because there
was two of everything we would do one of each and so would both
finish together. Because I was twenty years of age and my mate was
about fifty-five he was struggling to keep up with me, so there was
no fear of him telling me off because I was behind.
Next
it was the turn of the ‘middle longitudes’. These
had two
tenons on each end similar to the mortises in the bearer into which
they had to fit. Now that’s all done we can get on with
preparing the sole bars. Four mortises to cut out and two tenons on
each end. These would be cut out in the same way as on the middle
bearers. Before the frame could be assembled some things had to be
fixed to the sole bar. The spring shoes were in pairs. They would
provide a seating for the bearing springs which would carry the whole
weight of the wagon, and the spring stops would be fixed with coach
screws in the centre of each pair of shoes. These stops were castings
and were there to take the weight of the wagon should be bearing
spring collapse.
Before
we can fix anything to the timbers or even build them together all
areas where any ironwork is fixed or any joints brought together must
be painted. So off to the paint shop to mix up some nice thick paint.
Now I have painted where necessary and fixed the spring shoes and the
spring stops, a good coat of paint in the mortise holes, and the
solebar is ready to be turned on its edge and positioned to receive
the middle timbers. While I have been doing this, my mate will have
been doing exactly the same on the other side of the wagon. Now we
can start to build the frame. Two cross rods will have been obtained
from the stores. These are seven-eighth inch diameter steel rods
screwed at both ends. The middle bearer is taken in between the
solebars and the tenons at one end, and placed in the mortises on the
solebar. The same is done at the other end. Two cramps, one on the
top and one on the bottom soon push these joints home. The cracking
sound that comes from the joints as they are driven home is the sign
of a well made tight fitting joint. The middle longitudes are next to
be fixed making sure you have got them the right way up. They go into
the bearer at one end and the other end is supported on a jack until
the second middle bearer can be positioned. This is more or less a
repeat of fixing the first bearer except that the middle longitudes
have to be fitted.
Now
the bottom cross rods can be pushed through the holes near the bottom
edge of the solebar, through holes in the longitudes, through the
other solebar, washers and nuts fixed and then screwed up tight. The
tenons are driven home with a few belts from a ten pound sledge
hammer, and the first stage of building the frame is completed.
Remember, we are dealing with very big, very heavy pieces of timber.
Now
we can think about the two ends of the frame. The end longitudinals,
the diagonals, and the headstocks. As both ends are duplicated we
could work one at each end, but we don’t do that because now
various items of ironwork can be fixed to the solebar and the middle
bearers. I go to the mill and bring back the two longitudinals, and
two diagonals (a pair), then make another trip to bring back a
headstock. Although I am twenty years of age and quite capable of
doing the whole job I am still ‘the boy’. I fetch
and
carry and do as I am told. We set up the headstock on the trestles,
to be used as a bench to prepare the ‘guts’, wagon
builders
name for the smaller timbers in the frame. Then he has to chop out
twelve mortise holes and the hoop the ends of the headstock. What we
have done up to now is about one day’s work. The wagon has to
be
completed in three and a half days, or it will not pay very well. We
will be paid approximately three pounds ten shillings between us for
building it. I start to fix the iron work, first the axle guards.
These are very heavy things. They hold the wheels in place so they
need to be very strong. They are shaped like an inverted
‘U’
with two extra wings. These are fixed with seven bolts, each seven
inch by seven eighths inch diameter. Shaped washer plates fit on the
outside. Next the diagonal knees and the strap bolts go on the end of
the solebar. Strap bolts are steel plates two inches wide by twelve
inches long, half an inch thick. To one end of this would be welded a
threaded bar which will go through a hole in the headstock, and when
tightened up, will pull the headstock up to the end of the solebar.
This work had then to be repeated on the opposite solebar.
Now
I can turn my attention to the middle bearer. First the
‘block
hanger bracket’. This is part of the brake work. It is bolted
on
directly above the railway lines. All this equipment which is bolted
on is positioned correctly because the holes in the timbers were
bored in the mill after being marked out from templates. On to the
hanger brackets go the hanger plates. These are held in place by a
five and a half inch by seven-eighth inch bolt which is drilled to
take a split pin. The split pin is necessary because the bolts are
not tightened up so that the plates can swing freely. The brake
blocks will be hung on the bottom of these plates using the same size
bolt. Here we also bolt on the push rod swings. This is a safety
device, designed to catch the push rods should they become detached
from the hanger plates. Then I move to the other end of the bearer
and do the same work there. By this time my mate should have finished
preparing the ‘guts’ for this end and also the
mortises on
the headstock. A good coat of paint to the tenon ends and the
diagonals can go up with the headstock end of the diagonals bolted to
the diagonal knees. The end longitudinals’ tenons are
hammered
home into the bearer and the front end supported on a jack with a
piece of wood across the top so that it will support both timbers.
