bathgate
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bathgate
BATHGATE ONCE MORE The Story of the BMC/Leyland Truck and Tractor Plant, 1961-86 PAGE 00 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 Opportunity, Pride, Sweat and Tears... Contents INTRODUCTION Professor Tom Devine CHAPTER 1 The Political Context CHAPTER 2 It’s Bathgate CHAPTER 3 The Beginning of the Beginning CHAPTER 4 The Jobs We Did CHAPTER 5 Training and Apprenticeships CHAPTER 6 Working Conditions CHAPTER 7 The Leyland was a Community CHAPTER 8 The Trades Unions BATHGATE ONCE MORE: The Story of the BMC/ Leyland Truck and Tractor Plant, 1961-86 This book is the result of an 18 month social history education project to research, record and preserve the story of the Bathgate BMC/Leyland Truck and Tractor plant from the point of view of the people who worked in the industry. Many of the project activities took place during 2011 – the 50th anniversary of the opening of the plant and the 25th anniversary of its closure. More than 200 people have contributed to the project activities including 59 former workers who shared their personal, first-hand knowledge and experiences of the plant through taking part in an oral history interview. The project was funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund and led by the Workers’ Educational Association with the support and active involvement of the Bennie Museum, the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland, the Simpson Primary School, the STUC archives, West Lothian Local History Library and West Lothian Trades Council. The oral histories, written contributions, photographs and documents gathered through the project will be preserved in the West Lothian Local History Library for future generations to learn from and enjoy. CHAPTER 9 Bathgate No More CHAPTER 10 Looking Back Acknowledgements FRONT COVER PHOTOGRAPHS, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: THE FIRST TRACTORS OFF THE PRODUCTION LINE ARE LOADED ON TO LORRIES FOR EXPORT FROM GRANGEMOUTH DOCKS © THE SCOTSMAN PUBLICATIONS LTD LICENSOR WWW.SCRAN.AC.UK; HUGH MITCHELL, SETTER OPERATOR; BIG TRACK SECTION COURTESY OF RAB MARSHALL; BMC DANCE COURTESY OF TOMMY MORRISON; APPRENTICE PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF GORDON CAMERON. Founded in 1903 to open up education for working people the Workers’ Educational Association is a national voluntary sector provider of adult education in workplaces and communities across Scotland. ISBN 978 0 902303 74 4 Published by the Workers’ Educational Association, Riddle’s Court, 322 Lawnmarket, Edinburgh, EH1 2PG. The Workers’ Educational Association is a charity registered in England and Wales (number 1112775) and in Scotland (number SC039239) and a company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales (number 2806910). Registered address is WEA, 4 Luke Street, London, EC2A 4XW. Compiled and edited by Elizabeth Bryan, Area Tutor Organiser, Workers’ Educational Association © Workers’ Educational Association (2012) DESIGN BY www.theroundroom.co.uk BATHGATE ONCE MORE INTRODUCTION by Professor Tom Devine I have read Bathgate Once More with great interest. It tells the story in microcosm of a crucial part of Scotland’s industrial and social history from the 1960s to the 1980s which is essential to understanding the economy and society of the nation of today. That was the era of the great schemes for Scottish manufacturing regeneration, the Ravenscraig steel mill, the major car factory established at Linwood in Renfrewshire and, not least, the foundation of the giant British Motor Corporation truck and tractor plant at Bathgate in 1961. All were born in an atmosphere of enthusiastic hope for the future. All are no more, their very physical existence removed from the local landscape by redevelopment, landscaping and rebuilding. It is because of this vanishing history that booklets such as Bathgate Once More are so valuable. Communities exist and thrive for many reasons but one fundamental is a shared sense of their past, how they came to be and the influences which have moulded them into what they are. History is the social memory of the people and of the community, a powerful force in shaping identities whether they be local or national, providing the glue which provides for the development of social connections. All associated with this project deserve warm congratulations. I was particularly struck by the careful work which has been done on oral history with the aim of preserving the experiences of those who actually worked at the Bathgate plant and without which their memories would have been lost forever. History from above can often be easily recorded in official papers and newspaper sources. History from below is more difficult to access and needs the patient application of the kind and range of expertise among members of the team who were engaged in this project. Also impressive was the involvement of the children of the local primary school. Initiatives such as these not only connect them to their own heritage but also with a world of work experienced by their parents and grandparents but which has now passed away. The Bathgate story has to be seen against the context of British and Scottish political and economic policy in the second half of the twentieth century. In the postwar era, from the 1950s to the 1970s, all UK governments, whatever their political colours, were committed to the goal of full employment. There was to be no repeat of the social evils of the 1930s. As Scotland’s traditional industries began to falter in the winds of international competition, the Tory administrations of the late 1950s and 1960s put their faith in encouraging the transfer of some ‘new’ industries from CONTINUED >> PAGE 00 I BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 TOM DEVINE BATHGATE INTRODUCTION ONCE MORE CHAPTER 1 THE POLITICAL CONTEXT CONTINUED >> the Midlands through huge support and investment in large-scale prestige projects. This was the background to the ‘state of the art’ strip mill at Ravenscraig developed by Colvilles Ltd and the opening of the two large vehicle manufacturing plants at Linwood in 1963 and at Bathgate two years earlier. It was hoped that they would produce a dynamic and interrelated new industrial complex in central Scotland geared to the markets of the future as the old staples of mining, shipbuilding and heavy engineering went into terminal decline. Ominously, however, the leading figures in Britain, in both steel-making and car manufacture at the time, were sceptical about the potential for the long-term success of these ventures because of their distance from markets south of the Border and the lack of easy access to suppliers and an existing neighbouring infrastructure of technical support. As both the political and economic landscapes were transformed from the late 1970s these concerns proved prescient. The contributions in Bathgate Once More document the intrinsic problems experienced by the plant which eventually led to the death of vehicle manufacturing in the town. But the forces which killed the development were not only national but global in scale. The steep fall in world oil prices following the Yom Kippur war in the Middle East triggered the worst economic recession since the 1930s. It coincided with the election of a Conservative government under Margaret Thatcher whose priorities were not any longer the maintenance of full employment but the control of inflation and and reform of public finances. The full rigour of monetarist policy was imposed on an economy already mired in the most serious depression since the Second World War. Interest rates rose inexorably to control the money supply which was seen as the main cause of inflationary pressure. The results of this policy were catastrophic both for the old industries of Scotland and some of those more recently conceived by the regional policies of the 1960s and 1970s. Crucially, this time the state was not prepared to shelter ailing businesses from the harsh winds blowing through the market economy. The locational disadvantages of Bathgate were now cruelly exposed. But the plant was not alone. In the course of the 1980s, Goodyear, Monsanto, Massey Ferguson, Caterpillar and Burroughs were just some of the other major companies which went to the wall in Scotland. An era of bright hopes for the manufacturing future of the country passed away into history. TM Devine Personal Senior Research Professor in History, UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH. Tom Devine is the author or editor of some thirty books and numerous articles on Scottish History including the best selling The Scottish Nation 1700-2000. The British Motor Corporation (BMC) set up its truck and tractor assembly plant at Bathgate as a result of a Government regional development policy which sought to direct investment out of the congested English Midlands, where full employment and high wages created inflationary pressures, to the depressed ‘Development Areas’, which included Central Scotland, Merseyside and South Wales amongst others. The news that the BMC would be moving to Scotland was welcomed, as it was hoped that a Scottish motor industry based around Bathgate, the steel strip mill at Ravenscraig and the Rootes car plant at Linwood, would provide stable and well-paid employment for thousands of people. However, the company itself was reluctant to move out of the Midlands, where it benefitted from easy access to its suppliers and main markets, as well as economies of scale in an area dominated by its metal manufacture and motor assembly industries. The BMC’s experience at Bathgate was being watched closely by other motor manufacturers as, with the introduction of Industrial Development Certificates (IDCs), it was becoming increasingly difficult to build or expand capacity in the Midlands. A company would no longer be allowed to build without a Government-issued IDC, and the Government was using this scheme to compel manufacturers to invest in the Development Areas, leading to some lengthy negotiations over what would be allowed and where. As part of the deal which eventually took the company to Bathgate, the BMC also sought to expand its giant plant at Longbridge, to the south of Birmingham, as well as build new factories in Llanelli and Kirkby, near Liverpool. Initially, the company proposed to build a tractor plant in Scotland, employing around 1,200 people, while creating around 9,000 new jobs at Longbridge and in Oxford. However, these plans were rejected by the Board of Trade following the recommendation of the Scottish Development Department, who argued that ‘a tractor factory (and a relatively small one at that) would not be regarded by Scottish opinion as a satisfactory substitute for a car factory’, particularly as tractors were already being manufactured in Scotland and thus a new tractor plant would be unlikely to breed ancillary component manufacturing industries. Furthermore, it was felt that if these proposals Prime Minister Harold Macmillan visits the BMC Bathgate plant to meet managers and workers (1961). BMC Bathgate Managers Keith Sinnott and RT Rudd are also pictured. ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd Licensor www. scran.ac.uk were to be accepted, it would set the precedent that motor manufacturers would be allowed to expand in their present areas, provided that they made relatively small gestures in the designated Development Areas. In spite of reservations about the distance between Scotland and its supply networks in the Midlands, and about the suitability of the Clyde for vehicle exports, the BMC amended its CONTINUED >> PAGE II 00 PAGE 01 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE THE POLITICAL CONTEXT CHAPTER 1 THE POLITICAL CONTEXT ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk. The railway came right up to the plant. There was a pit at Blackburn, Riddochhill they called it…When the BMC started to build the trucks they just put a rail connection on the Riddochhill branch line for the transport of the trucks. I took this photo from up above the golf course entrance before I went into British Leyland while I was still working on the railways. Alex Binnie CONTINUED >> proposals and instead decided to move all of its production of tractors and heavy commercial vehicles to its new factory in Scotland. The company also agreed to increase its investment in both Kirkby and Llanelli, and to forego its expansion at Longbridge. The BMC’s Engineering Director was then shown fourteen potential sites around Renfrewshire, Lanarkshire, West Lothian, Grangemouth, Glenrothes and Dundee. Of these, it was decided that sites at Bathgate, Grangemouth and Johnstone would be the most suitable with the company expressing a preference for Bathgate due to its transport links to both the Clyde and the Forth. Transport links played an important part in the eventual decision of the BMC to establish its factory at Bathgate, as it was hoped that the ease of export from the Forth especially would help to off-set the increase in transport costs to the home markets in the Midlands and South of England. Furthermore, it was hoped initially that any pressures caused by increased transport costs would ease as component makers set-up in or moved to Scotland in order to supply both the BMC at Bathgate, Rootes at Linwood and other motor manufacturers who were expected to invest in Scotland as well. Both Ford and Vauxhall were known to be planning to expand their production and would have to move away from Dagenham and Luton respectively in order to do so. The Scottish Council (Development and Industry) argued that Scotland had a strong economic case for further motor industry investment, due in part to its high levels of unemployment and therefore its potential for long-term growth. Moreover, it was felt that Scotland represented a better proposition than Merseyside or South Wales as the increased distance from the Midlands would encourage a greater dispersal of the supply industries, and therefore ease the congestion stifling the motor industry in the Midlands. PAGE 02 However, these views were not shared by the motor manufacturers themselves, as Ford, Vauxhall and Standard-Triumph were all eventually to choose sites on Merseyside over Scotland. With the Scottish motor industry remaining restricted to BMC at Bathgate and Rootes at Linwood, there was little incentive for Scottish engineering companies to move into the manufacture of component parts, and no reason for existing suppliers in the Midlands to move production to Scotland. In spite of Bathgate’s advantageous position close to main road, railway and shipping links, it was therefore to suffer from its relative isolation from its main suppliers and markets in the Midlands, as problems in accessing supplies caused difficulties for management and workforce alike. Catriona Louise Macdonald Postgraduate research student in Economic and Social History, University of Glasgow Archive material from National Archives of Scotland, SEP4/1658 – Scottish Development Department, Specific Industries – Motor-engineering – General. THE BRITISH MOTOR CORPORATION (BMC) was formed in February 1952 when the two former competitors The Austin Motor Company and The Nuffield Organisation merged to become the largest motor manufacturing business in Europe, and the third largest in the world. The Austin Motor Company had been founded in 1905 by Herbert Austin. The Nuffield Organisation was the umbrella title for the group of companies associated with Morris Motors Ltd. William Morris, later Lord Nuffield, had set up Morris Motors in 1913. The joint experience, purchasing power and ability to rationalise meant BMC products were very competitive and the Company enjoyed a huge market share in the UK and many parts of the world. On the 14th May 1968 British Motor Holdings merged with the Leyland Motor Corporation to become The British Leyland (BL) Motor Corporation, the largest motor manufacturer outside the United States of America. As well as the manufacture of trucks and agricultural tractors at the BL Bathgate factory, BL’s Commercial Vehicle Organisation was well known for its manufacture of buses and coaches. Geoff Fishwick SOMETHING HAD TO BE DONE In 1958/9 not, I think, for reasons narrowly related to electoral advantage, Harold Macmillan and his Cabinet decided that something had to be done for an area where the shale oil industry was being put out of business by the then, cheap and plentiful Middle Eastern oil. Five Sisters shale bings at West Calder ©Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk Shale cutting at Breich pit ©Almond Valley Heritage Trust Licensor www.scran.ac.uk The result was that, albeit 3 shale mines were near exhaustion and would have had to close anyway, often mines, particularly the productive Deans and Philpstoun Pile, were forced to close prematurely and while there were ample reserves, once a padlock is put on the pit entrance, likely flooding and dangerous air pockets make it impossible to reopen. A lot of men in the areas of Broxburn, Pumpherston, Seafield and Uphall in their forties and fifties found themselves confined to the proverbial scrap heap. Although in retrospect it was against the economic interest of Britain, that the shale oil industry should be forced to close down I must confess I was not angry. As a teenager I had been taken down the Whitequarries pit, and made to crawl through a long passage which the miners were obliged to negotiate every working day. By its value, shale is a very jagged mineral, and serious cuts to the skin and knees could be debilitating in the long term. Industrial injury was common. Tam Dalyell Extract from Tam Dalyell’s autobiography The Importance of Being Awkward PAGE 03 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 CHAPTER 1 BATHGATE THE POLITICAL CONTEXT ONCE MORE The History of Bathgate The town of Bathgate has come to prominence in significant ways throughout its history. The settlement began in 1160 when King Malcolm of Scotland instructed Uchtred Sherif of Linlithgow to grant land in Bathgate to Holyrood Abbey for agricultural use and for the building of a church. In 1315 King Robert the Bruce gifted Bathgate Castle along with the Barony of Bathgate to Walter Lord High Steward on the occasion of his marriage to Bruce’s daughter Princess Marjory. After Marjory’s tragic death Walter returned to Bathgate with their infant son Robert the Steward who was raised in Bathgate Castle. Walter died in Bathgate in 1328 having founded the Royal House of Stewart, a lineage that would produce many Scottish monarchs, notably Mary Queen of Scots. Bathgate’s Annual Procession celebrating its royal history takes place on the first Saturday of June each year when local schoolchildren reenact the royal story ensuring Bathgate’s place in royal history is never forgotten. Bathgate continued to grow in size and population during the Middle Ages. Natural deposits were discovered in abundance as time went on leading to coal, limestone, shale and even silver mining flourishing in the area. In 1606 silver was discovered and mined in the shadow of two local landmarks, the Knock Hill and the ancient Neolithic burial site of Cairnpapple Hill. Although the silver ore was of varying quality some of it was used to make the Scottish Crown Jewels on the request of King James VI. This spectacular silverware is now on display next to the Stone of Destiny in Edinburgh Castle. By 1850 Bathgate was starting to resemble the town we see today. Bathgate’s first claim to industrial fame came in 1850 when pioneering Glasgow chemist James “Paraffin” Young chose to site the world’s first oil refinery in the town. Young discovered that oil could be extracted from certain types of coal and with the demands of the flourishing Industrial Revolution oil was needed to lubricate factory machines replacing whale oil which had been used previously. With abundant local pits providing Young’s factory with oil rich coal (later shale) supplies the industry flourished. Indeed Young’s patent gave him (and Bathgate) a worldwide monopoly in the production of oil for the next 14 years. The medical world was blessed in the year 1811 with the birth in Bathgate of James Young Simpson. After attending Bathgate Parish School and at the age of only 14 Simpson studied medicine at Edinburgh University becoming a Professor of Midwifery at St Andrews University. He began experimenting to find an effective anaesthetic for use in childbirth or even surgery. A chemist named David Waldie (originally from Linlithgow) heard of Simpson’s quest and sent him a phial of chloroform which he felt may be suitable for anaesthesia. Simpson famously asked PAGE 04 Postcard courtesy of John Bell’s family his dinner guests to inhale the substance and one by one they passed out briefly! Simpson knew the breakthrough had come and he had found a safe anaesthetic. Very quickly Simpson’s discovery