During more than 40 years in the pottery industry, Edna Moreton
worked at the Burslem factories of James Macintyre, John Maddock
and Wade Heath. Besides being a versatile worker who did a variety
of jobs, she had a reputation for speaking her mind in down-to-earth
language. Edna, now 77, told John Abberley about the potbank
life she loved.
FROM my early years on the potbank, my workmates thought I wasn't
well if I didn't swear a lot.
Everybody swore on potbanks, though not like they do it today.
But when I went to work at Maddocks, where my husband Len was
the clay manager, I had to be on my best behaviour and stop
swearing.
It didn't suit me at all. In fact, it made me come out in a
rash on my legs. My doctor told me it was due to the frustration
of not being able to be myself. That was one reason why I decided
to leave.
What made me strong-willed, I think, was being left an orphan.
I was the youngest of a family of nine. My father died when
I was eight and my mother followed him when I was nine.
My eldest sister took me on and although I wanted to go hairdressing
she insisted that I earned money in a potbank job when I left
school at 14. I started at 12 shillings a week in the clay end
at Macintyres.
My sister only gave me one shilling a week pocket money, but
I didn't hand over all my wages to her. I hid some in my shoe
so I could go dancing, though they called you no good those
days if you went dancing a lot.
At Macintyres (Washington Works) I started in sieving, which
chapped your hands and there were no creams then. After two
years I went pressing on piece work, making porcelain firebars
for electric fires.
As part of the job you had to swing a big iron ball, which
was hard work doing it all day. Once I hit my head on a press
and had to go to the Haywood Hospital for stitches. But I went
back to work the next morning.
We couldn't smoke on Macintyres, except in the toilets, because
of the danger of fire. We had to mix paraffin and palm oil,
which got on our overalls and stank a lot. This was accepted
everywhere. Apart from the smoking ban, I don't remember many
safety regulations.
In my opinion Macintyres sufferd badly through union rules.
The union tried to stop us fetching our own boards. We were
supposed to let the men bring them to us, but told them I wasn't
standing round waiting when I was on piece work.
After Macintyres I went to Maddocks and learned casting and
sponging, but left for the reasons I've already explained about
swearing. I became a sponger at Wade Heath, where I made ice
jugs, miniature whisky barrels and great big ashtrays.
I could speak my mind freely again and became a spokesman for
the workers when they wanted a new price for making jugs, say
1s 8d a dozen instead of 1s 6d.
Everybody promised their support, but when we got into the
office they all kept their mouths shut and left it to me. The
works manager always told me afterwards to collect my cards
and coppers. But I just carried on as normal the next day and
nobody said anything.
When I was on Wade Heath they'd still got a bottle oven. If
we were slack we went to the oven with our towels and the kiln
men handed down the hot saggars, which we carried out. They
wouldn't ask women to do a job like that nowadays!
Still, it was like home from home because we were allowed to
smoke all day on the bench. Colonel Sir George Wade came in
once and introduced me to Lady Wade as "the young lady
who's always got a cigarette going and won't tell me how many
she smokes."
Colonel Wade was a very, very nice man who always spoke to
us. When I had an operation he told me that he'd missed me.
We all called him the colonel.
I used a high chair to do my fettling and after having a couple
of days off I went back and found that my chair had gone. I
was told I couldn't use it any more, as the clay manager had
thrown it on the shordruck. So I went out and fetched it back.
And I kept it.
This clay manager was for ever coming up and helping himself
to a cigarette from my packet. One day I insulted him in front
of everybody and the next Monday morning I found he'd left me
a box of 100. I got away with murder sometimes.
I've been back to the works since I retired and it's all machines
these days. The placers don't have to carry boards on their
heads. They've got a lift which brings the ware down.
I found it depressing to go back because so many jobs I remember
are no longer done.