Plenty of paint on the mortises and tenons and the headstock can be
offered up.
First
on to the strap bolt ends. A few bats with the big hammer help it on
its way. Once we can get nuts and washers on the strap bolts,
tightening these will help.
Now
we put the end rods in. They are one-inch diameter rods, screwed at
both ends. They will be threaded through the headstock, through the
diagonal, and through the middle bearer. Plate washers and nuts will
be screwed on. Now we can really get some pressure on. Screwing up
these rods, tightening up the strap bolts really sends the headstock
right home. All these joints have to go right home because if the
inspector can get a feeler gauge up the shoulder of a tenon, we would
be called back to work on it until he couldn’t. Now that is
one
end finished so we take all our tools and equipment to the other end
and do exactly the same all over again. The difference at this end is
that we shall be fixing the ‘end pillars’. These
are oak
timbers five inches square at the bottom, tapering to five inches by
three inches at the top. We need to fix them now because the end rods
go through them, and we need to tighten the end rods to pull up the
headstock tight to the sole-bar ends.
We
can also now thread through the long rods. These are one and an
eighth inch rods that go the full length of the wagon, through the
headstock, through both bearers, through the other headstock. Instead
of washers a thick metal plate with a square hole in it through which
the draw bar will go is used. When these rods are screwed up tight
all the joints should close up. That is more or less the finish of
the timber part of the frame but there is still a lot of ironwork to
be bolted on. First to go on are the buffer castings, one in each
corner of the headstocks. The purpose of these is to support the
buffer rams, and to act as stops to limit the extent to which the
buffer springs can be compressed. These are very substantial
castings, capable of withstanding heavy compression shocks. They are
bolted on to the headstock by four bolts. The outer two are strap
bolts, and the inner two are eight and a half inch by three-quarter
inch bolts that go through the diagonal knee inside and the casting
outside. Having completed that one we move round and do the same
thing at the other three corners, as all are identical. That done we
can now fix the buffer rams, and the buffer springs. This is easier
done with two people, one person to hold the spring and washer in
place, and one to push home the ram. This done we need to slightly
compress the buffer spring to enable us to put the cotter pin in the
hole at the end of the buffer ram. This cotter is necessary to
prevent the ram from coming out when the wagon is in use. To compress
the spring we have a ‘buffer cramp’. This fits
round the
neck of the casting. It has a U shape that has a screw fitting. This
goes over the bell of the ram and when screwed up compresses the
spring. That done we now have three more to do, one at each corner.
Now
we can make a start on the draw gear. This is the gedge couplings,
the drawbars, the cradle, the coil spring and washers. The gedge
couplings are the three links of heavy chain that hang down from the
drawbars. The drawbars are the hooks that project from the centre of
the headstock. The opposite end to the hook is a bar of two-inch
diameter steel. This is about seven feet long and is screwed at the
end to take a two-inch nut. The cradle is like two steel washers
about nine inches diameter by one inch thick with a two and a half
inch hole drilled in the centre - these are joined together with two
three inch by one inch iron bars three feet long. The finished thing
looks like a baby’s cradle without a bottom in it. The coil
spring is similar to the buffer springs but is made with thicker bar.
To assemble, the drawbar is inserted into the hole in the faceplate.
The faceplate is bolted onto the outside of the headstock, through
the middle bearer and one end of the cradle, then on goes a washer
and a two- inch nut which is screwed up to a full nut. Next the other
drawbar goes on through the other headstock, through the middle
bearer, through the other end of the cradle, the spring and washers
go on now, and the nut. The whole thing is now screwed up tight so
that the drawbars are tight upto the faceplates. There is an
alternative system of draw gear that is sometimes used and I
can’t
remember which of these systems we used on our wagons. In the
alternative system a shorter drawbar is used with the end of it
flattened and drilled with an inch and a half hole. The intermediate
drawbars are also flattened at the end and drilled. These are joined
together with two steel plates about eight inches long with a hole at
each end. One plate goes on top and one underneath. Drawbar pins are
pushed through the holes and cotters and split pins used. This is a
safer method because should the draw-gear fail the drawbar ends
cannot be pulled through the headstock and faceplates.
