Workman’s weekly.
You knew the week-end was coming to the end on any Sunday afternoon, rain or shine. A kind of gloom set in as if any enjoyment should never have been trusted in the first place. The suburban strips of hooded shops and steel awnings were closed up, and dogs and people had disappeared. Was this not the time on a Sunday afternoon to expect the arrival of the “Demon of Noontide’?
Some of the tens of thousands across Sydney and other places would now be getting ready for the routine of obtaining the ticket to work by rail during the week. In those days a weekly train ticket was the best option for those that did not yet have a car. This ticket was called ‘workman’s weekly’. It was coloured a cheerful red and had both the destination and the year’s week number printed on it. Next week the same colour but the next number would be featured.
It is rather nice to know that in those days, a workman and his workman’s ticket was part of a society that had not yet discovered the stigma that would later attach itself to the word ‘workman’ by some. How many would now saunter up to a rail station, let alone buy a” workman’s weekly ticket”?
Of course, to avoid queuing on Monday morning in the thick of it all, the better planned would get the ticket from the nearest railway station on the Sunday afternoon.
Therefore there would often be a slight flare up of life and respite from the ‘Sunday demon’ between four and six pm or so, especially around the railway stations, when one could see fellow workers, so staunch and brave, facing the coming week with an heroic and fearless grim determination to buy his weekly ticket.. Oddly enough, those tickets, as far as I remember, could also be bought by work-women. Perhaps I am wrong here. Was there some sort of letter of proof from employer that one was engaged in physical work?
Monday mornings were so much better for having survived the Sunday, another week and another quid was now coming up, we are talking about seventeen pounds ten shillings per week here, being about the average adult wage, back in 1956. It was mid-summer.
The trains had sliding doors that were manually wrenched open by burley blue yakka’ed station attendants. The waiting workers would flick away the Ready Rub fag end and all would align and board the train.
The trains then, as perhaps still now, were of a past era but very much accepted as being modern, almost in vogue. There were no toilets or water on board, so passengers would develop strong constitutions and camel like water retaining attributes and bladders, even travel by late pregnant women would be undertaken with no worries. The date on the steel couplings between carriages was around 1932 or 34 and above the seats were still those brass ornate luggage racks, now keenly sought by inner city residents to use as holders for their terracotta potted geraniums.
The workmen and their workman’s tickets were of the norm then and so were men in overalls and travelling women with hair curlers. The trains would be packed.
Heralds and Telegraph papers would be spread open and many women would knit, young men would glance through Post and Pix magazines, with photos of girls in swimwear revealing nude knees and even feet. The afternoon papers, Mirror and Sun featured scandalous stories of Princess Margaret’s romances and titillating scandals of Professors at Tasmanian Universities. Every six months or so, when sales were down, papers would print front page with a single word ‘WAR’. It was often a fracas in Egypt or disturbance in Malaysia. But the paper’s edition went sky high.
As the train arrived, its passengers would be disgorged and new ones would hop on, perhaps shift workers going home on the reverse trip.
Many workers carried those big bags that clipped together at the sides and would bulge downwards. Inside those bags one could easily have discovered tinned containers with clip on lids that held the previous night’s dinner leftovers. Those tucker tins and other goodies would then be eaten after the factory siren heralded the thirty minutes lunch break.
A lot of work carried out in factories was done by unskilled or semi skilled workers. It often involved very repetitive work, day in day out arms and hands sometimes combined with feet would perform the same movements all day. Those movements sometimes also had a counter on the machine and a minimum number of movements were required per day. To make extra money, it was encouraged to do more movements with working faster or taking shorter breaks. Often safety shields on machinery would be disengaged for extra speed, risking workers losing hands or limbs by compromising on safety.
But what sustenance the men derived from their tucker boxes of the previous night’s morsels, many women would get for tuppence out of the slotted coin machines fastened on the wall next to the bundy clock, in the form of headache powders. The bundy clock was that dreaded invention that would stamp arrival and finishing times at the factory. Some stricter regimes also had time for lunch breaks recorded on those machines.
It wasn’t so much the headache or other ailment those women suffered from, no it was more for the enjoyment of ‘getting a lift’, as I was often told. It was also not the single occasional paper foil of headache powder, no, three or four a day, and every day. Are you a bit sick, I asked? “No no, it picks me up you know, it makes me feel a bit better”.
Years later, when thousands of women developed liver and kidney ailments it was blamed on those headache powders, the ingredient of phenacetin was the culprit. Many women ended up with all sorts of organ breakdowns through their overuse.
I sometimes thought that in those times, with the six o’clock swill at the ‘Locomotive or Cricketer’s Arm’ and similar, and those men pissing money on boots and porcelain, with pyjama clad kids hanging around pubs waiting and hoping daddy would come home soon for dinner, had a lot to do with the ‘lift’ that those factory women were getting and needing out of the tuppence phenacetin loaded headache powder slot machines.