led to a revolution in surgery and childbirth the world over. In 1892 Bathgate Golf Club was established, the course is situated where Bathgate Castle once stood. Bathgate Golf Club provides the town with two Bathgate Bairns whose achievements are known throughout the globe this time in the world of sport. Eric Brown was Scottish Amateur golf champion in 1946 before becoming a touring golf professional. Eric was part of various Ryder Cup teams and in 1969 became Captain of the Great Britain and Ireland team - a great honour which was made even more special by the inclusion in the team of another Bathgate Bairn, Bernard Gallacher. Bernard Gallacher also learned his golf over the Bathgate course forging a successful career as both a touring and club professional. In 1991 he was appointed Captain of the now European Ryder Cup Team thus making Bathgate Golf Club the first and only golf club either side of the Atlantic to produce two Ryder Cup players and subsequently two Ryder Cup Captains. Harry Cartmill CHAPTER 2 IT’S BATHGATE In January 1960 news broke that the BMC would site its new £9 million factory on Mosside Farm on the outskirts of Bathgate. The new factory was built to produce heavy commercial vehicles and tractors, as well as diesel engines, gear boxes, transmissions and axles. There was no history of vehicle design and manufacturing of this kind in the area. This was a predominantly farming and mining community but the closure of the pits and foundries had created high unemployment. The prospect of new industry and the jobs and prosperity this would bring to the area was warmly welcomed locally, and enthusiastically reported in the newspapers. Local Councils supported the coming of the BMC factory with a number of infrastructure projects including the provision of new social housing, the upgrading of the A8 dual carriageway and the development of Livingston New Town. Shops, hotels and local amenities grew up across the area. IT WAS OPPORTUNITY, OPPORTUNITY, OPPORTUNITY I would be 19, 20 years of age. I went into the paper shop to buy a paper before I got the bus to my work and there were banner headlines on the newspaper and if memory serves me correctly it just said two words ‘It’s Bathgate’. There had been speculation, of course, because there were a lot of sites that were up for consideration but then it was confirmed it was Bathgate. I remember at the top of the hill going up from Blackridge to Harthill, between the football ground and the chip shop, there was a big notice board erected not long after this announcement was made and it gave you the numbers around this plant. The number of trucks they were going to be building, the number of countries they were going to be exporting to, the number of tractors they were going to build, the number of people they were going to employ. It was something we just couldn’t envisage, it was mind boggling at that time. So it was opportunity, opportunity, opportunity and I wanted to be part of that opportunity. Guthrie Aitken PAGE 05 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE IT’S BATHGATE CHAPTER 2 IT’S BATHGATE They were comin’ from near and far It was definitely a big boost to Bathgate, no just Bathgate. I worked wi’ boys that come from Coatbridge and Airdrie, Glasgow, Edinburgh. They were comin’ from far and near. The majority was Bathgate because the pits were dying at the time. When we come here this place was pits galore… It definitely was a boost to employment. It employed six and half thousand men which was a hell of a lot of bodies. People used to say to you ‘but you’ll know ma man’. I’d say ‘… do you know there’s 6000 men in there!’ it was a new house, new job … Blackburn was all Leyland. All these hooses were built for the Glasgow Overspill. Where I stayed in Glasgow it was just a room and kitchen and I had two kids at the time. The toilet was out in the stair, on the landing. So I applied for this house in Blackburn. It was a case of saying yes right away because it was a lovely house. Three bedrooms! The kids were just coming up at the time. My third one was born there and they were all brought up in Blackburn. It was a new house, new job. JIM BILSBOROUGH I’d heard in the Albion there was recruitment taking place in the Bathgate BMC and there was houses going. At the point in time in 1964 when I applied I was staying in what they called a room and kitchen in quite a run down part of Glasgow, Whiteinch. So anyway we had two children at that point in time and I was desperate to take the opportunity that was offered. I came out here in January ’65 and I was with the plant until it closed. IT WAS A SIGHT TO BEHOLD Bathgate Town Council built 200 new houses at Boghall in Bathgate for the incoming workers and their families. New housing developments were created in Blackburn, Whitburn and Armadale too. ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk John Moore There were people there with bowler hats and they had lined the bulldozers up in sort of stagger formation and the guy gave the signal with the flag and the whole earth moved. When these bulldozers moved forward the earth moved. You could feel it under your feet. It was unbelievable. From that day on until about a year later or thereabouts everything was uprooted and filled in with blaze. There was coal taken out, peat taken out because of course it was a bog area. They dumped the waste in an old quarry in Broxburn. TAM BRANDON Survey work gets underway on Mosside Farm site. ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk. It was a dairy farm I was born on the farm where the factory was built. My dad was the ploughman on the farm and I was actually born in the farm cottage. The farm at that time was 212 acres and it was owned by a farmer called Richard Russell... My first recollection of the factory coming was when I was about 15 years old and I was helping my dad on a Saturday morning ploughing the field where the factory was built and when we looked up Dick Russell was coming out and he stopped the tractor and I heard him saying to my dad. ‘You better just pack up, Jimmy, I’ve sold the farm.’ So basically that was my dad out of work on the farm but Dick Russell had stipulated to the purchaser that whatever happened my dad had to get a job. In fact when the factory started they sent for my dad… It was aosbeudsayys hotel in th Construction of the Golden Circle Hotel close to the BMC factory. ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk Lord Craigton CBE, Minister of State for Scotland, cutting the first sod of earth at the inauguration ceremony of the BMC factory site on 1st June 1960. He is using a Bathgatemade spade, forged especially for the occasion by George Wolfe & Sons Ltd, and is accompanied by BMC Directors and Executives including George Harriman and Keith Sinnott. Afterwards a line of bulldozers started preparing the site for the construction of the factory. Image courtesy of Geoff Fishwick The Golden Circle was just across the way from the BMC… Some of the Leyland people used to come for meetings. I’d look after them and give them their teas and coffees in the morning and then service the room before they went back in after lunch to finish their meeting off. It was mostly management meetings. Some of the workers used to come up on a Friday for their lunch… It was a busy hotel in those days. Gordon Chalmers The BMC was welcomed, very much welcomed because of the number of pits that were shutting down and all the miners finding themselves on the dole. It introduced factory work and the different skills that were needed. Men had to retrain and found themselves doing different things. Jim McCulloch I knew about the car manufacturing down in England and that the BMC made the Mini. It was a real novelty to have cabs and truck building in Scotland. John Fleming ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk It gied us hope It was a good thing. It gied us hope, it gied us a job, got us out o’ a rut, and a bob or two in wages. It was a good thing. Tony Kizis John Weir PAGE 06 THE BMC WAS VERY MUCH WELCOMED PAGE 07 BATHGATE ONCE MORE THE BEGINNING OF THE BEGINNING BATHGATE ONCE MORE CHAPTER 3 THE BEGINNING OF THE BEGINNING C Block under construction, June 1961. Photograph courtesy of Geoff Fishwick. FACTS AND FIGURES Top soil removed 25 acres Reinforced concrete 5,000 cu.yds Roads 40,000 yds Fencing 4,000 yds Glazing 400,000 sq.ft Structural steel 7,500 tons Paint 20,000 gallons Completion date JULY 1963 Factory area 1,250, 000 sq.ft Initial cost of building £5,250,000 Cost of plant and equipment £6,000,000 The BMC (later Leyland Vehicles Ltd) factory in Bathgate was enormous. It stretched over 260 acres and at its peak in the 1970s housed the largest concentration of machine tools under one roof in Europe. The factory was built to have the capacity to make 1000 lorries and 750 tractors per week. Incredible figures which were sometimes achieved. The first BMC Bathgate workers remember the construction of the factory buildings, the installation of the machinery and Lines coming up from Longbridge, organisational procedures being put in place, and production of the first Bathgate built trucks and tractors. By the end of July 1963 the production of the whole BMC range of heavy commercial vehicles had been transferred from the Midlands to Bathgate. They transferred complete Lines to Bathgate… over the weekend What happened was the Bathgate plant, machine tool wise, was set up with probably two thirds used machine tools. Over a period of two years they transferred complete Lines up to Bathgate. They would do it over the weekend. It was amazing how they managed it. The Lines had been running at Longbridge and they had dismantled the machine tools and brought them up to Bathgate… Some of them were wartime machine tools. They still had the Ministry of Aircraft Production (MAP) oval brass tags on PAGE 08 them with the MAP number. In addition to that there was a committee met at Longbridge every Thursday at which time the Bathgate Planning Department submitted what was known as Requests For Authorisation (RFAs) and the RFAs CONTINUED >> CONTINUED >> were made up of information taken from quotations from machine tool companies... These RFAs were approved on a weekly basis and as soon as they were approved they were transferred to the Buying Department. The Buying Department then processed them. In other words they raised orders from the Machine Tool Companies and then they were responsible for progressing the building of the machine tools to ensure that they met specific delivery dates. I put in systems to cover that type of thing where they filled in forms. It was a critical path analysis of the various stages they went through ie scrutinising the order, the design of the machine tool and then the building of the machine tool and the delivery. Included in that we would run off a machine tool in what was known as a Demonstration Department before it went into production to ensure that the machine tool met the criteria that had been specified. David MacPherson It was eye opening to see the work that was getting done I was there before the factories were up and running. I saw each of the factories being developed… October was the first time they actually started to produce lorries and they were built on the side of what was to be the conveyor belt. They were built on trestles to begin with and that was the men undergoing their training. Jim McCulloch (centre) pictured in BMC Bathgate, 1962. The Work’s ambulance and Austin Gipsy fire engine can also be seen. Jim was the first hourly paid worker to be employed in the factory. Photograph courtesy of Jim McCulloch. They would eventually go on to the conveyor belt system. So I saw all that evolve in the time I was there. The same over in B Block with the engines and the gear boxes. It was quite eye opening to see the work that was getting done. Jim McCulloch It was just like a big empty barn There was men all over the place and literally thousands of pounds worth of tools lying all over the place. You just went ower and helped yourself because it was all big, heavy spanners that you needed for to put in the big bolts to hold the machine down of course. There were whitewashed lines drawn on the floor with alphabetical letters. So you would go to K and you got a drawing for K and you had to put fixtures in for a machine to come in and then they would lower the machine down to be fixed in. Big turning lathes, presses, drilling machines, boring mills – anything to do with engineering – that’s the machinery that was coming up. We got the hole dug, drilled down and put in big heavy bolts. The end of the bolt had a flat plate welded on so that it couldn’t come up through the cement. A lot of the machines were second hand coming from the old factory in England. They measured the machines up in the old factory and they measured up the floor in Bathgate but when they lifted the machine up the hole wasnae PAGE 09 anywhere near the bolt! Whoever had done the calculations and measured up the machine… well they just didnae fit! I was maybe there 3 or 4 month but then to dig the hole, fill it with cement, then it had to lie for a week or two weeks for it to solidify so that when you put the machine on and you tightened it doon it didnae come up through the floor. You had to wait until the floor was right hard before you could do anything. Jim Love BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE THE BEGINNING OF THE BEGINNING CHAPTER 3 THE BEGINNING OF THE BEGINNING THE FIRST OF THE MANY I CREATED ALL THESE SYSTEMS I came up from Longbridge to be the Superintendant in the Machine Shop B Block but when I came up the machines weren’t in place so I went to A Block. A Block was the first part to operate, that was in 1961, that was the actual track making the trucks. We were sending the parts up from Birmingham and the Morris were sending engines up and we got people assembling them… I couldn’t believe it when I came up nobody was recording anything that was being done… In a few weeks I moved into B Block the machines were in situation. Every major component on the truck – engine, gear box and back axle - I created a cost centre number for it and as the people were coming in for jobs I allocated them to these different sections and to a Foreman. I slowly built it up ‘til B Block was running as a big shop with four or five hundred men in. I knew exactly who was what and where they were. Everybody was filling in a daily worksheet. We knew what they’d done. I complained about people being allowed to walk in and out the factory. I had all these different things made by a firm in Bathgate – Pass Outs and things like that. The Managing Director sent for me one day and when I went in his office he had got all these things I’d created on his desk. He said ‘What’s this?’. I said ‘it’s a worksheet You’re running a factory with nothing nobody knows what they’re doing and who’s done it’. ‘What’s this?’ ‘A Pass Bill Raine ©Workers’ Educational Association Out. It’s so we know who’s gone and when they’ve gone and why they’ve gone’… So what he did, he started a guy on as an Organisation and Methods Systems Engineer and they started doing these things properly. But I didn’t care because all mine was on the wall I could just look at it. I could tell exactly how many men I’d got, where they were, how many Foremen, 6 or 700 workers and machinists and everybody knew what job they had got to do each day. We knew exactly what they’d done during the day. It was reported and there was a value given to it… Bill Raine BMC Factory (1961) ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk. A Block was the first building built and the rest were in progress, being built. The first people in, trainee people, were taught to build trucks on a couple o’ trestles so they got to know where the parts went, how the axle went on, how the engine was put in. In the meantime the actual Assembly Line was being built. By the time we were ready to open it wasn’t quite finished. The actual control block should have been in and the Electrical Workshop but it was still sitting out on the shop floor so for the press photographs we pushed a truck on to the conveyor backwards and I was at the end actually where it came off. We put a tape across it. Sinnott and Rudd, the two managers at the time, they were sitting on the truck and they drove the truck off. It was a running truck. We started the conveyor up and it moved and the truck with it and the truck run off and broke the ribbon. Billy Steven WOW, THIS IS SOME SIZE OF PLACE! The first Bathgate built tractors are loaded onto an Austin Commercial FFK360 for export. Photograph courtesy of Geoff Fishwick I was working in the tractor factory, C Block as they called it then, and that was where they were building Nuffield tractors. We hadn’t even started building tractors at that time. We were in a situation where we were taking in supplies to set up the stores area to feed the production lines. The very, very first tractor that was being built in Bathgate - it wasn’t being built on the assembly line, it was being built on trestles, off– line just to make sure that all the components were available and fitted together. I was given the responsibility of working with a guy called John Briffit. John eventually became the Works Manager. He was a technical apprentice so I was feeding the parts into John and he was building the very first Nuffield tractor at Bathgate by hand. So I’m quite proud of that. That was in 1962. Tractors went into production later that year and the assembly line started… Guthrie Aitken THE JUNGLE It got that name because it was so large and so many types of machines were employed in it going from high drills to low machines. It was just like a forest and it was always packed solid, so it was like fighting through foliage. You had gangways but beside each gangway you had pallets full of components and then you had another wee gangway and a guy was working machines. So it really looked like a jungle, in its wildest sense. As the factory developed the Jungle moved from A Block to B Block. The motor industry requires a tremendous number of machines to do the different functions especially to meet production standards. There were rows and rows of machines up the one side… and all different types of machinery too. Then you came to the Heat Treatment Department which split B Block in half. Then the next area was machines again, right up to the very top on the other side it was all machines - a great big row of machines, what they called Transfer machines. The cylinder block and the cylinder heads came in as a casting, they went into these machines and came out machined at the top end, passed, checked, ready to get taken to the bottom end of the factory where they were loaded on to the Engine Build Track. They put the cylinder head on, put the studs on, screwed it altogether and then it came up as a finished engine at the top. Then it got whipped down to the test beds. There was a series of test beds and, of course, they put them on a special bed and bolted them down. They were diesel engines, they put diesel in them, started them up and again they would check the temperature, check the amount of air, check for the engines working in freezing conditions. Fred McCormick Ian Tennant PAGE 10 When I went into B Block… I thought, ‘Wow – this is some size of a place’. When you were at the top of the factory floor and you looked at the bottom a man was the size of a matchbox. It was really quite wide as well. PAGE 11 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 CHAPTER 3 BATHGATE THE BEGINNING OF THE BEGINNING ONCE MORE BL Bathgate Factory, circa 1980. Photograph courtesy of John Bell’s family. Mosside Farm Yard showing demonstration tractors, the mobile training unit and a truck for carrying demonstration tractors. Photograph courtesy of John Paterson. John joined the Leyland Bathgate plant in 1969. He worked in Tractor Quality Control for a year before taking up the post of Service Training Instructor in the Tractor Training Centre at Mosside Farm. THE VIEW FROM THE ACADEMY YOU WENT TO BATHGATE FOR EVERYTHING The plant itself was huge. The trucks were all piled up towards the west end of the plant ready for distribution. From the Academy you could actually look over the golf course and see the plant. I always remember one of the art classes was high up in the building so you had really quite good vistas across the green of the golf course to the physical aspect of the plant and the gleaming windows of the trucks and the tractors parked up and ready to move wherever. When I was young Bathgate was really, really busy. You went to Bathgate for everything… to buy a telly or for a haircut or anything you needed to have. We came from Fauldhouse which was a small village which had a pub and a post office and a Co-operative. Any big items you needed for the house, or clothes, shoes anything like that everybody went to Bathgate. Vince