Now
we will be thinking about the side rails. These run the whole length
of the wagon and are machined from five-inch square timber. They are
bolted to the top outer edge of the solebar and form a base on which
the sides of the wagon will be built. To prepare them each end has to
be haunched to fit over the top of the headstock, then a chamfer is
cut along the top outside edge. The chamfer is cut with a drawknife
and is stopped short at both ends and also where the cross rods will
be. Then an arris is planed off the front bottom edge. Now we turn it
over and cut out where the side knees will fit. Seven bolts each
twelve and a half inches long and five-eighths inch diameter will be
used to fasten the side rail. The bolts will be pushed through the
holes in the sidebar and left protruding two inches on the other
side. Onto this protruding length of bolt will be placed a
‘spacer’
- this is a piece of oak six inches long by three inches wide by one
and a half inches thick. The side rail will be offered up, the
shoulders will fit over the headstocks, the bolts will be driven home
and the nuts screwed up tight. Care has to be taken so that no hammer
marks show on the face of the side rail. I should add that all the
nuts must always be left vertical - it looks better like that.
Now
we can do the same on the other side of the wagon. This time we put
the top cross-rods in but we don’t screw them up because
there
are other things to go on them.
Before
we can put the floor down there are one or two more things we must
do. The side and end knees must be fixed. The knees are very robust
‘L’ shaped pieces of ironwork. The foot is about
twenty
inches long and three inches wide, at the bend of the knee the
thickness of iron would be in excess of two inches. The foot had
three holes drilled in it to take the three-quarter inch bolts which
would fasten it down to the middle bearer. The longer side of the
knee would be the same height as the side of the wagon body, which in
this case would be about five feet. It would be drilled to take the
five-eighth inch bolts that would be used to hold the planks that
made the side of the wagon. The holes in the knee had been carefully
spaced out to ensure that two bolts went into each seven-inch wide
plank. The four side knees, two on each side of the wagon, are bolted
down in position on top of the middle bearers. Now we come to the end
knees. These are similar to the side knees but with one big
difference - at the top of the long arm they have a two and a quarter
inch eye. This is to take the two-inch diameter roller bar that will
form part of the hinge on which the door will swing. The end knees
are bolted down on the top of the headstock with three bolts. Next
are the end sills, one at the fast-or fixed-end and one at the end
door end. The fast end sill is two and a half by three inch softwood.
One two and a half inch face will be planed, a chamfer at the top
edge and an arris at the bottom. This sits on the top of the
headstock between the shoulders of the side rails. The face is flush
with the front of the headstock. The timbers that will form the end
of the wagon will sit on the top of this sill. The end door sill is
altogether different. It starts out as a floor plank at seven inches
by two and a half inches. One of the two and a half inch faces is
planed and chamfered then, because this has to fit over the feet of
the end knees, so enough of the timber has to be cut away to allow
this to happen. When this is in place it is pushed up to the lugs on
the buffer castings and the sill stops which are on the quarter rods.
There’s one more job before the floor can go down. The bolts
for
the feet of the side door bands with their washer plates are put in
place with the nuts screwed on loosely. Now a last check of the brake
gear and draw gear. Is everything screwed up and all pins and cotters
in? Now we can get on with the floor as there are no bottom doors in
this wagon. The floor planks are seven inches wide and two and a half
inches thick, and my memory tells me they were seven feet two and a
half inches long but I could be a bit out with that measurement.
Two
planks would have to be cut out to fit over the feet of the side
knees. These would be rough bored out in the mill and then finished
off with a hammer and chisel. This flooring would rest on the top of
the frame timbers with ends tight up to the side rails. Usually it
would be necessary to have a plank reduced in width so that it could
be wedged in place. Then when the whole lot was down they could be
nailed in place with five-inch nails, two to the end of each plank
through into the tops of the solebars. This work done up to now would
have taken perhaps two and a half days. Now we can think about the
body or top of the wagon. This in wagon builders’ parlance is
called the ‘sheeting’. This timber, which in our
case was
seven inches wide and three inches thick, is planed all round and has
a chamfer taken off the top edge on the seven inch side. We have to
plane an arris on the bottom edge. The timber is good quality
softwood. We take a handcart to the mill and bring back the end
planks for the fast end. There were nine of these planks. These end
planks are about seven feet four inches long. They fit one on top of
the other. The bottom one sits on top of the end sill. They are
correctly aligned and held down lightly with a big sash cramp. Holes
have been pre-drilled through the end pillars in the mill, so now we
drill through these holes into and through the end planks. These
holes take the five-eighths inch diameter bolts, one per plank in
each end pillar. The lengths of these bolts are different in each
plank because the end pillar tapers towards the top.
