Jump to content
 

Please use M,M&M only for topics that do not fit within other forum areas. All topics posted here await admin team approval to ensure they don't belong elsewhere.

"Travelling Shunter"


Recommended Posts

  • RMweb Gold

The travelling of course.

 

A travelling shunter was a higher grade than a 'normal' shunter, who would be employed at a goods or marshalling yard or a station to perform the coupling and uncoupling of stock.  He would be passed out on rules and regulations concerning the use of couplings, vacuum and steam pipes, and so on.  A travelling shunter leaves the station or yard with a trip or pickup with the guard on the brake van to assist the guard with the shunting operations at the unstaffed private sidings or small yards visited, by shunting and by working ground frames and so on.  So, he had to have passed signalling rules and regulations, working of trains, and be cogniscent of engineering or other works notices of speed restrictions and occupations, and sign guards' route knowledge as well.

 

The next step up would be goods guard; these men were employed by the Traffic Department and followed that line of promotion.   So, your wife's paternal grandfather was a skillled and competent railwayman capable of pretty much any freight duty, and she should be proud of him.  When I started as a goods guard 'off the street recruited' at Canton in 1970, I learned most of what I knew from travelling shunters initially.

  • Like 4
  • Thanks 1
  • Informative/Useful 4
  • Interesting/Thought-provoking 1
Link to post
Share on other sites

Thanks TJ; much appreciated.

I assume he might've been based at the nearby yard at Norwood Jn.

Any idea what they might've been earning; this was around 1939? Would it have been a reserved occupation as my wife can't find anything about him being in the services.

Edited by Peter Kazmierczak
Link to post
Share on other sites

  • RMweb Gold
On 30/11/2021 at 21:35, Peter Kazmierczak said:

Thanks TJ; much appreciated.

I assume he might've been based at the nearby yard at Norwood Jn.

Any idea what they might've been earning; this was around 1939? Would it have been a reserved occupation as my wife can't find anything about him being in the services.

Soz, no idea.  More than a shunter, less than a guard, but IWHT plenty of overtime available.  Yard shunting at a big marshalling yard like Norwood, basically dodging 20ton boxes on wheels trying to kill you and coming at you from several roads at once, in a blackout, sounds pretty terrifying to me; kudos to him. 

 

 

  • Agree 1
Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...