Moore Eric Mutter CHAPTER 4 THE JOBS WE DID Thousands of new skilled and semi skilled jobs were created at the factory attracting workers from across central Scotland and parts of England. At its peak more than 6000 people worked in the plant. The range of jobs in the factory was large and varied and each had its own challenges. Most of the workforce was men but significant numbers of women were employed too, largely in Packing, Office Work, and the Canteen. For the male workers there were opportunities to transfer to different departments within the plant and for promotion to senior positions in production and management. The Planning Engineer A Planning Engineer in those days received the drawings from the Drawing Department. You then had to sit and work out how the part was going to be machined. So you had to work out how the part was held in each machine that it was going to go through. You had to work out the feeds and the speeds of the drills or the mills, and work out an estimated time of how long the part was going to take to load, how long the job was going to take to machine, how long it was going to take to unload. Then you took the total time and multiplied that by 1.2 and that was the time for the job so it was worked out at 80%. Nobody could work at 100%, everything was done at 80%. We had to liaise with everybody. You basically liaised with the Buying Department to a degree, with suppliers, with Jig and Tool. You were obviously liaising with the shop floor, with the Superintendants and Senior Foremen and Foremen. One of your best pals were the Setters - the guys who set the machines up. You were always in and out the stores with John Duncan pinching tools to try new tools because at that time there were quite a few modern tools coming out. You were always trying to get your hands on them. You were not responsible for the ordering of the tools but you were responsible for seeing that everything came in and worked, and the part was ready when it was needed on the assembly lines. The Office Junior CKD drawing reproduced courtesy of West Lothian Local History Library Margaret Mutter Ian Tennant PAGE 12 We worked in B Block beside the Planning Department and the Jig and Tool Department and the Planning Engineers used to write layouts. Every job in Leyland on the shop floor had a layout. It gave you a list of components and it showed you how to put the things thegither, how to build an engine, how to put an axle together, how to completely build a tractor. There were all the different part numbers and there were drawings that went along with the layouts. We used to type up all the layouts, print them off and send them out. We used to keep a copy of every drawing. They were all folded in a particular way and kept in files and every time they were updated they had to be printed off again, folded and kept in these drawers…It was always busy. There were always lots of things to do. PAGE 13 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE THE JOBS WE DID CHAPTER 4 THE JOBS WE DID THE STOREMAN The Estimator The Estimating Department was a section of the Planning Department and our responsibility was to receive engineering modification notes from the Engineering Department on proposed introductions of a vehicle or changes to a vehicle, and we had to assess what that would mean financially to the cost of the vehicle, or to the cost of the part. Now based on that a decision was then made - would we make the part or, would we buy it? In some instances it was better to purchase – the volume of the part was too low as to justify spending a lot on tooling and stuff. So the decision was made in Routing and Estimating to determine whether you were going to make a part or buy a part. Once you’d established that you were going to make it then you had to do an estimate of what the financial cost would be and if it was going to be purchased the information would be passed over to the Buying Department and they then went on an enquiry to establish a source for the part, or parts. It was an exciting experience to get involved in estimating a commercial vehicle, or a tractor, or a diesel engine. It was really thrilling. I was very pleased with it and I enjoyed the work very much. We would probably be stocking something like 20,000 different parts in the Stores to make a tractor so obviously it was important that we had enough materials on the assembly lines when these tractors were coming down because every one wasn’t the same so we had to make sure that we had the right components on there at the right time to make sure it corresponded with the Build Programme. These supplies, of course, were coming primarily from the Midlands so every day we had half a dozen or ten trucks arriving with components getting them off the truck, getting them on to the loading bays, getting them unpacked and getting them into what they called the Storage Location. At that point in time the stock control system was all manual. You had for every individual part of those 20,000 what was called a Bin Card. Now on that Bin Card it gave you a part number for each individual part, and it gave you a maximum stock and a minimum stock so you had a running tally of how many of each part you had in stock at any given time. The maximum stock was important because you never wanted to hold too much stock at any given time because that was money at the end of the day, but more importantly was the minimum stock. When you got to that minimum stock level it meant that you had to call in extra supplies. So we in Stores would call Material Control. In fact, we did a daily report of all the parts that were at a minimum stock level and they would say ‘yeah, they’ll be in on Tuesday, they’ll be in on Friday, they’re on order’. So that was how the stock was controlled and it worked pretty well. Tractors used to come off the Assembly Line with parts missing - that wasn’t such a big problem. It was when the Line stopped that it was a big problem because that was real money when the Line stopped. So we had quite an important function in terms of keeping that Production Line moving. Guthrie Aitken ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd Licensor www.scran.ac.uk Andy McKeown The Electrician The Storekeeper John Duncan, (front row, second left) after receiving a gold watch marking 25 years service in BMC/Leyland Bathgate. Bill Forsyth, Alec Lawson and Tommy Morrison are also pictured. Photograph courtesy of John Duncan. Photographer: Alex Binnie I was Chief Storekeeper in the Tool Stores. I had the knowledge of hand tools from the places I had worked in before but most of the tools were special and had drawings related to them and these I had to get from the Planning Department. I was asked by the shop floor to supply the tool. I had to request it and drawings from the Planning Department to present to the Buyer. So that he could buy the tool that I wanted and I could give it to the man on the machine. My fear all the time was that we would run out of something. All the special tooling that we were using was a delivery of 6, 10, sometimes a great many more weeks before we could maybe get the tools made for us, because they were being made especially for us, and of course if we ran out of tools you stopped a particular part being made and you stopped the vehicle in itself being complete. When building a vehicle very often you had to put on one part before you could put on the next part so all the other bits were delayed as well. John Duncan PAGE 14 PAGE 15 In each block there was an Electrical Workshop which had its foreman, its workers and electricians’ mates. B Block, which was the engine and machining factory, had two workshops because of the size of it and A Block had the one workshop. The Assembly Lines were actually controlled from the Electrical Workshop because it took the onus of stopping and starting the line off the production. It was done by somebody not involved in the production lines. They phoned up and said ‘Stop the Line’, ‘Start the Line’. In the morning when they maybe discovered they didn’t have enough manpower they would want the line run at a slower speed so they sent word ‘Reduce the speed of the Line’. And electricians were on hand, of course, if anything happened. We kept a record of the speeds of the Line and the number of times it changed in the day. There were approximately 8 electricians in each workshop, and probably about 3 or 4 mates. Billy Steven BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE THE JOBS WE DID CHAPTER 4 THE JOBS WE DID The Craftsmen In the Tool Room, because it was a 24 hour factory there’d be maintenance jobs come in overnight, off the production lines. You’d maybe have to re-bush a capstan head or make up fitments for drilling jigs and things for production machines that had broken down overnight, or just general maintenance or upgrade. So you’d go in the morning and you’d clock in and you’d go to your machine, set up your stuff for the day, and go down to the work bench. You wouldn’t usually be allocated a job you could select a job you wanted to do, take it back to your work station and carry out the work required to be done or whatever had to be manufactured in the time that you were allocated to do it in. There was Time and Study people in there and the job had to be completed in that time specified by the Time and Study man. I’m a Universal Tool and Cutter Grinder to trade. The grinding was very precise, it was a tight tolerance for you to work to. Maybe that’s what I found interesting being a Grinder. You were finishing a rough machine part for a specific job so it had to be precise. It was a tricky wee job. Graham Bennie Bonderising process to prevent rust. The job is being timed. ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd Licensor www.scran.ac.uk THE FIELD TESTING ENGINEER Photographs courtesy of Tony Moore I spent a lot of time outside in the fields supervising the tractor tests. The tractors were all designed and built and then before they even saw the Production Line they had to go out to a field. We had lads who could drive the tractor, although they were maybe mechanics they could also drive the tractors, and they could plough. They used that tractor and ploughed that tractor as a farmer would and they may have to do it FG Cab hoisted into the paint dip. ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd Licensor www.scran.ac.uk The area that I worked in, the Millwright Department, we dealt with everything with the exception of machine tools. There wasnae really a typical day – every day was different and this was one of the good things about it. We looked after all the lifting equipment that’s cranes, hoists, things like this, we looked after the conveyor tracks, we looked after the Heat Treatment plant where the gears and things that had to be heat treated in the furnace and then processed, and the structure of the buildings. In the winter time some of the times you were outside. I can remember one time they had trucks and tractors outside. To keep the plant going they built them on spec, they didn’t have orders for them, so what they did was they built them and they put them outside. It was a cold winter,1963, and when they put them out in the yard outside they were on frozen shale and, of course, when the Spring came along and the snow and ice disappeared these things sunk into the muck. We used some of the tractors and made up lifting gear and we literally had to pull the trucks and tractors out of the ground. It took weeks. So the job I had in the Millwright Department was very varied! Andy Kidd PAGE 16 The Design Engineer The work was very interesting, very exciting in some ways because Tractor Research at that time was transferring all their knowledge to Bathgate. We had a full set of drawings for the tractor but we didn’t have the engineering test reports that explained why the particular hydraulic system worked in the way it did, why the cooling system was like it was, why the gear box was like it was. A lot of the historical test engineering information wasn’t available so if something went wrong in the Production Line that wasn’t just a production control, or a quality control, or a process buying problem, or a progress problem we’d end up getting a call. One of us would go down… and try to sort that out as best we could. There were hundreds of things we’d do. We worked on the hydraulic systems and Quiet Cabs and the other fairly major task which involved a lot less analysis but quite a bit of work wondering what to do about it was when they started selling tractors to South Africa where it was hot. The tractors have what they call a limiting ambient temperature (LAT) so if you have an LAT of 42˚ it means you can run up to 60˚ for weeks, months and then if it survives 3,4,5 months with whatever they’ve done then they come back and say ‘it works’, then it gets the go ahead to be made properly and then put down the assembly line. If it comes back after 2 or 3 months and it doesn’t work then we’ve got to start from square one so it doesn’t get produced, which happened a few times. It was a joy to be there and do the job I had. I enjoyed every minute of it because it was a very interesting job. John Gray The Machine Operator I was in C Block, in what they cried PrePaint. I would say there would be about 30 men on that side of the Line. The work was fine. You got to know the guys you worked with, you had good patter with them. It was putting the brake rods and things like that on the tractors. It was strange to dae the same job. A tractor came up on a jig every 7 minutes and you done the same job… It was just the repetition, simple as that. The more you done it, the more you got used to it. The thing that I noticed about it, a’ the guys had their own sort of wee tools that they had made for certain jobs you know to make it easier for them and to make it faster for them. If they could get an implement made to make that job easier, that was very acceptable. If you could cut a minute aff yer jig you were quite happy. before the tractor boils. In England, Scotland, Ireland… it’s never really an issue for the tractors overheating. As soon as you go to the African Continent you don’t have this thermal capacity. Initially we did some tests and we then did what turned out to be two very simple things. One, we made the fan fit better inside the radiator in the tractor and we immediately got an extra 5 to 10˚ bonus. We then found we could run the fan faster but that didn’t make as much difference as we thought. So we then just looked at where the air came from and we discovered the way they attached the side panels on the tractor really blocked all the air off so we just changed the way they welded them on and that was enough. Bruce Davies Walter Taggart PAGE 17 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE THE JOBS WE DID CHAPTER 4 THE JOBS WE DID The Production Grinder THE MACHINE OPERATOR I started on what was called the Big Track in A Block. The cost centre was F11. At its peak we were building 74 trucks a day, 9 or so an hour… You went in, tried to get a cup o’ coffee or cup o’ tea, and then as soon as the horn went at 7.40am the Line started. The truck you finished on the day before was sitting waiting on you the next morning. So you would just go and get the parts from the bin or the trolley that was supplying your parts that you were fitting on to the Line, go and pick them up, pick your wee tool box up. I was doing some work externally on the cab and I did some work internally on the cab. Now you would work away on, let’s say it was a Terrier at that point in time. You might come off that and it would be an FG you’d be going on to. So you had different parts to pick up to go on to the FG. And then you could maybe go on to a Boxer. These were different types of trucks. You also had the Mastiff, the Super Mastiff, WFs and Scuttles. It was rare, unless there was a big, big order for maybe Terriers or Boxers that you worked on the same model all day. They usually staggered the models so that it wasn’t totally repetitive work that you were doing. Andy Hunter Photograph courtesy of Tommy Morrison The Cab Trimmer At first it just took me hours to put this rubber round about the window of the cab because it was just springing off. Really, it was terrible to start with. You thought you’re never going to manage this. And then you’ve got to put the glass in, and then you’ve got to put stuff in round about to seal it. But then see before we were finished it was just too easy…You knew all the quick ways to do it but at the self same time you had Inspectors there to make sure it was done right – it wasn’t shoddy work, and rightly so. We had to do 20 cabs a day and then they came out with a scheme that you’d get an extra bonus if you can dae an extra 2 per day, that was an extra 2 cabs added to your shift. And at that time when you were Time and Studied it was hard to dae the 20 a day as it was and then dae another 2 but eventually you managed it. I enjoyed it because they gave me 2 or 3 different jobs on the track. I finished up being the Rectifier. It was at the front of the Line. A’ the boys daein the different jobs on that line before they push the cabs off their Inspector comes and checks every one and puts all the faults on the glass. It was my job to rectify them. Or if it was a big job I had to bring the guy back doon so they wouldn’t keep doing the same mistake. He had to do it. You had one Inspector who was really, really strict - he always had an average of 14 faults on every window… but it was good for the trucks. We worked on a production line making components for the Engine. In our section, that was G63 the Engine Gear Section, there must have been about 60 people. This was the highest paid job on the Production Line. We made so much of the components, we done a certain part of them and they were then passed on to another part of the Line, and they added to them or done something else to them, until the component had finished its work in the section. Then it would be taken away to another section and continue its process until it was completed. It was always interesting work. You had a tally to make for your day and you always had to try and get it out because your wages depended on it. If you didn’t make that tally you would have to have a reason for that, you maybe never got enough components to make that tally. There would be people coming in during the day and assessing the tally. They would time the machines so they would reckon you would be able to do so many during the day but it didn’t always work out like that because you couldn’t always get enough components to be able to do that. You got a break during the day, you just sat beside your machine during your 10 minute break. You got a break at lunchtime as well. You could go to the canteen or you could just stay where you were – most of us just stayed but the canteen was handy if you needed it. Lenny Walker THE SLIP MAN I got started at the very top o’ the tractor line and what we had to do was join the body of the tractor together and put a brake on. We started at 7.40am and the minute the horn blew for the shift to start the track moved and basically it was going all day ‘til you finished. On the Line they would have what they called a Slip Man so he would come and relieve you so you could have a cup of tea or something or if you were really desperate for the toilet he would come and do your job so he knew a number of jobs on ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd Licensor www.scran.ac.uk the Line so you got ‘slipped’ in the morning and ‘slipped’ in the afternoon. After that I went on to put in the clutch… I worked every third tractor. There were three of us. When I started they were building roughly 70-80 tractors a day which meant I was only working on a third of them. When you were working the brake you were working on every tractor. I was on the clutch assembly for a number of years. JOHN HASTINGS TOMMY MORRISON PAGE 18 PAGE 19 ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd Licensor www.scran.ac.uk The Inspector In the truck and tractor detail section there would be over 100 Operatives and maybe about 7 Setters. There would be what they called a Junior Foreman and a Senior Foreman in that area. A normal day would be come in and the Foreman would have a sheet. If you were night shift you would have the sheet from the day shift and there would be a list of the jobs that must run for that day and the targets that had to be achieved. As soon as operators got that information you just got on to your machine and you produced whatever you had to produce. An Inspector would have a section of maybe about 80 machines and maybe about 40-50 operators operating these machines. Your job was what they called AQL (Acceptable Quality Level)… Say we’d produced 100 components, you would check 25% of that. How you checked that would be through the day, once an hour, once every two hours, so that the component was maintaining the standard either for the next operation or the final assembly. John Moore BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE THE JOBS WE DID CHAPTER 4 THE JOBS WE DID The Mechanic Ian Reid and I worked as a pair on the actual Assembly Line. You worked in two sets of two. As a lorry came down you sorted all the minor faults that you could; the two of you worked on that lorry until it came to the Spray Paint place and then you went back. The other two guys who were following were in the lorry behind that so you were continually going up the Line… You could be starting up trucks, you could be doing adjustments. It’s not a case that you had to do anything that technical but you had to know exactly what was wrong. You had to know that if such and such a thing happened what was the cause and you got to know that. It was very typical that a common fault would come down so you got to the stage that you could actually do it quite quickly. I liked working with the people I was working with. The work got a wee bit monotonous at times but working with people made it less monotonous because there would be a bit of banter between the two sets, one trying to beat the other – ‘We’ve done that!’ Glen Munro Glen Munro ©Workers’ Educational Association THE BOILER MAN THE ENGINE RECTIFIER The summer of 1962… there were four of us started – George Clark, Jimmy Crombie, myself and Jimmy Wishart… were the first four people that started in Engine Assembly. There was no Engine Assembly at that time; there were only holes in the ground. All we did for the first 5 or 6 weeks was take a 6 cylinder or a 4 cylinder diesel engine, stripped it down, built it back up again, stripped it down built it – everyday we did the same thing ‘til you knew every part o’ that engine fae the shells on the crankshaft tae the tappits... Foremen came up from England to show us what to do. As far as I was concerned everything was new to me and I was very interested in what I was doing so I really, really liked it. I got myself involved. I got stuck in to try and improve my lot and maybe get myself promoted. It was really, really very interesting. Once other people got started we helped them identify parts of the engine…There were cards went with each engine and on parts of the track there was an Inspector who would inspect the work that had been done before it came to him. He noted down the parts of the engine that needed changing or rectified or tightened or that had been missed. And we did that work. We were called Engine Rectifiers John Cooper PAGE 20 Dougie Miller ©Workers’ Educational Association The Pipe Fitter We were involved with all the supplies of liquids and gasses, maintaining the furnaces, maintaining the ovens they used for paint drying. The test beds was a big job for us as well. People say ‘what are plumbers doing in the test bed?’ You need water to cool the engines, you need oil for the engines, you need fuel for the engines, you need compressed air as well. The job in the test beds was split between pipe fitting and engineers and millwrights. There was a lot of very complicated work in the test beds for pipe fitters because every engine had to have fresh oil. I did quite a lot of gas welding and the heat treatment was challenging. Just before I left, I was on night shift and there was a pipe blew… I was in the paint plant working at the time and they couldn’t find me because I was working away inside the paint pumps. By the time they got me it had been going for half an hour and you couldn’t see anything for steam. We had to hunt for lights, then hunt for valves and finish up we had to shut the boilers down. Dougie Miller I was in the boilerhouse…We looked after the heating system or the place couldnae run. It was heavy work at times because it was all coal fired and you had to work with the coal summer and winter… I remember Ted Heath’s 3 day week they had to shut the heating off to save coal and it was the wintertime. There was tremendous complaints. They had to hand out donkey jackets. A factory like that is like a big tin box… and every time a roller door goes up the cold air comes back in. Guys used to come to their work in the morning and the Management wanted the heating on for them coming in so you put the heating on the back of 6 or 7 in the morning afore they come in. Then they start work, the doors are up, the doors are doon. Nothing but complaints. The heat’s going oot. So I went to Management, I says ‘There’s a better way a daein it than this’. ‘What do you think we could The KD Manager Semi Knock Down, you would take the tractor and you would take all the axles off it, put it into a packing case with the front and rear axles and linkage…. Complete Knock Down (CKD), the tractor was never built - it was just given to you in bits and pieces for packing. The ladies packed the fasteners for the KD kits to be exported... This was perhaps one of the first sections in the shop floor of ladies working, and they were all young ladies... They all had what they called a packing sheet which gave them the part numbers and the quantities. They had to retrieve the parts from store bins and put them into polythene bags, seal the polythene bags and then I had to put them into hessian sacks. I had to identify which pack number they belonged to, which type of KD, and then I had to put them into separate pallets by pack number and make sure they were taken to the packing area when required. That was my first job. Chassis packs, engine packs, axle packs, cab packs, wheels and tyres would be marshalled in the area between C Block and B Block and the Dispatch Department would come in for them when shipping approved them to go to the docks to be loaded on to the ships to go overseas. A lot of the packs went from Grangemouth, a lot of them had to go down south to the Hulls, to the Liverpool area. Some of them even went to London depending obviously on which country they were going to go to whether it be South America, Mexico, Iran, Australia, South Africa, Rhodesia and Finland. When I first started it was only chassis parts that were being done in Bathgate, all the rest were still being done down south in Birmingham and it was a PAGE 21 dae?’ I says, ‘what we could dae is shut the heating off during the day when the workers are in but put the heating on at night when there are only a minimum number of workers in the place, and only a minimum opening and shutting of doors so the plant’ll get a chance to heat up ower the 10 or 12 hours it’s running during the night and they’ll come in the morning and it’ll be reasonable for them’…So it worked. CHRIS BETT progressive transfer from Birmingham to Bathgate. (When Photograph the cabs came up all) I got for that wascourtesy a bunch of Geoff of photographs and packing sheets saying ‘this is Fishwick how you did it’ and it was huge fortified timber packing case and I had to just get on with it. We employed a lot more men and I was training them on how to do the cabs but I also had to keep an eye on the pre pack section for the ladies. The axle packing came up so I had to give a hand with the axle packing as well. So my job was multi tasking. But it was a great learning curve for me and I just took it in my stride. Harry Mckay BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE THE JOBS WE DID CHAPTER 4 THE JOBS WE DID CONTINUED >> The Fleet Service Manager The Warranty Claims Administrator My parents, John and May MacDonald were Glasgow people who had moved south to Oxford for my father’s work. After losing his job in road transport he started in the Service Department of Morris Motors in Cowley. In 1969/70 Leyland were offering employees in other factories the chance to transfer and relocate to Bathgate. As we still had family ties in Glasgow my father took up this option and so we relocated to Armadale. My father became a Warranty Claims Administrator and worked in the Service Department beside Geoff Fishwick. My sister also worked in the offices and my mother spent many years in the canteen. She used to serve the Directors their dinner. My father’s main role was to collate and gather together information from big fleet operators such as Royal Mail, British Bakeries, Rank Hovis McDougall - all these big companies that used Leyland vehicles such as the Leyland FG model. If they were experiencing lots of problems in use in the field then that information would have to come back to my father’s department for him to collate and pass to the technical correspondent and engineers out in the field to rectify the problems. In those days there were a lot more corner shops which were serviced and supplied by the big bakeries using the type of vehicles being built at Bathgate. Leyland had models like the FG, Bedford had the TK and Ford the D series. These vehicles were the mainstay of distribution fleets up and down the country at the time doing multi deliveries to corner shops and high streets but as the years have gone by the large out of town supermarkets have taken their place and the smaller vehicles aren’t used as much. FG Cab coming off the production line ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd Licensor www.scran.ac.uk John MacDonald It was considered necessary to have a Fleet Service Department to maintain good relationships with the major fleet operators of which BMC had many, a huge 40 odd percent market share. Bakeries, for example, at any one time would deliver bread to the corner shops of that period in FG 3 tonners, FGK 60s which became 550 FGs. They proved the most economical delivery vehicle. Although they were getting a bit dated by 1970 they were still being produced at the time the plant closed… primarily, I think, for ABF Sunblest Bakeries. I used to arrive in the morning with CONTINUED >> Geoff Fishwick (far right) together with John Braid, Stuart Clark, Bob Muir, Jimmy Whitelaw and John Young from the Technical Service Department, Bathgate Office, 26th February 1982. Photograph courtesy of Bob Muir, Tractor Service Liaison Supervisor 1964-1982. a plan of priorities but the phone would start ringing about 8.30am and various things had gone wrong so I had to just decide how best we could help… I had to attend regional meetings with Fleet Engineers of the big operators… Getting to know these people, these Regional Engineers of the big fleets, did help. You knew they weren’t pulling your leg when they phoned up asking for a replacement engine outside warranty, free of charge. They were all pretty straightforward people. Another big operator was, of course, the Post Office. I had to visit them at Gresham Street in London quarterly - sometimes more often if they were having serious problems although I had two engineers permanently attached to them. At any one time they had about 21,000 vehicles of BL manufacture – minor mail vans, post office engineer vehicles. We took over the build of the EA from the Midlands in the early 70s primarily for the Post Office... They had to be inspected by the Inspectorate of Fighting Vehicles – all Post Office vehicles had to be inspected by the IFVME before they were delivered and we had a resident Inspector in the plant. The Employee Services Manager A typical day would start quite early. Part of my job was to meet the unions. We would have meetings to try to manage changes within the plant. This was a big part of the job. It was also to run the Job Evaluation Scheme that existed for four groups of white collar workers. So that essentially was it but more often than not you wouldn’t know what the day would bring you because someone would say ‘I would like a meeting with you’… or conversely I would have to take some suggestion to trades unions and I would call them in for a meeting but more often than not it would be at their instigation unless we wanted to introduce something new or discuss something from our point of view. Then there were disputes between the Trades Unions and the Management about interpretation of, say, a job description. There would be formal monthly meetings with certain Trades Unions with a fixed agenda. I did the first job for about 3 years ‘til ’77. It was regarded the kind of job that you shouldn’t be in it for too long because it was generally regarded that you burned yourself out. Then in ‘77 Leyland in Head Office decided they would devolve a lot of the powers held at the centre and a lot of the functions that were done at Head Office were transferred up to Scotland, and in fact it became known as the Light Vehicle Division of Leyland Truck and Bus and that included Bathgate and the sister plant, Albion in Glasgow. We had an office block in Edinburgh, in Wester Hailes, and I had a good function there looking after Terms and Conditions, running the Company Grading Scheme which covered several thousand people in Scotland, including the Albion Plant, and I was also the Office Manager and the Personnel Manager for the people that worked in that office. I was in Edinburgh but I spent a lot of time on the Bathgate site and at Albion. In June ’84 the announcement of the closure of the plant came. The first three months we dealt with a lot of people wanting to leave because they had redundancy packages and we were bringing people in to help the workers to find jobs and deal with the consequences of the closure of the plant. Berian James Geoff Fishwick PAGE 22 PAGE 23 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE THE JOBS WE DID The Fireman Photograph courtesy of Dorothy Hunter The story behind the photograph I worked in the Design Department within British Leyland, Bathgate between 1967 and 1972. At the time the photo was taken I was 17 years old and the head of our Department was Mr Bob Beresford (who went on to become Plant Director at Bathgate). It all started one afternoon with me being asked by Mr Beresford if I could come into his office. As I would take shorthand for him when his secretary was off work I thought nothing of it although I knew that he had visitors from our Longbridge plant in his office at the time so maybe alarm bells should have been ringing. I wore specs at the time for typing and the first question he asked me was could I remove them for a moment. I took them off and all the gentlemen in the office nodded their heads as if in agreement. I thought this a little strange and I hadn’t a clue what was going on but then Mr Beresford asked me if I would like to be the model for the launch of the new Leyland tractor. Of course I agreed and the rest is history. I will never forget the moment I told my mum and dad. They were so proud. On the morning the photos were being taken our home was buzzing with excitement as Mr Beresford was picking me up to take me to the site where the new tractor was located. At 1.00 pm a large black chauffeur driven car parked outside our house and Mr Beresford came right to our door and spoke to my mum and dad, then he escorted me to the car. I felt really important. At this point I didn’t know where I was going as the site was a secret. Eventually we arrived at a farm PAGE 24 somewhere around the Bathgate hills. It was a drizzly wet day and was not good for me as I hated getting my hair wet, hence the bad hairdo! After the photos were taken a picnic and drinks were supplied by The Golden Circle Hotel, Bathgate. It was like a dream. Afterwards I was chauffeur driven back home. On the Monday morning back in the office I was just plain Dorothy Aitken, shorthand-typist and Mr Beresford was “my boss”. In those day we knew our place at work. Many years later my husband and I met Mr Beresford at a Classic Car rally at Culzean Castle. He was retired but kept himself busy running his own small garage business in the Borders. It was really nice speaking to him again as an old friend. Dorothy Hunter (née Aitken) left to right: Alex Binnie, Robert Anderson, David Benzie, Davie Nimmo Front row, left to right: Eddie Hartley, Michael Lawrie, Tom McDonald, Peter Rankine, Alex MacMillan Photograph courtesy of Alex Binnie The railway work was actually declining because in this area ninety percent of our work was pit work and all the pits were shutting down so I said well I’ll have to find employment because I had a family. I left the railway on the Friday and started in the BMC on the following Monday, 1964. The BMC had advertised for firemen because at the time they had only one man on each shift as a fireman and they needed four firemen on each shift. We had an Austin fire engine. The Austin was the precursor to Landrover. The fire engine carried a tank of water and there was a hose reel on it. On the roof you had a double ladder extender and two water uplifts. We were based behind the Personnel offices at the main gate… There were four gates in British Leyland, No 1 gate opened on to the A8, No 2 was the Main Gate, why they didn’t name it No 1 I can’t understand, No 3 was the nearest gate to Bathgate town and No 4 gate was away up where the farm was. If any pipefitters, fitters or anybody like that worked outside their own compound and they were doing any welding or burning they had to have a fireman standing behind them with a fire extinguisher in case they set fire to anything. If they were working up a ladder we would sometimes foot the ladder for them. Although it was concrete floors and the ladders maybe had rubber rings round the bottom of them so they wouldn’t slip but you stood there with your foot on the bottom rung just to make sure, especially if they were burning or welding up high. ALEX BINNIE Tam Dalyell at the BMC factory gates. ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk PAGE 25 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE E Block Assembly – 1985 Norman Binnie, Dougie McIndoe, Rab Jack, Peter Stewart. Photograph courtesy of Dougie McIndoe THE RECTIFIER B Block Engine Assembly circa 1979. Photograph courtesy of Jim Bilsborough (back row in the centre). Also pictured are John Orr, William Reape, John Steel and Jimmy Wishart. Working on Engine Assembly I worked in a great team. The best lads you ever worked with. You all helped each other. I worked on Track 1 in B Block building the 6 cylinder engines. There were about 15 different operations on the Line. I started on No 1 and 2 operations but after 15 years on constant nightshift I could build a full engine myself! I worked myself up to be a Slip Man and could do all the different jobs on the track. Engine goes through the wash (1)Remove bearing caps, blow water out of holes, fit crankshaft and fit rear oil seal and pump (2) Fit rear timing cover and fit camshaft (3) Fit bellhousing and fit flywheel (4)Turn engine on its side, fit piston liners and pistons (5)Turn engine upright, fit cylinder head studs and cylinder heads (6) Fit diesel pump and front gears (7)Fit cam followers and push rods and rockers (8) Fit ejectors and set rockers (9) Fit fuel pipes and exhaust manifold (10)Fit front cover on front of engine (11)Fit air manifold and rocker cover and alternator (12)Fit mounting brackets and water pump (13)Lift engine and fit sump (14)Push engine on to the Test Bed Line Engine goes to the Test Beds Jim Bilsborough I started in 1969 in Truck Rectification. They were under pressure at the time for mechanics. You went into the work you clocked on. You walked down to your bay. Each mechanic had his own bay and in that bay was a truck. The truck wouldnae be completed. You got a job card for every truck. You would look down the job card. The night shift mechanic would maybe have done a lot of the jobs and other ones would be left so you completed the jobs on that card. Then an Inspector would inspect the truck. The truck was away and another one pushed in. This was non stop. They weren’t really great big jobs, there was the odd one or two, but they were mostly wee things that were faulty like cables in the wrong place or you had to sort out rattles. It was more or less wee jobs. They were classified as ‘minors’ or ‘majors’. A minor you were allowed so many minutes to do the job and a major you got so much time. Really big jobs such as changing an engine there would be a special time for that. …The Line would stop for nothing. They couldnae stop the Line for to wait for parts coming. So a lot of our work was actually fitting shortages on. Shortages were when the parts hadnae come up from England. A shortage in one part could lead to us fitting quite a few bits. There were that many things used to go short but say there was a shortage of an alternator. That could stop the Line fitting different parts round about it. Later on they only made trucks if they’d been bought but at that time they were making them for stock so they had stacks of them out in the field so what they used to do was sometimes salvage parts from those trucks to get other ones ready if they had bother getting the shortages from suppliers. They’d take the part off one truck put it on another. The mechanics were working non-stop. The overtime was massive. George Waddell PAGE 26 CHAPTER 5 TRAINING AND