My eye was cught yesterday by an image in Peter's canal book showing farm milk in kits being delivered to a canal side dairy in the 1920s and it reminded me of West Marton.
The Lad waiting to tip farm milk at West Marton Dairy in 1960.
My years working for the dairy epitomise to me how good old fashioned industry was. We were not the highest paid labour, about 3/6 (17p) an hour and the it was hard physical work but it was secure, enjoyable and we were working out in the open all day. Everyone was content and got along with each other. Sounds like rose-tinted glasses but it isn't, labour didn't turn over like it does now, many had worked there for over 20 years so there must have been something good about it. Our pay and conditions were set by a government wages board. We got overtime, sick and holiday pay and increases based on cost of living. How many 'labouring' jobs get that these days?
It wasn't official but a blind eye was operated by the management and everyone had free milk at home and the occasional tub of cream or pound of butter, following the Biblical dictum, "Never muzzle the ox". Old fashioned yes, but a very easy system to work under.
Looking back, the enterprise fitted in well with the landscape and the local economy. What was more sensible than a bottling dairy sat in the middle of a grass based local farming system? That's why we had two dairies, don't forget Dobson's Dairy in New Coates Mill. Funnily enough Dobson's were based in Didsbury near Manchester and when I was a lad they delivered our milk at home.
As the dairy industry consolidated we converted from bottling to bulking and cheese making in the late 1960's and were bought out by what was then Associated Dairies. That was when I moved over to tanking milk, one of the best jobs I ever had.
It was a clean job and good hours. We loaded at around noon each day with refrigerated filtered raw milk and delivered it to other dairies first thing next morning to other dairies as far apart as Sanquar in SW Scotland to Ashby de la Zouche in the south. That meant that we started early and were back home finished shortly after noon the following day. That suited me down to the ground and meant that I had a few hours in the afternoon to do things at home on our seven acres at Hey Farm. I had half a dozen heifers and some pigs at that time.
In short, it was a low paid job even then but supported a family and the purchase of a house and seven acres. What's not to like?
I look at wages and conditions today and the lack of security and I ask myself whether this is progress. I feel sorry for young families facing a far worse situation than we had in 'the bad old days'. It's a forgotten corner.