My life on Canvey 1948 to 1970
by Eddie Terry "My first job after leaving school at 15 was with Gouldings & Sons Sheet metal and Wireworkers where a lot of local boys had their first taste of working for a living. They had two factories, one in Yamburg Ave (Wireworks) and one in the old market building down on the corner of St. Annes Road (Sheet metal). I worked at the wirework factory which was only a few minutes walk from Beach Road, my starting wage was 10 pence an hour - a grand total of One Pound Sixteen Shillings and Eight pence a week, of which I gave my Mum one pound. Can you imagine the outcry if you asked your kids now to give up over half their gross income towards the upkeep of the family! The foreman at the wireworks was a man called Arthur
Richards and a nicer man you would not meet, his tolerant attitude
to the boys who had just left school helped us to acclimatize to the
workforce, when you start your first job straight from school you
need a man like Arthur to ease you into adult life not some boss or
foreman who think their sh*t doesnt stink and play all kinds
of idiotic tricks on you. Mr. Goulding the boss left the running of the factories
to his foremen and did not visit the factories all that often, when
he did he reminded me of Winston Churchill as he was very big and
smoked a cigar. "Most of the girls living on the Island either commuted to the City or worked at Egans Factory or Neales a bookbinding firm at Northwick Corner. The girls who used to travel to the City to work went mob handed, nearly on the same bus and train. One of the girls gave me the nickname of "peanuts" as I was always sat on the top deck of the bus in the back seat eating peanuts and it was this one girl amongst that mob that I had a crush on, nice little dimples on her cheeks but as I was rather shy back in those days I did not have the courage to ask her out, I just wonder where I would be now if I had of asked her out?? I will not mention her name in case she still lives on the Island (Oh the joys of youth.)!!!!! Who can ever forget a typical Saturday in the Fifties: "Sometimes we were stopped by the local police
and asked to keep our singing down but it was all in good fun, it
is quite a long way from Southend to Canvey so we were knackered by
the time we walked (and sometimes rolled) down Essex Way, over the
level crossing and along Lakeside Path and home. |