ALL IN A DAYS WORK
SKINYARDS
by ZACHARIA CRASHLEY
PAGE TWO
Dad
would agree a price for anything unusual. We had dogskins, bales and
bales of them stacked, you could tell what breed they were. There’s a
lot of grease in a dogskin, it’s not a good pelt but they got sent for
the fancy leather trade. Angora rabbits, we did them too, picking them
with fingers on our knees. I remember we even had a load of wallabies
once!
Any
tails and pieces wouldn’t be thrown away. We’d look at the doddins,
sheeps tails with all clagging on, and say "There’s brass in that
there muck." They’d be put in a big tank and treated with enzymes
which digested all the skin and fat. Then you washed the wool, spread it
out over a net and all the tail bones fell out.
Wool
was packed by treading, two of you trampling it down. The old manager
used to come at nine when you’d been on since seven, two gangs
packing. He’d stand and watch with his hands behind his back, never
spoke a word till twelve o’clock buzzer went. Sometimes he’d lift the
corner of the sheet with his foot and spill all wool out as if to say
this isn’t packed tight.
The
Washbeck supplied all our water needs. The soaks area next the beck,
that was called Egypt. The biggest soak, we called that the North Sea. I
remember skins frozen solid in lime in the North Sea, couldn’t get at
them for six or eight weeks. We had a steam pump and an electric pump,
we’d let the beck flood over into our soaks and pump out of them. Only
time you couldn’t use it were when Washbeck flooded and the water got
mudded up. When houses were built there in the 1930s, we sank a bore,
just opposite Tates Lane, to pump water up to the yard.
We’d
our own works Fire Brigade, won a lot of prizes in competitions. Dad was
in it. I’ve still got the buttons from his fireman’s jacket with the
C.W.S. motto on "Labor and Wait". We used to say "We’ve
laboured and laboured and we’re still waiting!" We’d get small
fires from spontaneous combustion in the wool. The worst fire was in
1921. I’d be nine then. The sky were full of sparks, local brigade and
work’s brigade were there. Twelve of us kids helped on Billy Howton’s
farm damping down the hay with wet sacks. Whole stacks would have gone
up otherwise. Everyone was frightened the benzine tank at the top end
where the bones were cooked would go up but it didn’t. After the fire
the pullers and materials were diverted to Birkenhead. Dad found he
couldn’t afford to pay his board there and keep the family at home so
he came back after three weeks and started work on the construction of
the new skinyards.
The
Booths was an area on its own then, quite separate from the town. Miss
Garlick, she had a shop at bottom of the Booths. While the fire was on
she did all the sandwiches and tea for the men. Then there was Tasty
Wilson, he came round hawking fruit. Jacky Pease had the shop next to
Miss Garlick’s. He was a dumpy little fellow, five foot two inch high
and nearly that across. When he went to get you a stone of flour he’d
trudge over from the barrel on one side of shop to the scales on the
other, spilling it all the way. Happen he’d have to go three or four
time. Some of the cottages in the area were just hovels really.
Mattresses on floor, hens pecking round, no daylight in at all, they had
to have candles lit all day.
It
were a crafty game were wool job. It was allowed to have
seven-and-a-half percent moisture in wool. If we found there wasn’t
that in we used to get watering cans going. I’ve seen two lads work
all day on an eight-hour shift, just carrying water. Our wagon once took
a load of wool to a big buyer in Bradford and it were all sent back,
said it were too wet. We opened it all up, wet it again, sent it off,
and they took it!
You’d
to supply your own boots and an apron, linseed type. A bonemeal sack cut
up the middle and fastened with string made a pair of trousers and in
winter we’d have leggings out of reject pelts. The Inspector would
come round and make us take boots off to see if they were wet. First few
times I had to dash to get hidded as he also came to see if anyone were
under sixteen years. You could help but get the depilatory on your
shirts. That were a terrible job for the wives; they had to soak them
and scrape them to get it off, it smelt awful.
At
the top end the bones were cooked for grease and glue and then ground
for bonemeal. The bulk of the ground bone went to C.W.S. Longton
Potteries for china and the rest went for animal feeds and fertilisers.
The horns were left stacked for months and then cooked and ground up for
hoof and hornmeal. They’d get everything to deal with at top end. I’ve
seen elephant feet come in from Manchester Zoo! During the war there was
a shipload of pork and bacon that had been bombed at Liverpool and
condemned. I looked up from pulling and saw a side of pork going past
the window! I can see it now. I tell you, there was more of that pork
taken out of works than kept, condemned or not. I didn’t have any;
once anything’d gone up there that were enough for me. I didn’t
fancy it.
I
remember on V.E. day I had to walk round top end. There were whole
carcase’s of fresh beef condemned for TB, you could see the TB blebs.
It’s got green dye on it to stop people eating it.
There
were a lot of wild cats at top end to keep mice out. Down bottom end we
domesticated a few. We’d plenty of rats too. Every so often we’d
newt off the pound and go after them with short ratting sticks. I
remember nine of us killing above a hundred rats at one time. They were
beautiful clean skins, all different colours.
The
Sports Club got started in 1928, we teamed up with C.W.S. Ferrybridge
Potteries for football, cricket and table tennis. We had our annual
social at Wordsworth’s and our first dinner dance at the Crescent in
1931. We joined the C.W.S national football club and beat Hull. Then we
were drawn against Shilbottle and they beat us 13 – nil. We played Don
Wilson at Hull, he’d had a good trial for Leeds United. He wasn’t a
C.W.S worker so we played him as Jack Sherburn!
We
didn’t get a weeks holiday till 1942. When I got married I’d to
stand holiday meself. We did a lot of overtime; basic week were 48
hours, but we’d often do 60 to 65. I worked there from 1926 to 1977. I
estimate I’ve handled about five million sheepskins over the year;
sometimes we’d do three thousand shearlings in a day.
All
them years I only enjoyed the last three. The rest you were striving and
hoping to put your own ideas in practice. Well, last three years I had
me chance. I altered piecework for a start, it creates jealousy. We were
only allowed to do so many skins per hour, the pace slowed down and we
got a better product altogether.
When I retired I saw the top man at Manchester and had lunch with him. I
got £150, that’s all I got, and I’d done 51 years.
Zacharia Crashley
'Skinyards'
by Zacharia Crashley, is reproduced from 'All In A Days Work - Wait
While I Tell You No.2', edited by Richard Van Riel and published by
Yorkshire Arts Circus. It is reproduced with the permission of
Richard Van Riel.
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