In and Around Swindon Works

In and Around Swindon Works PDF Author: Peter Timms
Publisher: Amberley Publishing Limited
ISBN: 1445611201
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 362

Book Description
A new study looking at the Swindon works in the transition period between the GWR and BR (Western) ownership.

Swindon Works

Swindon Works PDF Author: Rosa Matheson
Publisher: The History Press
ISBN: 0750968869
Category : History
Languages : en
Pages : 172

Book Description
The age of steam is past, the heyday of Swindon Works is long gone – but the legend lives on. What made the Great Western Railway’s Swindon Works iconic? Was it its worldwide reputation; perhaps its profound impact in shaping the new town of Swindon; or that it melded those who worked there into one big family? In a new and exciting format, this book, by popular railway historian Rosa Matheson, helps explain why the never-ending love story endures. With big facts and fascinating stories, it is a must read not only for ex-Works employees and their families, nor just for GWR fans and railway enthusiasts, but also for any newcomer seeking to find a good way into railway history.

Swindon Works 1930-1960

Swindon Works 1930-1960 PDF Author: Peter Timms
Publisher: Amberley Publishing Limited
ISBN: 1445642670
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 401

Book Description
From 1841, when the Great Western Railway began building its works at Swindon, to 1986, when the works were closed, Swindon was a railway town

Doing Time Inside

Doing Time Inside PDF Author: Rosa Matheson
Publisher: History Press
ISBN: 9780752453019
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : en
Pages : 0

Book Description
GRW's Swindon Works had a proud reputation. The boast was "if you had worked in Swindon Works, you could get a job anywhere!," and that meant anywhere in the world. The Works was referred to by locals as "Inside," and thousands of men did "time Inside" for eleven decades until the swinging '60s brought changes to the way young boys trained to become "modern" journeymen with flexible skills. Apprenticeship, when a young man was bound over to a master for years, was hard work and came with a lot of history and baggage. In early years the conditions and rules were awesome--including no marriage and no letting harm come to your master--but when the old ways were abandoned did it lose much of its ritual mystique? Doing Time Inside expresses the collective voices of the Swindon apprentices, recording the life of apprenticeship, and how it changed, the differences between apprenticeships, the good times and the rotten jobs. Including many first-hand accounts and unpublished photographs, this fascinating book will appeal to the thousands of workers who remember this period with affection.

Swindon Steam

Swindon Steam PDF Author: L. A. Summers
Publisher: Amberley Publishing Limited
ISBN: 1445616963
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 343

Book Description
This book investigates the facts behind the myths and mysteries of the Swindon Steam.

Struggle and Suffrage in Swindon

Struggle and Suffrage in Swindon PDF Author: Frances Bevan
Publisher: Pen and Sword
ISBN: 1526718235
Category : History
Languages : en
Pages : 187

Book Description
An in-depth history of women’s activism and achievements in one English town, with photos included. As the industrial revolution and the coming of the railways transformed the Wiltshire countryside, Swindon women were on the front line of change, shaping the new industrial town and transforming the old market one. Newcomers arrived from the great railway centers across the country to create a welcoming, tolerant and creative community with women’s contribution at its heart. Following the incorporation of Old and New Swindon in 1900, innovative women stepped up to the plate: women like Swindon-born suffragette Edith New, who challenged political conventions, and Emma Noble, Swindon’s first female councilor, who campaigned to improve living conditions in the town. During two world wars, Swindon women worked in the railway factory in jobs once considered beyond their strength and endurance. Women supported the war effort on the home front, volunteering in what little spare time they had. Struggle and Suffrage in Swindon tells the stories of women like Mary Slade and Kate Handley, two teachers who during WWI headed the Prisoners of War Committee, which sent food parcels to soldiers held in German POW camps. The story of Swindon women includes artists and actresses, political activists and social reformers—and the ordinary women who worked in the factories, raised their children, and made a difference.

Trip

Trip PDF Author: Rosa Matheson
Publisher: History Press (SC)
ISBN: 9780752439099
Category : Vacations, Employee
Languages : en
Pages : 128

Book Description
'Trip', if you happened to be a Swindonian and one that worked 'inside' the Great Western Railway's Swindon Works, was the event of the year. When, in 1848, a party of some 500 made up of men from the Mechanics Institution and their families took the company's gratis train to Oxford, they set a tradition that lasted for over 120 years. Trip enabled the 'trippers' to travel initially all over the GWR system, then up and down the country and, in later times, even across the Channel to Europe. It was a masterpiece of management and in its heyday numbers up to 26,000 would leave Swindon in a matter of hours. Over the years Trip became part of the fabric of life for Swindon Works' railway families and they invested it with their individual rituals and traditions. It was talked about with hushed breath and hopeful longing for many months before the event and is now remembered long years after with great fondness. This book provides an evocative record of Trip for those who remember the excursions and for anyone interested in the history of Swindon and the administrative prowess of the GWR. Archive photographs and postcards offer a fascinating glimpse of Swindon Works and the families on holiday at an array of Trip destinations.

The End of the Line

The End of the Line PDF Author: Ron Bateman
Publisher: The History Press
ISBN: 0750995289
Category : Transportation
Languages : en
Pages : 274

Book Description
In 1977, the iconic Swindon Works was building locomotives. By 1986, it was shut down. In The End of the Line, Ron Bateman recounts the fight to save Swindon Works, its 3,500 jobs and the livelihood of the entire community it represented. Initially joining through the Works Training School in 1977, Ron witnessed this tragic struggle and the crushing blow dealt to the industry that had defined Swindon for generations. Combining personal recollections with information and interviews from many other insiders and railmen, this book provides the only comprehensive chronicle on the final decade of 147 years of railway engineering and a fateful milestone in the history of Swindon.
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