Now
we must build the side of the wagon. The two of us work together on
this as rather long pieces of timber are involved, and one man is
needed inside the wagon to put the bolts in while the other man
outside fits the strap plates and screws up the bolts. We fetch the
side planks from the mill. They are softwood approximately sixteen
feet long by seven inches wide by three inches thick. They are planed
all round with a chamfer to the top edge of the side. There are nine
of these planks. One end needs rounding off on the face side where it
will fit behind the corner plate. This is done with a hammer and
chisel. The side planks will sit on the top of the side rail tight up
to the side knees to which they will be bolted. The first five side
planks can be put in place one on top of the other on the top of the
side rail. When they are properly lined up they will be nailed to the
end plates to hold them there. The sixth plank needs to have two saw
cuts made. These will be four inches deep from the top of the plank.
They will be cut with a bevel pointing to the centre of the plank.
When all the planks are bolted up and the side door bands fixed,
these cuts will be carried down to the side rail and the side door
will be formed. Now all the remaining planks can be positioned, the
lot cramped down, and the holes can be bored and the bolts put in.
Washer straps can be used on the outside. These are two and a half
inch by quarter inch thick and fit on the outside of each side knee.
There are also diagonal washer straps. They fit from the top corners
to the cross rods. The side door bands can now be bolted up. They
have washer plates inside the wagon. The side door band catches can
also be fixed. I can’t remember if on our wagon the end door
roller bar went through the top plank or over the top of it as either
method were sometimes used, anyway if it did we would have pre-bored
a two and a quarter inch hole before we fixed the plank. We would
also have put in the seven and a half inch by half inch bolts to hold
down the capping when that was fixed. Having completed that side of
the wagon we would go to the other side and do the same thing there.
That done the top cross rods could be screwed up tight.
Now
we could turn our attention to the corner plates. These plates are
one for each corner of the closed end of the wagon, so we need a
pair, not two the same as the bolt holes are different. They are made
of quarter inch thick steel. The long side is the same as the height
of the wagon body and is about three feet wide the other way. It is
bent at a right angle at the centre of the long way, not an acute
bend, but nicely rounded. The necessary holes have been punched to
take the half-inch bolts that will be used. The corner plate can be
held in place while some bottom holes and some top ones are marked
through. These will be bored, bolts put in place and the corner plate
bolted up. Now the rest of the holes can be bored and bolts put in,
not forgetting the washer straps and the inside top corner plates.
Once again we move to the other corner and do the same thing all over
again.
Now
the only big thing left to do is the end door. First we nail on the
sill plate. This plate prevents damage to the sill when the wagon is
emptied via the end door. The bottom end door plank is eased at the
bottom back edge to make the door close better. That done we put in
the roller bar. This is threaded through the eyes in the end knees.
The three end door bands are put on it and a nut screwed on. The
roller bar is a two-inch round steel bar, which together with the end
door bands makes a hinge on which the end door swings. We lay two
washers on the sill plate then the bottom plank goes on the washers.
The washers will allow for the door to drop a bit when it is finally
bolted up. All the other door planks are put in place. The bolt holes
are bored, the bolts put in, and washer straps are used on the
outside. All the bolts are then tightened up. The end door fastener
bar goes on next. It is a steel bar three inches wide by
three-quarters of an inch thick. On either end is an eye which, when
the door is closed, will fit over two lugs that project on either
side of the wagon. These lugs have slots in them into which cotters
can be placed to keep the door closed. While my mate is sawing down
the through plank to make the side door I have one or two things to
do. First the capping has to go on. This is steel plate two and a
quarter by a quarter inch that fits on top of the wagon sides and
ends. Its purpose is to prevent damage to the timbers. This capping
is fastened with the bolts we put in the top planks before they were
fixed, and nails are used in the spaces between the bolts. The end
door roller bar stopper goes on. This is to prevent the roller bar
coming out should the nut come off the other end. When the side doors
can be dropped the mark on the timber where it has hit the bang
spring will show us exactly where to fit the bang spring striker
plates on the door.
While
this has been going on one of the painters has arrived to start
painting the wagon. The first thing is to go all round the wagon and
‘knot’ the wood. The ‘knotting’
is a mixture of
shellac and spirit which is painted on all the knots in the wood.
Then the whole of the outside gets a coat of undercoat paint. Now the
‘lifters’ arrive. They will jack up each end of the
wagon
and roll the wheels underneath, then fit the axle boxes. But as far
as we’re concerned we leave them to get on with it. While I
pick
up all our tools my mate has already gone to the office to find out
what our next job will be. After a few days we go back to couple up
the brakes and to put right anything the inspector says needs doing.
Then we can stand back and look at the wagon, shining dark grey
woodwork, all the wheels and undergear painted black, and its name is
white across the side plank ‘London County Council Supplies
Department’.
Who
thought, as they watched the wagons roll by, of the men that made
them?
Albert
Wright
April
2003
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