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After
being demobbed from the forces at the age of twenty-two, it was expected
that he would join his father to learn the Black Country Lock Trade.
It seemed a good idea, as jobs were not plentiful at that time.
After working seventeen years in Wolverhampton and Wednesfield, he decided
to make a new life in the countryside of Shropshire. Taking the lock
work with him, he and his wife Ann restored two derelict cottages and
he worked his trade from there for almost thirty years, making, by hand,
high quality security bank door locks. He had an eventful career, packed
with amusing incidents, troubleshooting in Britain and parts of the
Empire. Living on the rural Shropshire/Staffordshire border, he recalls
movingly the changes in country life, the farming ways, the rural habitat,
feathered friends and the impact of change (including Foot and
Mouth). In retirement in Gnosall, Staffordshire, he continues
to be a colourful figure, campaigning for the maintenance of a flagship
rural surgery.
This autobiography will be of considerable interest to those living
in the Industrial Midlands (particularly the Black Country) and rural
Staffordshire; to school children and students; and to local historians
and general readers of the Midlands.
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