The document I used is held in The National Archives under RAIL 410/1805 and is a staff record book listing London and North Western Railway (L&NWR) employees from the Operating, Traffic and Coaching Departments (to be hereon known as the Traffic Department) between 1837 and 1871. The information I have used were the individuals’ ‘last employment previous to entering the company’s service,’ the date they joined the company, their age on joining and the position they received. For speed of data collection other pieces of information, such as their names, locations, or who recommended them, have been left out of my research.
Before anything else is said, it is important to note how
the results are spread across the decades.
Clearly, more data is available from 1850 onwards, reflecting
the fact that as the company expanded its workforce grew. Across the entire
period the railway employees had between them 120 different professional occupations,
however, I have sorted these into twelve categories based on the economic
sectors these were in. Only four individuals (1%) had professions that I could
not categorise as I had no clue what they were (such is the nature of the 19th
century occupational descriptions). The
distribution is shown below of their
It should be remembered that the data relates to Traffic Department
employees and does not include railway workers from other departments, for
example the Engineering or Locomotive Departments. Indeed, it seems that a
large numbers of individuals worked for railways before entering the Traffic Department.
However, analysis reveals some interesting things about how the department
sourced labour. Sixty-eight department employees, or 17.25% of the entire
sample, had come from railways’ secondary labour market and had undertaken jobs
that had low job security, pay and poor promotional prospects. However, of
these, forty-nine (72.06%) had come from the ‘Permanent Way Department’ (4) or
had been a platelayers (45).
What this was suggests is that the L&NWR’s Traffic
Department drew heavily on its own Permanent Way staff for employees in the
period. Nevertheless, the proportion of staff moving from the Permanent Way Department
to Traffic changed with time. Between 1837 and 1839 4.55% workers made the
move, however, this osmosis reached its height between 1850 and 1854, when 25
of the 112 in the sample transferred (22.32%). Nevertheless, the proportion
dropped thereafter, and in 1860 only one person (1.96%), John Lycett, a Police
Constable at Rugeley Station, had been employed in the Permanent Way Department
before starting with Traffic. The proportions are shown below.
Thus, the L&NWR’s Traffic Department increasingly drew
on staff previously employed the Permanent Way Department in the 1840s and early
1850s. Presumably, this was driven by two factors. Firstly, the core of the
L&NWR’s network began to be completed in the late 1840s, meaning that the
number of staff the engineering establishment required diminished. However,
concurrently, the business of the line was increasing, meaning that the Traffic
Department required staff. Therefore,
they were happy to employ those ex-Permanent Way men who were put out of the job.
Furthermore, from the late-1850s the number of transfers declined.
Given what is known about employment in the later railway industry, it seems
that by this period the department which individuals joined were usually the ones
they stayed with throughout their career. Thus, the low number of transfers
from Permanent Way Department to the Traffic in the late-1850s and 1860
reflects that these employment patterns were becoming established. Indeed, on
the L&NWR at least, it would suggest that the idea of sons following
fathers into the industry began in the late 1850s.
However, while transference out of the Permanent Way Department
would have been a step-up for some railway workers, in the majority of cases
their new posts were still manual one. The distribution of the posts Permanent
Way staff went into after their transfers is shown below.
Indeed, given that ex-platelayers constituted forty-five
of the forty-nine individuals transferred from the Permanent Way Department,
and what they had been doing what was effectively the lowest ranked job in railway
companies’, it is unsurprising that many took up the lowest jobs in the Traffic
Department. Indeed, thirty-four (the Gatekeepers, Porters and, particularly,
the Pointsmen) were all manual jobs that were the lowest rank on the
promotional ladder. Also, Police Constables, that worked for the companies’
private police forces, were basically hired muscle, and were also low-ranked
jobs. Only two individuals, the two ‘[Station] Agents,’ were part of the
L&NWR’s ‘primary labour market,’ which had high job security, steady pay
and promotional prospects. These were John Robinson, who had transferred in
August 1846 from being a Permanent Way Inspector, and George Turner, who had transferred
in November 1851 from being a platelayer.
Thus, what has been learned is that the L&NWR’s
traffic department employed large numbers of ex-Permanent Way Department
employees, that these individuals usually transferred from low-paid manual jobs
into low-paid manual positions in the Traffic Department, and that by the late
1850s, because employment patterns were becoming more established, these moves became
less common. Indeed, this would suggest that as the railway industry became
more mature, the opportunity for upward mobility declined as people were tied to
the department with which they started.
In the next post I will look at the other individuals in
the sample who came to the L&NWR’s Traffic Department from outside the
railway.
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