I have never been to
the Pencil Museum at Keswick in the Lake District. It has always seemed too
limited a concept on which to spend time, though it may well be worthy and I
expect it is popular with holidaymakers committed to spending a week or so in a
region where, whatever the season, rain can drive everyone indoors. We
campervanners, however, have no need to hang around and wait for the sky to
clear: we just ‘up-sticks’ and move on. (Although I suppose that phrase needs
updating, since it originates from a time when a wanderer’s shelter comprised canvas
supported by wooden poles.)
I was in the Lake
District this week to rendezvous with an old friend. We don’t see each other
often so we both arrived the evening before our planned hike around Langdale
Pikes. After supper at the local pub, we settled in to our campsite for the
night – as did the rain. The next day’s forecast, fortunately, was “brighter
later” so we set off enthusiastically, our conversation ranging from nostalgia,
through updates on family and mutual acquaintances, to current affairs and
shared cultural interests. The walking became strenuous towards the end, especially
where we lost our bearings for a while, but at its conclusion, we congratulated
ourselves on having sufficiently youthful limbs to carry us through and
arranged to meet again soon for another hike – in Norfolk, perhaps.
Back at camp I was ‘upping-sticks’
when a neighbouring campervanner approached me to ask whether I had a set of
Allen keys. “Yes,” I said. “I have a comprehensive tool-box that I have been
carrying for about thirty years and I am delighted that, at last, my prudence
has paid off.” He was also delighted – on his own behalf – and explained that,
like me, he normally has Allen keys to hand but, being from Australia and in a
hired vehicle, was without the means to tighten his loose fitting. Men who fix
things are called ‘blokes’ as opposed to ‘chaps’ or ‘lads’, neither of which categories
seems to signal the inclination or ability to mend broken stuff.
With the rest of the
day free, I decided to drive home via one of the visitor attractions –
Wordsworth’s Dove Cottage or The World of Beatrix Potter, perhaps. However, being
a bit of a bloke, I opted instead for the bobbin mill at Stott Park. It ceased
production in 1971, the last of sixty such factories in the region, which
sprang up because of the plentiful supply of trees for coppicing and water for
powering machinery. Their ready customer base was the cotton industry of nearby
Lancashire. The mill ended its days powered by electric motors, though they
were – and still are – attached to the original belt and pulley system that drives
all the equipment, so our tour guide was able to demonstrate bobbin-making.
From a mechanical/industrial-ingenuity
perspective, the whole set-up, which began in 1835, is admirable and
fascinating, but our guide was careful to remind us, from behind a retro-fitted
safety-guard, of the human cost of these early industrial endeavours. Boys had
to serve a seven-year apprenticeship just to qualify for a lifetime working
twelve hours a day, five and a half days a week at a single, repetitive and
inherently dangerous task, for which they received only subsistence wages. Things
may have changed (for some of us) but vestiges of our industrial past are
embedded in our language, reminding us how hard it was. For example, the mill
workers were obliged to buy their own hand tools so that they would be sure to
look after them. If they left the job having worked well they were given a sack
to carry them away in, but if they left under a cloud of disapprobation their
tools were thrown in the fire. Better to be sacked than fired. Either way, you
could always try your luck at the pencil factory. They were tough times for
workers – and they still are: the gig economy, with its self-employment and zero-hours
contracts is proof that exploitation never went away – it just changed its image.
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