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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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