Doing Time Inside: Apprenticeship and Training in GWR''s Swindon Works
English
By (author): Rosa Matheson
The Great Western Railways Swindon Works was the largest employer in the area, even during the early British Railway years. For well over a hundred years thousands of apprentices and trainees passed through its doors to learn the trades of the railways. Throughout its lifetime the apprenticeship process was hard work with many constraints, particularly in the early periods when even marriage was forbidden. However, alongside the hard work of doing time (a colloquial term for apprenticeship), there were undoubtedly good times as the young boys were absorbed into the family of workers Inside (as Swindon Works was known locally). Doing Time Inside chronicles the changes of the apprenticeship process from its earliest times during the Industrial Revolution; through the varied work of two world war periods; the changes of thinking and policy in the post-war era; the significant developments of the 1960s; and the decline of apprenticeship until the closure of the Works in 1986. Full of fascinating photographs and documents, many previously unpublished, as well as numerous engaging first-hand accounts of the different apprenticeships on offer, the books presents an in-depth study of apprenticeship in the railway world.
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