APPRENTICESHIPS Many of the workforce were time served mechanics, electricians, plumbers, engineers and craftsmen when they started work in the factory. For others joining from the pits, bakeries, brickworks, the railways and other local industries there was “on the job” training to learn new skills. Some of the first workers remember being trained by Foremen who had come up from the BMC plant in Longbridge to show the Bathgate workers how to operate machinery on the assembly lines. Then in 1964 the company launched an important apprenticeship scheme for school leavers to gain training and skilled employment in the factory. ON THE JOB TRAINING There was men up from Longbridge. They showed you what to do… That was my training. Arthur was his name. He was a proper gentleman… We got on great. Of course, he’d been 30 odd years at the job. He knew the machines backwards. Malcolm Black I worked on the brake drums. It involved drilling and grinding. You worked with an experienced worker for two days. Then on the third day you done a quarter of the tally yersel, then the next day you done half a tally, the next day you done three quarters o’ a tally, then the next day you done a hundred percent So it was really about a week before you were on your own. A boy called Willie Cross and me got started at the very top o’ the tractor line and what we had to do was join the body of the tractor together and put a brake on. Then it went down to the next stage. So me and Willie were there for maybe 2-3 months. It was the type of job that everybody did when they started… it was relatively easy, you could learn it relatively quickly. So what they done was after that we got other jobs and then the next ‘new starts’ would start up there. It just depended how often new people were starting – some of the time you could be there for 6 months. But I think from memory, Willie and me were roughly 2-3 months and then we got moved. John Hastings The first day you started you were taken into the canteen, maybe about 50 of you at a time, and you were all allocated different sections. The Foreman from the section that you were allocated tae (for me the flywheels) came down and got you. He took you up to the section and he showed you a’ the different machines fae the flywheel came into the section ‘til it went out finished. So he explained every machine to you and he showed you how they worked. Then you had men called Setters who used to set the machine. If there were any broken tools in the machines they would reset them. One of them would show you how to work the machines for maybe about an hour, half an hour, then leave you to get on with yourself. See how you got on and gradually you just worked up to the speed that was required to dae the job. Harry Bradley Rab Marshall I worked in the pit, on the tables – that’s taking the dirt out from amongst the coal at the pit head. I started at that and after that I went down the pit. I’d be about 17 or 18 years old. I had nae option. I had nae skills, nae trade. When the pit shut down in ’62… I was offered a job in Easton Colliery but I didn’t take it. The age I wis I decided I wouldn’t go back to the pit again. It was strange to me being in the pit a’ they years, then going into a factory, working in there and on your feet a’ day. Whereas in the pit I was on my knees. You had to pick up the engine, turn it, put it doon on the trestle, put the bearings in, then the liners, then the pistons. The Operator showed me the job for a wee while and then I was put in the job myself. PAGE 27 It was kinda monotonous. On the moving track you had to keep goin’. I started out as an Operator and as time went on I got a Slip Man’s job. If you needed the toilet, I let you away and I done your job. I’d learn all the jobs on the Line. When I started I couldn’t put a nut on a bolt! I learned all these things in there. Tony Kizis BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TRAINING AND APPRENTICESHIPS CHAPTER 5 TRAINING AND APPRENTICESHIPS Bathgate Technical College ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk The BMC worked very closely with the College. In fact the BMC gave Bathgate College a lot of stuff to get them set up. I remember they gave them engines for the Heat Lab. They gave them a Triumph engine chassis and backend – just a shell without the body work - for the motor lab, and they gave them a lot of metal work, and tools so that they would take us apprentices in and get us started on our course work. John Weir The first apprentices – we grew up with the factory When we left Lindsay High School at Bathgate our form teacher at the time submitted our names into the brew office. I got a letter to come for an interview and as we later discovered there were 500 applications for that first year as an apprentice. They cut it down to 250 and I remember sitting in the big canteen down in the factory with 250 others doing this entrance examination and from that they picked their apprentices. The apprenticeship actually started on the 14th September 1964 so the exams were sometime previous to that. The first intake that year there were 5 Technical Apprentices, 15 Craft Apprentices and 4 Commercial Apprentices and that was really the size of the intake each year thereafter for quite a time. The 5 Technical apprentices were expected to study for the Higher National Certificate. The Craft Apprentices did the Mechanical Engineering Practice course and the Commercial guys studied commercial subjects as well. When we started the factory wasnae really up and running and wasnae really ready for the apprentices if the truth be told. They knocked up a big compound in the middle of B Block for us with 12 feet high fences round about and a wee office for the boss. Our apprentice Instructor at that time was a guy called Charles Frederick Low. He was a real star. The boys loved him. And, of course, he just lived for the boys. He had worked in the shipyards and had actually designed the loading bay for the QE II but he was just a quiet, unassuming guy and he just loved his job as Apprentice Instructor. It was very basic inside this big compound. We had a couple of old production machines… and we had a couple of vertical drills. There was an old radial drill that was ancient but they had stuff on order which hadn’t been delivered so gradually the machines started coming in. I remember we got a couple of PAGE 28 shaping machines. We got some surface grinders as well, we got new drills in and we got some lathes for letting us do our turning work and we had a wee welding section beside the office. So that really was the start and we would do our first year in that compound. Thereafter there was a programme marked out for us where we would go through all the departments in the factory. The Technical lads would take a slightly different direction from the Commercial lads. We used to go and maybe do 6 or 8 weeks in each department. We did production as well; we made cylinder blocks and cylinder heads and crankshafts. We were actually working with the machines and the rest of the men in the factory. It was a great time because we grew up with the factory. We were in all the different departments so we had contacts everywhere we went thereafter. John Weir The boys all went to the Apprentice Training Centre and the girls went to the typing and shorthand class I left school in March 1967 and I applied for two jobs – one in British Leyland and one in Armadale – and I was fortunate to be offered the two jobs at the same time…I decided to take the one in British Leyland because it seemed to offer more opportunities… When I started, aged 15, there were only three young girls in the factory. The first day I was sent up to the Print Room and I wasn’t expecting that was where I was going to be working but it turned out I spent a year working in the Print Room which involved printing drawings for the factory floor and filing all the different Draughtsmen’s drawings. When I was 17 they opened up a Training Centre and we went twice a week and we were taught typing and shorthand. We had a teacher called Mrs Bowman. That was for the girls. The apprentices had Mr Duncan and Mr Low. They were the Training Officers. The boys all went to the Apprentice Training Centre and the girls went to the typing and shorthand class. That’s where we were taught touch typing and shorthand and then we all sat Pitman Examinations... So I learnt my skills through the Training School. We went from Elementary stage typing to Intermediate and then the Advanced stage. I THOUGHT THIS WILL BE A GOOD GROUNDING FOR ME Photograph courtesy of Dorothy Hunter With shorthand we started doing 50 words a minute and I think I went up to 100 words a minute. They had an annual prize giving for the girls who had passed their exams and for the apprentices, where you were presented with your Certificates. For the apprentices there was an Outstanding Apprentice of the Year. Joyce Brogan (née Love) I thought the plant was massive. I’d never been in anything like it before in my life but I wisnae long in orientating myself. When you’re an apprentice the first year you got to stay in the workshop - it was dedicated to learning aspects of engineering - and then the rest of the time you got to go about, but during the lunch breaks you could wander about wherever you wanted so long as you weren’t tampering with anything it was okay so you actually got to see how big the place really was. I was just quite amazed at all the different types of things they were doing… I thought this will be a good grounding for me. If I can learn good skills here I’ll no have a problem later on in life. ALAN MARR PAGE 29 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TRAINING AND APPRENTICESHIPS CHAPTER 5 TRAINING AND APPRENTICESHIPS APPRENTICES THEY TAUGHT YOU EVERYTHING YOU NEEDED TO KNOW ABOUT ENGINEERING My first job was as a Craft Apprentice which meant that you were taken into the apprentice compound which was essentially a machine shop for learning. There were 3 dedicated training supervisors who took care of you and showed you what you had to be shown from a safety point of you and they became your teachers. They taught you everything that you had to know about engineering that was relative to British Leyland. So you spent your first two years doing broad based training - learning how to operate lathes, drills, milling machines, everything you would need to use up in the factory. You were taught how to use them safely in the training compound. At the start of your third year you had to either go into the Tool Room and become a Machine Operator, Turner, Miller, Horizontal Borer or you became a Machine Tool Fitter or a Jig and Tool Fitter. I became a Machine Tool Fitter. These guys were responsible for the maintenance of the machinery that produced the parts for the engines or the trucks or the tractors. So that was you had left the apprentice compound and you spent your final two years on the job training. After the two years you became a fully fledged tradesman, then you got released into production to go and fix machines and you moved up to a tradesman’s wage which was nice. The apprentices were paid the going rate for apprentices but it was a huge step up in salary from an apprentice to a tradesman… You got your Union card updated from apprentice to tradesman… and that was you off and running. You just became the same as everyone else in the Tool Room after that. The big thing in Leyland was that the apprentices in those days used to wear a dark green overall that signified you as an apprentice. When your apprenticeship finished you moved to a blue overall, and that was the big thing! Eric Mutter It was the start of friendships I left school in 1978 and started my apprenticeship at British Leyland in 1979 and that was the first time that I met people from Whitburn, Pumpherston, Livingston, Broxburn – a whole range of different folk from all over the central belt. There was the serious side because obviously you were working machinery and that was always to be respected but because there was such an eclectic bunch of folk, I just remember having a real good laugh… It was the start of friendships. The people who trained us were completely committed. By the time I went to British Leyland the place had maybe got a bit of a reputation in industrial relations but on reflection I have to say it was a really, really good apprenticeship. They looked after us incredibly well and it has left an abiding memory in me in terms of actually how positive it was. There was a mixture of practical and theory - college based work. Some of us went to West Lothian College - day release. Some of the Technical Apprentices went to Edinburgh’s Telford College. In the apprentice compound, you were given a variety of different projects to do. Essentially one aspect of a project could be working a piece of metal to a completed product and it would incorporate all the various machinery. You would start by maybe shaping a piece of metal on a centre lathe or milling machine and then if it required you would grind it to give it a smooth surface or you would cut threads into it - so, basically demonstrating all the skills of all the machinery. All of this required you working from a drawing and incorporating the measurements required using various measuring devices such as micrometers. Vince Moore PAGE 30 The Apprentices The apprenticeship was absolutely second to none We decided we were going to put two entries in and we did the Magic Roundabout and Fred Flintstone’s Car. We had the mini moke that used to run about the plant. We commandeered the mini moke and stripped all the stuff off it and built the car round about that. We had great success at Linlithgow Marches, the Bo’ness Fair, Bathgate Procession Day. We were even up at Forth. It was brilliant. I remember working in the middle of the night, maybe 2 in the morning, spraying it all wi’ paint, sticking stuff on it, cutting trees doon of course though you weren’t supposed to do that! But we needed the wood. The first year of our Technical Apprenticeship, was spent in the Apprentice Compound in B Block, where we learned how to use a lathe, a mill and a grinder as well as welding and fitting. Before we were allowed near a machine, our Training Instructors demonstrated the use of the equipment and made sure we understood all the safety features. We had to wear our safety glasses at all times - mine made me look a bit like Hank Marvin! Because my hair was long, I had to wear it in a cap with a net attached to it. We were issued with safety shoes and it was mandatory to wear them in the factory. It was a very clean, safe environment. At the end of our shift, we apprentices had to clean our machines, sweep up the floor and put all our tools away. That Compound was spotless and tidy before we went home! When we began our apprenticeships, we really didn’t have any understanding of the various engineering roles open to us, so we spent 18 months working in all of the technical departments to give us an appreciation of what was involved. We spent time in the Quality Department, Production Engineering, Power Train Design, Jig & Tool Design and Tool Room Estimating where we were mentored by the engineers. There were also periods when we worked with the operators on the shop floor. I remember assembling gears on the axle line, having the intricacies of a cam shaft explained to me on the engine line and learning to use a spanner on the chassis line. I also had a spell in rectification, repairing transmissions on finished trucks which failed inspection when they came off the assembly line. All in all, I believe it was an excellent, all round experience. When we had completed this general training, we selected the area we preferred to specialise in, subject to the discretion of the department manager. Technical Drawing was my passion and so I was delighted to get a placement in the Tool Design Office. Our apprenticeship also involved one day a week at College. During my first two years at Leyland, I attended West Lothian College of Further Education in Bathgate where I studied for my ONC in Production and Mechanical Engineering. I then went on to Bell College in Hamilton to complete my HNC. The apprenticeship at Leyland was absolutely second to none, in my opinion. Having spoken to people who have completed apprenticeships with other companies, I don’t think I’ve come across anyone tell me of a more comprehensive and thorough training programme than the one we experienced in our factory. When the plant closed, the Company made every effort to ensure that we could complete our apprenticeships. They found placements for us with various companies in and around central Scotland. I left Leyland in May 1985, 3 months short of the requirement for a 4 year apprenticeship, and so was fortunate to be offered a position with Terex Equipment Ltd in Newhouse, and was able to complete my qualification as a Jig & Tool Design Engineer. Alan Marr Elaine Harvey (née Swan) used to do the Gala Day float for Bathgate Procession Day. Photograph courtesy of Alan Marr PAGE 31 BATHGATE ONCE MORE CHAPTER 6 WORKING CONDITIONS For many the working conditions at BMC/Leyland were significantly better than they had experienced in other industries. Others, however, describe the conditions as basic. Health and Safety was taken seriously by both Management and Trades Unions. The Company employed full-time Fire Safety and Health Care staff and there was a Trades Union Health and Safety Group. The canteen is remembered by many former workers but there were few other onsite facilities. I’d go back again! It was one of the best places to get an apprenticeship… you were trained in engineering – turning, milling, grinding. I turned out to be a Grinder at the end of the day. I enjoyed my training, and mixing with different people. The quality of machining and the machine shop equipment was second to none. It was a good training. I’d go back again! It was really good. Completely different from the brickworks and places like that. Unless you worked in a brickwork people don’t realise how it was. You were working under tremendous heat, you weren’t allowed to strip to the waist, you had to wear a blue vest but the heat in the kiln was horrific. You went into the kilns in the morning with a navy blue vest and when you came out at night it was pure white just with the salt and sweat out your body. All you had was a wee billy can sitting outside the kiln with salt water because you had to drink plenty salt water for the heat. So the Leyland was a completely Leyland Bathgate Apprentices pictured with their Instructors including Harry Anderson (far left) and Charlie Low (far right), August 1977. Photograph courtesy of Gary Vines Graham Bennie I would still be working in there if it was possible. Gordon Cameron, BL Bathgate Craft Apprentice, is presented with first prize in the Turning Competition at the Engineering Industry Training Board Craftex Competition (1981). This was a national competition involving apprentices from a range of companies including John Brown Engineering and Ferranti. This was the first time that Leyland’s Craft apprentices had entered the competition. Another Leyland Craft Apprentice, Robert Finlay also won an award that year; he came second in the Milling competition. Afterwards, BL Managing Director Tony PAGE 32 Jordan and the Apprentice Manager, Eric Mutter (senior) presented Gordon and Robert each with a special plaque from British Leyland. The plaque is a mount of the centrepiece of the Albion Trucks Steering Wheel. Gordon Cameron Photograph courtesy of Gordon Cameron different situation. You were reasonably well attired, your footwear was fine, you werenae working in the heat, it was all air conditioned. And, I suppose for the people in the pits it was a completely different situation as well, not having to go down mines. In the Leyland, you had toilets, you had washing facilities…you knew the hours that you were working, and had better wages, better conditions, you had unions, better conditions all round. If anything was wrong you could go and see a Foreman or a Manager and they were very good at listening to you and helped you quite a lot. Alex Moffat Wages I started off earning £2 a week more, then went up to earning £3 a week more, than what I had been earning as a baker. So for me it was brilliant and because of the situation in the job I was doing I could get overtime on Saturday morning doing rectification to try and clear up the backlog of maybe engines which were lying about needing rectified. So the overtime involved allowed me to earn more money. John Cooper I actually went to British Leyland for less money… it worked out about £2.50 a week less for my basic wage. But the difference was after a wee while you got certain bonuses, and you also got the opportunity to do overtime so that it actually made it more. So after a short time I was slightly better off. Ian McFall PAGE 33 THE CONDITIONS WERE