Menu Close

T33a – Summary

Back to Oral Taping Menu

The transcript is an interview with Brian Lamb as transcribed by  Microsoft Word and summarised by  ChatGPT and subject to errors.

 

Early Life & Education

  • Born in Shuttleworth.
  • Attended Peel Brow School from nursery through senior level, leaving at age 15.

First Job – Porritts (Textiles, 1950)

  • Entered via family connection (uncle was an electrician at the mill).
  • Started as warehouse boy in July 1950.
    • Pay: £1 10s weekly, later rising to ~£2 5s.
    • Tasks: stitching large hessian bales of woollen fabrics (including conveyor felts for papermaking).
    • About 10–15 workers in the warehouse, with a clear foreman-led hierarchy.
    • Used cranes/hoists for moving heavy bales.
  • Enjoyed the job and stayed ~18 months.
  • Attended night school (Stubbins Tech → Bury Tech), studying textiles, weaving and draughting.

Progression in Porritts

  1. Felting Room (1951–1953)
    • Assisted foreman, handled cloth for women workers who sewed and joined fabrics.
    • About 20–25 women worked there.
  2. National Service (1953–1955)
    • Served in the Royal Army Pay Corps (clerical).
    • Basic training in Wiltshire, later stationed in Leicester.
  3. Return to Porritts – Weaving Shed
    • Post-service, joined weaving production under manager Billy Stark.
    • Learned sequentially: warping → drawing-in → weaving.
    • Worked mostly on large German looms (10ft–26ft wide).
    • Became weaver for 3–4 years, then tackler (loom maintenance), working 3 shifts.

Shift to Cotton Side

  • Moved from woollen to cotton weaving looms (larger, up to 32ft wide).
  • Tackler role expanded: maintaining, repairing looms, sometimes with outside engineers.
  • Workshop supported by joiners, blacksmiths, and engineering staff.
  • Tacklers’ reputation: "if the looms ran smoothly, sitting down was a good sign."

Supervisor & Management Career

  • Mid-1960s–1970s: supervised shifts (~10–12 workers each).
  • Shift system evolved (6–2, 2–10, 10–6) → workers negotiated changes for fairer rotation.
  • Oversaw transition from cotton to synthetic monofilament fabrics (used in papermaking).
    • New challenges: winding, tension control, repairs.
    • Fabrics costly (£7,000–£60,000 each), so damaged belts were repaired whenever possible.

Senior Role – Weaving Manager

  • By late 1970s, became Weaving Manager after colleague Fred Greenhalgh’s accident.
  • Responsibilities:
    • Overseeing winding, warping, weaving operations.
    • Ordering materials and loom parts.
    • Health & safety.
    • Quality control (accept/reject fabrics).
  • Managed through technological change and expansion of synthetic production.

Key Themes

  • Family connections important for entry into textile mills.
  • Progression from manual to technical and managerial roles over career.
  • Shift systems and worker negotiation shaped work–life balance.
  • Technological adaptation: transition from wool and cotton to synthetic fibres.
  • Strong camaraderie in workplace; many local families interconnected within the mill.

Back to Oral Taping Menu