EXCELLENT The factory was clean and tidy. The toilets and washing facilities were very, very modern. You didn’t get that standard in foundries I can assure you. The only thing was you never got a break between 7.30am and 12.30pm. You could eat something and drink something but you had to move at the same time. That was the only thing I found unusual until you got a properly agreed break. Lots of people used to sit down and they were disciplined for sitting down in the very early days. You weren’t allowed to sit and have a cup of tea during working hours. You had to wait ‘til your proper break and there was only one a day and that was from 12.30 to 1.15pm. Harry McKay Harry McKay was born in Armadale. After school he trained as an Apprentice Moulder in the Wee Foundry in Armadale before joining the BMC on Boxing Day 1961. The BMC introduced the first Christmas public holiday in Scotland - up until then Harry had worked every Christmas Day. BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE HEALTH + SAFETY If you were on the mills and drills, you were drilling steel all the time. Well drilling steel causes stoor and it causes a lot o’ smoke and it causes a lot o’ noise. On the Engine Line it was noisy tae because there was a lot of things getting bumped together going into these machines. My section there was a lot of noise in it but it wasn’t that difficult - you had ear plugs if you wanted to wear them and, of course, you always got gloves for your hands. Some people didn’t like to wear gloves in case their fingers got caught in any of the machines or in the lifting tackle but to protect your fingers from getting burnt or scratched you were better wearing the gloves. Temporary kitchen, BMC (1960) © West Lothian Council Canteen On the day shift if you wanted to you could go to the canteen… or you sat in your section, you got some truck seats, maybe four in a circle, so you could have a wee game of cards at dinner time and you just sat there and blethered away, had a wee game o’ cards and ate your sandwiches. H A RRY BRA D LEY stuff, but it was basic… It was a big canteen. It used to have to take hundreds of people at once so it had to be a big canteen. Alan Marr The working conditions were on the whole very good. You weren’t asked to do anything that was dangerous although you maybe crossed the line a couple of times. They could have had better facilities for noise, I think, because I do suffer from tinnitus and I believe that’s where I got it. There was a bit of dust, carbon and stuff like that, from cast iron and that was never deemed a problem but you must have breathed tons of that stuff in over your life. When the sun came through the windows you could see this stuff hanging about in the air. ONCE MORE CHAPTER 7 THE LEYLAND WAS A COMMUNITY Trucks and Tractors weren’t the only products of the plant. Marriages were made, lifelong friendships were formed, social events were organised, and opportunities were created for workers and their families to take up a wide range of hobbies, interests and sports, and get involved in community and charitable activities. This helped to foster a great spirit of camaraderie in the workplace. Social events, sporting achievements, promotions, marriages and retirals were reported in the BMC World magazine Scottish Edition published monthly throughout the 1960s. Certain areas were dangerous… but most areas were okay. When it came to fire security the whole plant was dangerous. I did the Fire Service side of it. I was always there on standby when they were welding in case a fire started, and the machinery being old and no being replaced the fire potential was there for the electrical equipment. Even the paint plant was a volatile place. Because the plant had been up for years there was a lot of stoor and dirt in the rafters and on the steel beams. If that caught light fire could travel right through the block. CREATIVE USE WAS MADE OF THE FACTORY SPACE Ian McFall “THE MUSCLE MAN OF B BLOCK” Hobbies & Sports Caroline Bennie There were some perks We could get motor cars. You got quite a discount off the price of a car roughly 15-20% off the list price. If you ordered an Austin the Company would process the whole order and it would be delivered to Bathgate but if you ordered a Morris vehicle you had to register the car in Linlithgow and you had to go to England to collect it. I got a job as a Clerkess in the Buying Department. I never worked inside the plant. The office I was in was just outside the gates. It was a wee prefabricated office. I got a discount off buying stuff. I got a discount off my washing machine and a got a discount off the fire. You got a sheet to go to this warehouse in Edinburgh to pick what you wanted. It was about a 20% discount on mainly electrical goods. the factory they’ve got big wheels that fits to the engines, fly wheels and things, and all you needed to dae was get one o’ them, a wee touch of a welded collar on it and we had a wee bar bell goin’ and we had a crowd of fellas, 10 and 20, I remember training with the bar during the dinner hour. A lot of the guys during the break - they played at darts, some of them played at dominoes, some of them played at cards, some of them played at chess. There wisnae many things that didnae go on. You had a’ the different sports. Some of the guys went away running, some of the guys went out and played at football. My friend and I, we were both in the Badminton Club. We used to play during our break in a made-up court inside the factory. It’s amazing what you can dae wi’ pieces o’ a tractor! You know, exhaust pipes for stands for the net... Andy Kidd Jean Kidd Frank Leech Walter Taggart Harry Bradley The canteen facilities were excellent, I’ve got to say. I’ve never come across a canteen that gave you as good helpings, good tasting Within the factory there weren’t any designated rest areas. You made your rest area where you worked. There used to be a seat frame for an FG cab. We used to use these seat frames and just put a cushion on top of the seat frames and you basically sat at your workplace and had your piece, if you didn’t go to the canteen. Andy Hunter If you didn’t feel well there was the First Aid room with a rest area. You could go down and see the nurse. They took care of everything. Alan Marr PAGE 34 Frank Leech in training for the East of Scotland Amateur Weight Lifting Championship. He won the 10 stone championship with a lift of 25 lbs more than his competitors. The Newspaper article is from BMC World, October 1962. the weight lifting in there. I do W remember we had the wee bar bell and in E STARTED PAGE 35 The company was unbelievably good. They allowed everybody to have their project and they encouraged you to have a project. They had golf, cricket, football, table tennis, fishing, cycling. Tam Brandon They started a pipe band in the factory - there were that many ex pipers going about. They were looking for pipers and anybody that wanted to learn. So I thought I’ll have a go at this. I was 35 years old at the time. Malcolm Black Malcolm Black playing the bagpipes at the 1986 Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh. BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE THE LEYLAND WAS A COMMUNITY CHAPTER 7 THE LEYLAND WAS A COMMUNITY The runners looked to me because I was the most experienced runner in the plant. I encouraged them to run. So if they hadn’t run before I used to encourage them to run at lunch time, and build them up and then stretch them… show them by example how to train. At lunch time we just went round what we called the Moss – that would be about 4 miles. Hugh Mitchell from the Shettleston Harriers winning the 1964 Edinburgh to Glasgow Road Run. The Sports Reporter is Duncan MacLeod Wright, the Scottish athlete who competed for Great Britain in several Olympic Games finishing fourth in the 1932 marathon race. Hugh Mitchell John Lawrie (front row, centre) holding the Leyland Cup having won the 1981 Bowling Championship Singles Tournament There were a good lot of bowlers. We played ties. A good crowd o’ fellas. John Lawrie PAGE 36 BMC Golf Club Committee Member, John Bell is pictured after winning the Clarkson Trophy in its inaugural year, 1962. John was also part of the BMC golf team taking part in the National Championship of the Scottish Industrial Sports Association; 50 other clubs also competed. The Car Rallies My dad, John Bell was an Experimental Engineer at BMC/Leyland plant from 1962-86. He and his workforce road tested the trucks to find out how they road handled. They did test drives all over Scotland. My happiest memory was helping my dad make up the car rallies. You would have your own car and there’d be a family unit there. It would start off at the canteen and it would finish at the canteen. It was all measured out on the speedometers of the cars. So for example every half mile you’d have to stop and there’d maybe be a question, or maybe there’d be a box. Dad organised this. We would put boxes of nuts and bolts out and you had to come back with matching nuts and bolts. And we’d go round in the morning to make sure that nobody had moved either the boxes or some of the treasure or questions overnight. It wasn’t any good just coming back with any nut or bolt! Folk would come back with a nut and a bolt and my dad would say ‘yeah, but do they fit?’ It had to be just right. Lynne Bell Photographs courtesy of Alex Binnie, Joyce Brogan and John Moore When I became a Superintendant I was eligible for the Executive Association… which met fairly regularly and I eventually became Treasurer for the Association… One of the Committee’s responsibilities was getting speakers for the various events we held. We used to get Sandy MacDonald, who was the Minister in Bathgate. Now, his son David MacDonald – he became David Tennant, Dr Who. Andrew McKeown social even ts Some sections had a Social Convener who would organise dances, outings, leaving dos and Christmas parties. In other sections arrangements were more informal but there were frequent “get-togethers for a pint and a blether” arranged in pubs and clubs in West Lothian, including the Leyland Social Club in Blackburn. I was on the Social Club Committee. We used to run various functions in the canteen. When the canteen was built it was the biggest hall in West Lothian. We used to put on variety shows. We had Billy Connolly when he was with Gerry Rafferty in the Humblebums. We had wrestling shows, boxing shows – we used to get the rings in from Shotts Boxing Club. Membership cards There was a guy courtesy of the came in... He said Bennie Museum that he had a pop group that was on the way up and he was wanting to book the hall. As I say it was the largest hall in West Lothian. We had 1700 people seated at a wrestling show so you can imagine how many people we could have had in at a pop concert. We said we have reservations about it because it’s a company building… I believe we turned down The Who! Andy Kidd Sandy MacDonald, Jimmy McGinley and Jack Smart were regular speakers at the Leyland Executive Association Burns Suppers. Programme courtesy of John Bell’s family. Jim & Rena’s Marriage My father started in December ’61 just a couple of months after me, and he used to pass the office window when he was going to pick up a truck and he used to give me a wave. When Jim started he was actually working with my dad to show him the ropes and, of course, Jim got into the habit of giving me a wave and one day he waved me out and asked me if I would like to go to the first BMC dance, at the Maybury. Jim borrowed his brother’s car… and we thoroughly enjoyed our evening. So that was our first date and we’ve been together ever since. Rena Hamilton Jim and Rena Hamilton pictured at the Bathgate Once More anniversary event, 27th June 2011. Rena (née Hay) was already working as a Copy Typist in the BMC when, in January 1962, Jim Hamilton started at the plant as a Driver, working alongside her father. Jim and Rena married on 4th July 1964. ©Workers’ Educational Association PAGE 37 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 CHAPTER 7 BATHGATE THE LEYLAND WAS A COMMUNITY ONCE MORE CHAPTER 8 THE TRADES UNIONS Special Visitors Charity Work We used to contribute to a charity. Everybody in the plant, unless they opted out, used to give a penny a week off their wages... So therefore if you had 3000 workers raising a penny you had £30 a week for charity... At a mass meeting of the workers (that was the only way you could get something like that passed) I proposed that we increase it from 1 pence to 5 pence... We were raising hundreds of pounds every week from the workers. We then set up within the Joint Shop Stewards Committee a charitable organisation where we were instrumental in donating thousands of pounds to all the various charities. We were buying monitors for Bangour Hospital, foetal monitors for the maternity units and various other things. A lot of the other industrial factories they set up charitable organisations that were donating these things as well. Leyland set a lead. Kenny Paton Faith, Hope and Charity - Trucks for Cambodia I must have been about 12… My brothers and I used to love watching Blue Peter. They had their fundraisers every year and I remember the year they decided they were going to be sending trucks to Cambodia and as soon as I saw that the trucks that they were going to buy were coming from the Bathgate plant I couldn’t wait ‘til my dad got in from work. ‘Dad, why are they having to buy the trucks from you? Why can you not give them for their funding?’ Elaine Harvey All of the workers gave a quarter of an hour extra, took a quarter of an hour off their dinner for a fortnight, and that made up the money to pay for these three lorries…Everybody felt good about it because we were doing something that was needed. Glen Munro I remember when the Queen was coming and there was a great amount of activity then because they were brushing floors and scrubbing floors and painting the corridor where she was coming down in the centre of B Block. The first two or three machines leading on to the passageway where she was going down were painted, and everybody had to wear clean overalls. Alex Moffat I remember the Queen coming. I remember she had a yellow coat on and a yellow hat. She drove through the plant in an open jeep. It was one of the office girls Jeanette Kerr, in Material Control, who was chosen to present the Queen with a bouquet. Joyce Brogan PAGE 38 Photograph courtesy of Alex Moffat We had a big Open Day. I took my son. I think Scott was aged 3 and I took him up through the plant to show him where his dad worked... It was a great day. It was a really, really fun day. The highlight of it was a helicopter came across and the parachute guys came oot and dropped onto the spot and they passed a baton over to Charles Archer, the Managing Director, and that baton lay in the Managing Director’s office for as long as I can remember. Andy Hunter I can mind I met Jim Watt, the boxer. He’d finished boxing by that stage but he had been the World Champion. He was along at an Open Day - people could bring their kids in to see round the plant. Ian McFall Trades Union representatives, Ian Tennant and Stan McKeown are presented to the Queen during her visit to the factory on 5th July 1968. Photography courtesy of Ian Tennant Almost all workers in the Bathgate BMC/Leyland plant were trades union members. The Joint Shop Stewards Committee (JSSC) was the forum for all blue collar unions to meet, work together to resolve problems and negotiate with Management on wages and conditions. The JSSC also represented Bathgate members on the UK-national Trades Union Combine, the Trades Council and at STUC meetings and conferences. Trades Union membership cards courtesy of John Lawrie, Hazel Marjoribanks and Margaret Mutter There were 9 unions in the factory My union has changed its name a few times but it started off the Amalgamated Engineering Union (AEU)... We had about 2000 members that would be roughly a third of the workforce. Then there was the Transport and General Workers’ Union (TGWU) who had the track workers, and the Vehicle Builders Union also had track workers. They eventually amalgamated into one union. Then there was the Foremans’ Union, ASTMS (Association of Scientific, Technical and Managerial Staffs) and the Office Draughtsmen were in TASS (Technical, Administrative and Supervisory Section). There was the Sheet Metal Workers, the Boilermakers, the Electricians, the Pipefitters – they were all separate unions. Jim Swan The 1966 Scamp Inquiry What became known as the ‘Scamp Inquiry’ was set up in 1966 in response to government and trade union concerns over the level of productivity at BMC Bathgate. The previous year, the Ministry of Labour had sent an Industrial Relations Officer to the factory to discuss ‘general industrial relations matters’, and had found that the management at Bathgate felt that the main problems facing the plant were a lack of discipline amongst the workforce, including what they described as a ‘one out, all out’ attitude, and related low levels of output. In his report of PAGE 39 Fundraising I felt strongly that to be involved we should go to trades union meetings down in England. There was a Combine there where you had representatives from different factories. They met in Leyland Lancs, Birmingham, Coventry… I was picked to go along with Chris Bett and we were the spokespeople from Bathgate… In the winter weather we were left many a time sleeping overnight down in England in the railway station because you hadnae the money to stay in a hotel. We decided that it just wasnae good enough... So we came up with the idea – why do we no have raffles but make it good raffles. So they asked me to dae an exercise. I worked it out that if everybody paid 10 pence off their wages, it went directly into the Company off their wages, maybe 7 or 8 pence of that would be used in prizes and members were only putting an extra 2 or 3 pence into the JSSC funds. That was still a lot of money because it accumulates. And so when you went to meetings whether it be Edinburgh or Glasgow you could say to the person ‘well there’s your petrol money’. It was all done through C Block from the Management side… It was really successful. The prizes used to be a car a year and then it went up to 2 cars a year. Tommy Morrison this visit, the officer concluded that production difficulties at Bathgate were closely linked to industrial relations difficulties, and that these problems were in turn exacerbated by a feeling of distrust between workers and management due in part to the frequency of lay-offs and short-time working. Later that year, the Ministry received a letter from a Bathgate Shop Steward who expressed his disquiet CONTINUED >> BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE THE TRADES UNIONS CHAPTER 8 THE TRADES UNIONS STRIKES THE JOINT SHOP STEWARDS COMMITTEE I’d been on strike 3 times – 3 occasions we were on strike for petty things that could have been talked over and settled… ‘It was too hot to work’. That was the final straw for me. I says ‘I’ve had enough’. I says ‘that’s it’. A lot of the disputes were trivial, a lot of them were brought on by the Management because if the workers went on strike they wouldnae need to pay them layoff money. A lot of strikes were engineered by the Management that’s what I think. Paul Kelly Demarcation I started on the big track on A Block. I’d be on the big track for about maybe 6 months. Then the EA van was transferred from Willenhall to Bathgate so a vacancy arose for a panel beater and Gus Andrews who was Block Manager at that point in time knew that I was a panel beater. He says ‘Andy, do you fancy going on to panel beating on the EA vans?’ which I did do…I went to the Tool Stores, got my tools wi’ a line off o’ Gus Andrews, and started repairing dents in vans but I hadnae transferred my union. I was still in the NUVB (National Union of Vehicle Builders). So I’m knocking away at an EA van and John Allardyce who was the Convener of the Sheet Metal Workers Union at that point in time came and tapped me on the shoulder. He says ‘Haw, What dae ye think your daein’. Of course I say, ‘Well, I’m sortin’ the van. He said, ‘That’s a Sheet Metal Worker’s job’. He was very nice about it. He says ‘Put your tools doon, you’ll need to sign a form and join the Sheet Metal Workers’ Union’, which I did do and then that was me free to carry on repairing vehicles… There were a lot of demarcation lines within the plant. John Meffen, TGWU, addresses BMC workers at a meeting on the Banking. Trades Union leaders had to get silence and manage large meetings of thousands of workers in the canteen or on the banking beside the A8 dual carriageway. Decisions were taken democratically by a show of hands. Photograph ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk Kenny Paton Andy Hunter The 1966 Scamp Inquiry continued at the way in which the factory was being run, drawing attention to the impact of lay-offs on the workforce, and asked that an official inquiry take place. On the 25th of April, 1966, a court of inquiry organised by the Motor Industry Joint Labour Council under the auspices of the renowned industrial conciliator Sir Jack Scamp met at the factory to discuss its problems. The Ministry of Labour felt that it could not make an inquiry into production at a private firm, and so discussion focused on industrial relations issues, with the terms of reference ‘to examine the cause and extent of lay-offs at BMC (Scotland) Ltd., Bathgate’. PAGE 40 say ‘What is the problem?’ and I would The Joint Shop Stewards Committee try and analyse what the problem was was going in the 60s. When I first and say ‘look you’re no’ going to do started in the plant the Convener was yersel any good wanting to go out on Stan McKeown – a very clever, very strike, you’ll need to be constructive, intelligent man. I admired him having positive on what you’re going to do’. to go up there and put forward an As a Shop Steward and trade unionist argument in front of 4000 people we prevented more trouble within the at a meeting in the canteen. You’d be plant… Maybe one union would have crammed in there and these guys had a grievance with the plant and them to get silence and put forward their walking out would cause the plant point of view and try and calm to shut… so you had to sit in down certain elements that the Joint Shop Stewards were wanting to walk Committee and try and iron out on strike. A lot of out any problems to stop times these guys had strikes. a grievance and a It was exaggerated complaint but walking that British Leyland were out the plant was always on strike. I was never the answer. there 11 years and I think I One of the most was only on strike 3 weeks in important things I learned Photograph in there as a Shop Steward was total. The Joint Shop Stewards ©The Scotsman Committee meetings were very that Shop Stewards weren’t Publications Ltd. positive and constructive in instrumental in saying ‘right, Licensor www. stopping a lot of the trouble within we’re no getting that, let’s go scran.ac.uk the plant. We used to try and oot on strike’. I would say 9 sort it out before it went to the out of 10 of the times that Management level. people approached me with a complaint or a grievance then I would turn round a The court of inquiry was made up of representatives of both the BMC (Scotland) management and of each of the relevant trade unions, which included the Amalgamated Engineering Union, the Transport and General Workers’ Union, the Electrical Trades Union, the Plumbing Trades Union, the Boilermakers’ Society, and the Amalgamated Society of Woodworkers. Both management and trade union delegates stressed the difficulties that had been experienced at the plant in building up its labour force to the 1966 level of 5,000, particularly as most of these workers were new to the motor industry and its working practices. Similarly, the trade unions accepted that they had initially found it difficult to establish and organise themselves due to a high level of labour turnover. The weaknesses in the trade union organisation during the plant’s early years was put forward by management representatives as one reason for a relatively high level of unofficial strike action. According to a dossier of statistical information provided by the company, there had been 117 unofficial strikes between the plant’s establishment in 1961 and the time the inquiry took place in 1966. 93 of these had occurred before the official negotiating machinery could begin, and 46 had lasted for less than one hour. It is PAGE 41 TGWU leaders including John Meffen outside BMC Bathgate. Photograph ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk I was in the Transport and General Workers’ Union, a’ the men in Cab Trim was in that. For a while I was the Minute Secretary… I remember there was trouble on the Line and the Shop Steward came doon and he says ‘Right we’re goin oot on the Banking everybody’. And we said ‘Wait the noo, that’s stupid’ and we stayed in… Well, Tommy Morrison was the Convener at that particular time and he got hud o’ the Shop Steward and he gied him a hard time. He says ‘you took a group oot there for no good reason’… Tom had an awful lot o’ sense. Frank Leech important to note that only one of these strikes was over pay, and the majority came under the category of ‘working hours and conditions’, in many cases linked to concerns over the insecurity of employment within the factory. Over the same time period, there had been 16 incidences of lay-offs and short-time working, seven of which were a result of the BMC (Scotland) management’s inability to maintain an adequate CONTINUED >> BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE THE TRADES UNIONS CHAPTER 8 THE TRADES UNIONS HEALTH + SAFETY The 9-Week Strike – a watershed for wages and conditions of employment We made a major breakthrough in what was called the 9-Week Strike in 1972. Wages were increased easily by about 30 percent. There was an agreement on a yearly increment. There was a move towards what they called parity – a comparable wage for people within the industry, people within the company, because other Leyland plants had higher wages than Bathgate. One of the biggest achievements of that strike was lay-off pay. Lay-off was a regular occurrence mainly during the winter… you’d come up to your machine and the Foreman would come round and say ‘you’re on here, you’re on there’. Within an hour you would get somebody coming down and saying ‘you’re sent home’. The only reason they would gie you is the trucks from down South bringing component parts werenae able to come up over The Shap. So you were laid off and that caused real issues and problems within the plant… John Moore …But that wasn’t the end of it in terms of improvement in conditions. We managed to wring a sick pay scheme and also a pension scheme out the company and ex BMC/Leyland employees like myself are picking up that pension the day and it’s really helpful. Leyland Motors itself had been going a hundred years and they didn’t have these benefits and they got it too because they had to give it to the whole Division. Whether all the workers realise how important they were in these things I don’t know but it was certainly a tremendous step forward. Chris Bett Mass meeting of workers in Inch Park. Photograph ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www. scran.ac.uk The 1966 Scamp Inquiry continued supply of component parts, and the remaining nine of which were caused by similar problems due to strike action elsewhere in the motor industry. The Ministry of Labour’s official report of the inquiry concluded that ‘the incidence of short-time working was no more than a contributory factor to the sum of interruptions to production’. However, the trade union delegates to the inquiry argued that lay-offs and short-time working, usually as a result of difficulties in accessing supplies, were among the main causes of discontent amongst workers at Bathgate, as they created an atmosphere of insecurity on the shopfloor. Furthermore, they felt that PAGE 42 this insecurity bred distrust of the management amongst the workers especially as there was often very little consultation between the two groups before men were laid off. The Company, meanwhile, pointed out that short-time working was a common feature of working practice within the motor industry, and that in fact the factory in Bathgate was not losing much more time to layoffs than the BMC’s other factories, Kenny Paton was instrumental in stopping the use of asbestos mats throughout Leyland Vehicles Ltd. Having become aware of the long term health dangers of asbestos, Kenny researched and put forward the case to his Union, the JSSC and Leyland Management. ©Workers’ Educational Association As Maintenance Welders we had to go into an environment that was very unhealthy. The Heat Treatment Department had chrome pipes that heated up to heat the various engine components so as they would become hard. Within these ovens… the pipes or welds had to be renewed so we would be put on a trolley on a roller and you used to have to lie flat and go in there and weld these chrome pipes. It was like an oven when you were in there and then when you were welding them you were generating heat. One of the major issues I found in the plant was that when we were doing this in the mid ‘70s it was custom and practice that whenever you were going into these furnaces or wherever we were sent to within the plant to do anything… to get one of the Fire Department with you because we were using burning equipment. They brought with them an asbestos blanket for you to either lie on so that you weren’t touching the hot metal or they would hold it in case something went on fire. I was the Vice Convener of the Boilermakers Union and I decided that because of the warnings that one particle of asbestos going into your lungs could actually kill you I decided to try and stop them using asbestos mats… I therefore took it to the Joint Shop Stewards Committee… Kenny Paton most of which were located close to their supply networks in the English Midlands. This was taken by some trade union delegates as a sign that the company management had failed to understand the concerns of their Bathgate workforce, for whom stable employment and a forty-hour week were paramount. One union representative in particular argued that the level of labour turnover, which in 1966 stood at 16 per cent, was indicative of the disillusionment felt by many of the workers, many of whom had had experience of unemployment and had been led to believe that motor industry work would be stable as well as relatively well-paid. However, it is important to note that by the time the inquiry took place, it was acknowledged by management and trade unionists alike that the situation with regards to both shorttime working and unofficial strike PAGE 43 NEGOTIATING AN ALCOHOL POLICY – WE DREW THE LINE We had two hotels selling beer and whisky to our workers during the lunch break and people would come in drunk... I argued wi’ the Shop Stewards initially that we should say to people ‘If you come in drunk we’ll no be representing you because you’re no just pittin yerself in danger you’re pittin everybody else in danger round about you’. We put that out. Even if it was just the smell of drink then that would be it. One of the things that came out of that was there was less people in the Engineering Union getting into that situation because they knew the score, we drew the line. And then I ended up negotiating an Alcohol Policy in the factory. People through in Rolls Royce had an alcohol policy and employee counselling because they had had a lot of problems and so had the shipyard people. It was one of the industrial chaplains, a guy called Donald Ross, great man, who came through to see us and said ‘we want to see if you can dae the same thing in BL’. The people I had the maist difficulty getting that through was the workers because they were saying ‘why CONTINUED >> action was improving markedly. In 1965, the management had taken the decision to increase the value of stocks held at the factory from £3.3 million to £4.5 million in order to minimise supply shortages, and it was agreed at the inquiry that they would in future consult more closely with the trade unions over any potential problems. Equally, trade union organisation within the plant was becoming better established, BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE CHAPTER 9 BATHGATE NO MORE CONTINUED >> should we hae a policy if it’s just going to be a cop out for folk that want tae come in drunk’ and, of course, the opposite was the case. We were sayin’ the person who comes in wildly drunk and abuses their position will still get the sack but it’s the ones who were off every Monday and Friday who were alcoholics who were daein it a’ the time but never were wildly drunk that were gettin’ their fingers injured an a’ that. That’s what the policy was for and once you got them in that situation you would then put them in a procedure where they got counselled. It was pretty successful once we got it in, once we got it through the men and said ‘No, this isn’t an easy option for these people’. ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk b block had huge ambient noise ...when the 1974 Health & Safety at Work Act came in you had to negotiate a policy with the Management... Before that, a book came out called Hazards at Work and the Convener at that time of the AEU, a guy called Bill Kerr, decided that we should use our funds to purchase 100 books for our Shop Stewards. We all had one of these books and the books demystified health and safety for us. They had been written by people with workers in mind, and we found out things that astonished us. For instance as far as noise was concerned, the Health and Safety Officer would say that ‘it was okay, noise levels are only one or two decibels above the norm’, but what we found out when we read the book was that it was exponential, in other words one decibel was a huge jump you know, so people were getting made deaf. There was a big argument going on for a long time, right up to the factory ended, about what the noisy areas were and how bad it was to work in, particularly B Block which had huge ambient noise. Jim Swan Following the closure of the BL factory Jim Swan became a Resource Worker with the Lothian Trade Union and Community Resource Centre. He was responsible for carrying out hearing tests with former BMC/Leyland workers. The hearing tests were conducted using an audiometer and took place in Miners’ Welfares around West Lothian. As a result many hundreds of former workers found they were entitled to compensation for the hearing loss they suffered as a result of being exposed to high noise levels in the factory. Jim Swan The 1966 Scamp Inquiry continued and the maintenance of a settled Joint Shop Stewards Committee was improving relations between the shopfloor and the management. Indeed, the factory’s General Manager went as far as to praise the Joint Shop Stewards specifically, saying that, ‘I think in the last 10, 12, 15 months the rational thinking of this group of people has been of great assistance to us as management in getting implemented common sense in this factory’. The inquiry certainly ended on a positive note, with the Chairman acknowledging the concerns raised by the trade union delegates, and PAGE 44 promising that the Bathgate factory would be given ‘a fair crack of the whip’. Catriona Louise Macdonald Archive material from Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick – MSS.178/15, proceedings of the Court of Inquiry. In 1982 the Joint Shop Stewards Committee (JSSC) and their members occupied the Leyland Bathgate factory to resist the sale of the profitable agricultural tractor plant. The next day workers at the nearby Plessey factory did the same to try to protect the jobs of the largely female workforce. The BMC/Leyland dispute ended after a month when workers narrowly voted to return to work. The JSSC and their members continued to support the 3 month Plessey factory workers’ sit-in. Two years after Leyland sold the tractor plant, the JSCC joined forces with the staff unions in a Joint Action Committee to fight closure of the remainder of the Bathgate factory. In 1984 the workers again occupied the factory and the occupation lasted for a month but again the workers voted narrowly to return to work. However, this gave the factory another two years life before it closed on 27th June 1986 with the loss of the remaining 2000 jobs. THE MICHAEL EDWARDES’ PLAN The really big problems came when they hired a Michael Edwardes (British Leyland Chairman). He was in the same line as Beeching, the railways, MacGregor, the pits, and I knew what he was there for. He developed a Corporate Plan and we searched for a while to find out what this Corporate Plan was. He put out a series of documents and asked everybody to vote whether they accepted his version of the development of Leyland or no, and he won hands doon. 7 votes to 1 was the vote in favour of Michael Edwardes’ plan. That was right across the Leyland Company. So after the result came out PAGE 45 the National Shop Stewards met to discuss it and the conclusion wis that it was a scam, the intention was to close plants, curtail the operation. So we were delegated to go back and report back to your plant the position of the National Shop Stewards in relation to the plan that it should be opposed. CONTINUED >> BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE BATHGATE NO MORE CHAPTER 9 BATHGATE NO MORE CONTINUED >> I’ll never forget it. We organised a meeting in the canteen. There’d maybe be 2500 of a workforce there that mornin’ and I argued the case that we should oppose Michael Edwardes’ plan. I nearly got drawn off the platform and I can understand the position of the lads. ‘We voted 7 votes to 1 to support the plan, what right have you got to come and try and change it?’ So that was the outcome of the Michael Edwardes plan… At the end of the day the number o’ people that came up to me and said ‘sorry, you were right’. That was after they got the word that they were getting the boot. It was a rough mornin’ that I can tell you but I hadnae any qualms about daein it. Chris Bett ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk It was just a total bombshell All the Shop Stewards got cried down to a meeting with the new Leyland Truck And Bus Group Managing Director Ian McKinnon and he said ‘Five minutes ago we signed a deal with Charles Nickerson to sell the Tractor Production to Marshall Tractors’… Jim Swan I can remember it as if it’s just now. Head Management were in the front row, Trades Unions were in the second row and I think everybody just turned and looked at one another. We knew that the writing was on the wall. When they were getting rid of a tractor that was so good in the farming industry, to take that away, was a disaster. Andy Hunter Fighting the Sell Off of the Tractor Plant We decided that rather than going out on strike what we would do was everybody would pay £1 into a fund that the Joint Shop Stewards Committee would hold and the people who were working up at the Dispatch would not dispatch any tractors or tractor parts. So the first thing the Management said was ‘Right, they’re all off the clock’ which meant they weren’t going to get paid so we then walked up to the Manager in Dispatch and said ‘you can get out of here, we’re taking over Dispatch’, and he took a while to do it but he went out, and we paid the workers in the Dispatch area and we kept that going for about 6 months and tractors piled up and when the time was right we phoned up the PAGE 46 various media and we said ‘get out to Bathgate something is happening’… The cameras began to come outside the factory gates, and they said ‘what’s happening?’ And we said ‘we’re about to occupy this factory’ and we symbolically slammed the gates shut and put a big chain on them… We occupied the factory. It was to try and let the people out there know what was happening to us in the factory. Frae oor point of view as union guys I don’t know that we could have done any mair than we did. We stood our corner and got the best conditions we could for our workers. The dice was always going to be loaded against us. Jim Swan The Joint Action Committee The Joint Action Committee continued to function up until the closure. Just after the sit-in there was a movement within the plant to hive off part of the plant and that was the tractor manufacturing to Nickersons. It caused a major split within the trades unions within Bathgate because people in one part of the plant, C Block the Tractor plant, felt it was their entitlement to make a decision on their job rather than the Joint Shop Stewards making an overall decision about the plant. They took the decision to accept the closure of C Block which eventually led to the closure of the factory… You always felt the factory was going to close after the removal of the tractor manufacture but it was still a shock… I was the Vice Chair of ASTMS at that point of time and I was their representative on the Joint Action Committee. The demonstrations that took place in Bathgate and elsewhere I was part of that. I was involved in demonstrations down in London on the closure, visits to the Parliament about the closure. I was part of most of the negotiations that took place up until the early part of ‘86 when it became inevitable that the factory was closing. John Moore The Leyland Sit-In ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk IN COURT We took ower the factory, it went for 2 or 3 weeks and then the Company took out an Injunction against the Joint Shop Stewards who were all named on the Injunction. It comes up in the Court of Session. We didnae contest it ‘cos we couldnae afford a barrister. Jimmy and the rest of them asked me if I would go into the Court of Session and observe the goings-on and report back. So I went into the Court of Session and it was packed, press in the main, but Tam Dalyell was there. So the Leyland barristers got up and made their point that they wanted to get their premises back because of constraint of trade, that was the legal terminology. I always remember Dalyell got up in the court. The Judge says to him ‘Mr Dalyell, sit down. You’ve got rules in your place and I’ve got rules in my place. Sit down. The only people that are allowed to say anything here are either the people mentioned on the Injunction or their legal representative’. So everybody looked at me. I was standing at the back. So I go down and sit on the fancy benches wi’ the boys with the wigs on. I just said ‘we’re only ordinary working people fighting for our jobs. I don’t understand the legal implications in relation to constraint o’ trade. If you put us oot the factory there’s still a constraint of trade because there’ll be naebody daein anything, we’ll be on strike outside as opposed to inside’. Anyway it didnae wear. Oot! …after it the lassies at Plessey sat in and they went to the Court of Session wi’ an Injunction. They argued that constraint o’ trade was not involved and the Judge accepted it… Subsequent to that Thatcher changed the law so that they could put you oot under any circumstances. Chris Bett Our aim was to stop the closure if we could and if we couldnae stop the closure we’d try to delay it as long as possible. We manned the gates and wouldn’t let anybody in. We also went to what was then supposed to be the future Scottish Parliament, the Royal High School in Edinburgh, and we held a big demonstration there. We done everything in our power that we could to stop the closure. Lenny Walker PAGE 47 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ONCE MORE BATHGATE NO MORE CHAPTER 9 BATHGATE NO MORE The Plessey Sit-In The bravery and bottle came from the workers We were absolutely petrified being in a court. I remember there was one girl fainted out of fear just before we went into the room. All the legal aspect did was buy time. The bravery and bottle came from the workers - some men, but mostly women. I was one of the solicitors. Paul Laverty and I did it as a team. Jonathan Mitchell though, as the Advocate, was the brains so to some extent I was the conduit - the person doing the running for the legal work being done by Jonathan Mitchell QC... The meetings with Ina Scott, George Wilson and others would almost invariably take place within the occupied factory... the women were fairly buoyant... It was actually fairly relaxed. Access was restricted but not in terms of barbed wire or anything like that simply the doors were locked. To be fair the management went away. They didn’t seek to put in Sheriff Officers or anything such as that. They might have had the court action been unsuccessful. So there was a kind of Mexican stand off. Getting in to the factory was simply a matter of turning up, identifying who you were and you were invited in. Matters were ongoing because the women had to amuse themselves but it was all very disciplined. There was a loophole in the law which Jonathan Mitchell exploited. It was a significant legal victory but it was a matter of finding a loophole. Ultimately the loophole would have been closed which is why I take the view that these matters were political not legal, but the legal challenge was important in keeping the hopes alive. Ultimately, it can only do so for a short period of time. In due course, the legal battle was won but the industrial war was lost. Susie Bradley Kenny MacAskill Plessey Shop Stewards and workers outside Edinburgh’s High Court, 26th February 1982. Lord Kincraig withdrew a court order that he had made three weeks previously requiring the women to leave the Plessey factory. ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd I would say out of B Block which had maybe 2500 workers in it, mostly men, the biggest majority of the men’s wives worked in Plessey... We used to go to the Plessey dances maybe once a month up in the canteen and it was like walking through Leyland at times because every second guy you met worked in Leyland. Ina Scott was the Plessey Shop Steward... During their strike my wife was one of I think 80 workers who sat in, they wouldn’t come through the gates. Ina and Jim Swan had got thegither because STV had asked them could they interview a couple whose wife worked in Plessey and her man worked in Leyland so because my wife and I stayed next to Ina they put our names forward. So we got a letter to say that STV was coming to interview us... They come into the house and set up the camera and asked us what our fears was, how we were living and how we were getting by from day to day. In Plessey the women controlled the kitchens and they were making food like soup for all the workers. The interview went out on a programme called This Week. So they paid us £40 because they can’t interview without paying you so my wife took £20 down to the Plessey fighting fund and I took £20 down to the Leyland fighting fund. When Kenny MacAskill who was representing the Plessey women for no fee went to the court to fight it for them word came round B Block that the police were going up to put the women out the gates so the men downed tools and marched up the railway to Whiteside but the police went away. There were nothing done. Harry Bradley PAGE 48 We got handed a letter saying that everyone in the Tractor Division was getting paid off, made redundant, about 1000-1100 personnel. Wherever you worked in the plant if your major job was to do with the Tractor Division you were being made redundant. When the plant closed I was absolutely shattered. I’d never, ever been paid off before. No matter how good you had been at your job, or how good an attender or anything. They just decided the Tractor Division was goin’ so you were goin’with it. It was a disaster. At that time there was a massive recession on and there wisnae any work so I was made redundant and tried for a period of time to get any type of job... I hated being unemployed. The majority of the people that were in the factory were in an age group where they thought that was them settled for the rest of their working days. So when it closed it was a complete financial and a mental disaster for the people that worked in it. Alex Moffat John Cooper Coffin made by workers on Truck Assembly to mark their last day of employment in British Leyland. Photograph courtesy of Alex Binnie I don’t mind telling you I cried because I was looking forward to my family getting work there. The Leyland had a tremendous input in the social life of people. You’ve got to understand how many thousands of people worked in there… and their skills were unsurpassed. I got that word and I came home and I sat and I held my wife’s hand and I said ‘we’re finished’. Tam Brandon I just could not believe that they would shut that plant. I kept saying to myself, and I wisnae alone, how can they shut a place like this? It was a total shock. Blackburn really suffered. The shops felt it. They started to pull down the houses they built for the Overspill. Jim Bilsborough I was there for a number of weeks after the plant closed because I had all these tools to separate, have them labeled and ready for dispatch to the various BL factories in Coventry and Birmingham and so on. The parts that we were making were being transferred, the making of them, back down South but not all to the one factory. These tools had all to be separated. I did it personally... There was no shopfloor workers left when I was doing that job. There was staff in the Planning Department because they were responsible for the change over – the paperwork and drawings going down South. I was one of the last people out the factory because I could handle a tractor and a winch and I took all the machines out. 600 machines and I never ©The Scotsman damaged one and some Publications Ltd. of them were maybe Licensor www.scran.ac.uk 25 tons in weight… Believe you me, you maybe had only a couple of inches to spare taking all these machines out because they only wanted certain ones at first and they were picking them. Jim Hamilton John Duncan PAGE 49 BATHGATE ONCE MORE LOOKING BACK BATHGATE ONCE MORE CHAPTER 10 LOOKING BACK Within weeks of being 25 years on there is little physical evidence that the BMC/ Leyland factory ever existed in Bathgate but the story lives on in the hearts and minds of the people who worked there and their families. What can younger generations learn from this important time in Bathgate and Scotland’s history? ©The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk LOOKING BACK on it I think it was good for the area and it brought all our children up through the 25 years. But sadly it wisnae there for our families to go into and work and the youngsters nowadays they never hear about Leyland or they say ‘Aw, that lazy place where everybody was lazy and shoved a brush’ which was totally untrue. A lot of hardworking people were employed there. The factory was isolated. There werenae enough nearby subsidiary factories supplying Bathgate wi’ the likes of bolts, nuts, sub assemblies, whatever. It was all being brought up from England. Harry Bradley John Cooper PAGE 50 Members of the Nuffield and Leyland Tractor Club with BL tractors and memorabilia to show the children of Simpson Primary School at the Bathgate Once More anniversary event, 27th June 2011. ©Workers’ Educational Association elected (Member of Parliament for West Lothian) early in the summer recess, I went to Birmingham… I was invited to lunch in his plush office dining room, by Mr George Harriman, the crusty old boss of Austin at Longbridge. With him was Alec Issigonisis, the genius designer of the Mini… I shall never forget what Harriman said to me, as I was leaving at the end of the lunch. ‘Dalyell, I am an old man and you are a young man. Before you come to retire as MP for West Lothian I fear that the Bathgate move will end in tears. When this happens, please bear in mind that we never wanted to go to Scotland in the first place – we were pressurised and incentivised by the Cabinet to do so’. Harriman was right. It did end in tears. But that is not to say that forcing the motor industry to come to Central Scotland was not worth doing. For a quarter of a century, BMC Bathgate provided good jobs which we would not otherwise have had. In the context of the time Government direction of industry was far from stupid. Tam Dalyell Geoff Fishwick ©Workers’ Educational Association Postcard courtesy of John Bell’s family IT HAS A FANTASTIC PLACE in the history of this area. If you look at the mid to late ‘50s this area was depressed, and really depressed. It was a political decision taken by the Tories in the ‘50s. They obviously realised that you had to get people working. It was social engineering. Thatcher did it in the wrong way but this was done in the right way. It proved that you can take people with very little skill and make them very useful in a productive sense and give them a sense of belonging, a sense of pride because there was a lot of pride in Bathgate… It put a lot of money into this county every week. It provided for Blackburn to grow…it provided Whitburn with opportunity to expand. Bathgate did exceedingly well out of it during the ‘60s and ‘70s. I’ve heard people decrying the Leyland experience but it was really an excellent piece of social engineering. Ian Tennant I’m surprised that there wasn’t sufficient expertise at the right level to realise that to build a plant… 300 miles from the Midlands couldn’t succeed unless you insist that your major suppliers set up satellite factories all around the producing factory. This was Linwood’s problem. Nobody’s going to bring the components, which every manufacturer uses to build a vehicle no matter what badges are on the front of the vehicle, 300 miles from Birmingham to Scotland and back with driving hours meaning the driver has an overnight stay… without increasing the price of the part. So you’re on a loser before you’ve put a nut and bolt together. Geoff Fishwick PAGE 51 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 Frae the ‘50s, ‘60s, ‘70s we were at the forefront of engineering throughout the world, frae the ship building to motor manufacturing and I think we were instrumental in getting a lot of industry going… We’ve got to expand our brains and think positively and jump ahead of our competitors and try and manufacture stuff again. Kenny Paton It was a great grounding for an apprentice because it was something different every day… most of the apprentices are still really doing so well. Alan Marr DInnae blame the workers of Bathgate. They were good workers. They adapted well to factory work. You get the ‘Aw they did nothin’ up there’. We couldnae have produced what we produced if naebody was workin’. So that’s a fallacy that. There were some jobs better than others, some jobs cleaner than others, but overall the people that was there, whatever they got paid, they worked for that. Looking back, it’s a shame the way it ended and the reasons for it. Tommy Morrison BATHGATE ONCE MORE LOOKING BACK The Bathgate Songs IT WAS A POLITICAL MOVE to bring the factory here and it was another political move to close it again. We shouldn’t be playing politics with people’s jobs like that. That sticks in the craw a bit. When the factory was here okay they had their troubles and there were strikes and different things but we werenae worse than anywhere else. We made some good stuff here. We made some very good stuff. But with a big place like that you always had your knockers, there were always people that run us down and gave us a hard time, but we did a good job basically as far as I can see. Former workers and project contributors at the Bathgate Once More anniversary event, 27th June 2011 John Weir Guthrie Aitken and Harry McKay at the Bathgate Once More anniversary event, 27th June 2011 ©Workers’ Educational Association The main thing I liked about it was the companionship. There was a fine lot of lads there. Alex Moffat They were the best bunch o’ guys ever I worked wi’. I still see quite a few of them yet and I’m still friendly with a few of them yet. Jim Swan ©Workers’ Educational Association Walter Taggart PAGE 52 One of the things that West Lothian learned was don’t have all your eggs in the one basket. In the ‘80s we were heavily dependent on manufacturing and coal extraction, we hadnae anything else to balance our economy. So far we’ve managed to get on. We’re coming to it again. The main employers now in West Lothian are the hospital and the Council so people have got to be aware of that, we’re back in that situation again. Jim Swan The BMC/Leyland factory site is now home to Simpson Primary School. In early 2011 as part of the Bathgate Once More project the children of Primaries 6 and 5 and Primaries 4 and 5 of Simpson Primary School worked with local songwriter Ewan McVicar to write songs, make pictures and research the story of BMC/ British Leyland plant. The children performed two of their songs at the Bathgate Once More anniversary event on 27th June 2011. ALL AROUND THE WORLD Lyrics by P6 and 5, Simpson Primary School Tune: I Ziga Zumba, from South Africa British Leyland trucks and tractors Built in Bathgate factory We found pictures, we wrote stories On our website, come and see They were sold to different countries Finland, Sweden, Russia ya ya Kenya, Ghana and Uganda Argentina and Brazil zil zil In the 60s and the 70s Bathgate was a vibrant town People worked in the plant From the places all around Blackburn, Whitburn and Linlithgow Ladywell and Livingston tun tun Boghall, Uphall and Torphichen Addiewell and Armadale dale dale Before 1961 On the site there was a farm Where they built the massive plant And the vehicles were made In 1986 there came a big alarm HERE IN BATHGATE TOWN Lyrics by P4 and 5, Simpson Primary School, Tune : Ni Wapi Banana, from Kenya There was a sad announcement “We are going to shut you down down down!” When the workers heard the bad news There were frowns all round the town town town The workers tried to save it They held protests, they sat in But their hard work was in vain They felt angry, they were glum Then there came a giant car park Where the factory had been been been Till at last they built a village And again the place was green green green In the year two oh oh seven Oh seven, oh seven They built a school called Simpson Our brilliant primary Our brilliant primary Example of artwork by children of Simpson Primary School Four years ago they built a school in BATHGATE! So we will never be fools in BATHGATE! Simpson Primary is cool in BATHGATE! Here in Bathgate town They piled up the earth with big machines in BATHGATE! They were really keen in BATHGATE! Then they stopped and had a plate of beans in BATHGATE! Here in Bathgate town Down on Castle Road – BATHGATE! There used to be a castle on its own – BATHGATE! I bet they didn’t have a phone – BATHGATE! Here in Bathgate town Do you think they had a big pipe band – BATHGATE! At the opening ceremony – BATHGATE! Of the truck and tractor factory – BATHGATE! Here in Bathgate town There were ancient farms in – BATHGATE! A house and a midden and a barn in – BATHGATE! Crops and cows and lambs in – BATHGATE! Here in Bathgate town That was fifty years ago in BATHGATE! After twenty five years it had to go from BATHGATE! Now we live there you know in BATHGATE! Here in Bathgate town On a grassy field on a farm in BATHGATE! A different kind of plant was born in BATHGATE! Not tatties or carrots or corn – BATHGATE! Here in Bathgate town PAGE 53 BATHGATE ONCE MORE TELLING THE STORY OF THE BMC/BRITISH LEYLAND TRUCK AND TRACTOR PLANT AT BATHGATE, 1961-86 BATHGATE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This publication has been produced as part of the Bathgate Once More project which aimed to research, record and preserve the story of the BMC/Leyland Truck and Tractor plant in Bathgate from the perspective of the people who worked in the industry. The project was led by the Workers’ Educational Association (WEA) with the help of a great many people and organisations who gave their time, knowledge and enthusiasm to the project. The WEA would like to thank all the people and organisations who have contributed to the making of this publication especially: Guthrie Aitken Chris Allen Lynne Bell Alex Binnie Caroline Bennie Graham Bennie Chris Bett Jim Bilsborough Malcolm Black Janette Bond Harry Bradley Susie Bradley Tam Brandon Joyce Brogan Elizabeth Bryan Gordon Cameron Margaret Campbell Harry Cartmill Sybil Cavanagh Gordon Chalmers John Cooper Tam Dalyell Bruce Davies Tom Devine John Duncan Geoff Fishwick John Fleming Helen Foster Neil Fraser Gavin Grant John Gray James Hamilton Rena Hamilton Elaine Harvey John Hastings Elizabeth Henderson Andy Hunter Dorothy Hunter Berian James Helen Jeffery Paul Kelly Andy Kidd Jean Kidd Lesley Kinloch Tony Kizis John Lawrie Frank Leech Jim Love Kenny MacAskill Carole McCallum John McCaughie Fred McCormick Jim McCulloch Catriona L Macdonald John MacDonald Ian McFall Dougie McIndoe Harry McKay Andrew McKeown David MacPherson Ewan McVicar Hazel Marjoribanks Alan Marr Rab Marshall Dougie Miller Hugh Mitchell Alex Moffat John Moore Tony Moore Vince Moore Tommy Morrison Bob Muir Glen Munro Ross Murray Eric Mutter Margaret Mutter John Paterson Kenny Paton Bill Raine Janice Rhind Cecilia Rose Malcolm Simpson Billy Steven Jim Swan Walter Taggart Ian Tennant Gary Vines George Waddell Lenny Walker Selby Wands Janice Wimpenny John Weir ONCE MORE The Story of the BMC/Leyland Truck and Tractor Plant, 1961-86 The volunteers of the Bennie Museum, Bathgate Heritage Lottery Fund The Living Memory Association The Nuffield and Leyland Tractor Club The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland The children and staff of Simpson Primary School, Bathgate STUC Archives, Glasgow Caledonian University Voluntary Sector Gateway West Lothian Courier West Lothian Local History Library West Lothian Trades Council PAGE PAGE 5400 Photographs courtesy of Caroline Bennie, Jim Bilsborough, Alex Binnie, Gordon Cameron, Dorothy Hunter, Andrew McKeown, Dougie McIndoe, Alan Marr, Tommy Morrison BMC Cab Trim (1961), Photograph courtesy of Tommy Morrison For 25 years Bathgate was at the centre of Britain’s giant motor vehicle industry. This book tells the story of the coming of the British Motor Corporation (BMC) factory to West Lothian in 1961 through to the plant’s closure in 1986. It is based on the first-hand accounts of some of the many people who worked in the industry. ISBN 978 0 902303 74 4 The Workers’ Educational Association is a charity registered in England and Wales (number 1112775) and in Scotland (number SCO39239) and a company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales (number 2806910). Registered address is WEA, 4 Luke Street, London EC2A 4XW