Then there were those that did not have clip on bags nor clipped tucker boxes. These were the recently arrived Europeans from complicated countries and backgrounds. Thick accents, some heavily vowel rounded, others guttural consonantly. Many silently doing the factory processing work, week in and out, bending over machinery, often imported from their home country, making bolts and nuts or putting thread on same.
Hungarians, Czechs, and Slavs with professorial demeanours and qualifications from Giessen or Vienna and with Cum Laude as well, doing now in factories what the Bill O’Reilly’s had done for generations. These were the times of ‘workman’s tickets, factory work and European migration’.



Susan,
I do miss the articles of Horton and Stronach and many others, Sheridan Emmjays and yours. I can’t believe that the ‘unleashed’ has become so tame and repetitive.
Why did the fire in the belly be allowed to go out ?
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Gerard, The last 2 weekends I have spent time on UL now that I am housebound and yes I agree with you the fire is extinguished.
One other issue is the speed of moderation. I think the term is opium for slow working dope.
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Smoochy smoochy kiss kiss, c’mon take me on
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Hungie and Jules, we boosted Lyndon’s replies up to 42. I wonder why we do it, are we so bored… 🙂
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Yes Helvi we are bored 😕
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Bleedin ell that’s a mouthfull!
Hungarians, Czechs, and Slavs with professorial demeanours and qualifications from Giessen or Vienna and with Cum Laude as well, doing now in factories what the Bill O’Reilly’s had done for generations.
But I like it. As they say. A good narrative
Oi’ll give it foive!!
You wouldn’t know that one I suppose. ..A test for you?
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Ooops forgot the tick.
I invariably do. I don’t know why.
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I used to worry about the South Africans, the ones i met had tendency to treat other people as if from a lower caste. Must be that the nice ones had avoided me.
Serves me right for lumping my South Africans in the too difficult basket. Lo and behold last New Year’s party i met not only one but two most likeable SA blokes…
It seems that we base our opinions on one or two incidents. I loved the Argentinians I met, even the machos. A couple of bad eggs in Chile made me dislike the poor Chileans until i met the lovely Julio, his nice sister and kindly mum…
PS. My Aussie painter sealed the fire damage with ‘bleed seal’, which is an acrylic paint, in our son’s bedroom, and nothing bled through. He was fifteen and was learning to smoke with his friends and started a fire instead… never took up smoking.
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This was meant to be a reply to Warrigal below, it jumped up…
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I know I’ve told this one before, but it’s a beaut so here we go again.
Sche refers to that post Mandella flush of South African arrivals who left RSA when the ANC got in as “the new boat people”. They came here rich with their apartheid spoils and in a week or two they’ve got a new boat.
Boom boom.
But of course life has a way of then sending you a white South African that turns out to be a great friend. Bigotry bowled over in a single meeting. Things are seldom as our prejudices would have them.
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You Aussies better stay lovable, or…
The same goes for the Greeks and for the old Englishmen….
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Loved it G. I’m partial to a railway story. We had a Fairbridge boy that used to board with us in Orange when he left Fairbridge. He worked on the railways. He was a fireman on the old steam trains. They didn’t electrify the line out to Lithgow until 1958 and it stayed steam all the way to Broken Hill for many years yet. I think it was the late 60’s or early 70’s before it all went Diesel Electric.
I loved steam trains. I still do, and one of my most enduring memories is of being allowed to ride with him and the driver in the cab of a double Garratt hauling a huge train of coke(?) from East Fork at Orange to Broken Hill. I had to get off at Molong unfortunately. I think I would have enjoyed steaming along at top speed across the western plains.
The Garratts where one of the last and most powerful steam engines used on the railways in Australia. When those two big engines got up a head of steam the “chuff” was deafening and to my young mind it was a thrill ride from start to finish. Remember these were the days when wanting to be an engine driver or a fireman was a common aspiration. The railways offered jobs for life.
Our boarder’s elder brother became a school teacher and taught at Orange Public School. I remember him telling me in the playground that I wasn’t allowed to call him by his first name while we were at school. I must try and find them both, if they’re still in the land of the living.
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G, have you noticed that ticket you’ve used to illustrate your story was issued by the “Mumbles Electric Railway” and is for a “workman” who perhaps works at “Mumbles Pier”?
http://www.welshwales.co.uk/mumbles_railway_swansea.htm
Check it out
The very pier!
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Yes, I know. You are sharp Waz!
The Australian ticket was bright red and had the weekly number stamped on it. I could not find the local version ticket.
My father, who was totally absent-minded, had an European ‘reffo’ attache case. He used to take a bottle of milk on the train to work.
They were glass bottles with silver foil milk caps. On a hot morning he drank some and put the bottle upright in his case. He forgot about it till he put the bag onto the overhead luggage rack.
The two pasengers next to him copped a load of milk.
This story we lived off for years.
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Those silver capped bottles where de rigueur in those days. The milkman would leave them on your step or box or whatever and the Noisy Miners would come and peck a hole through the foil and have a little drink.
The worst of it was at school where we all got a third of a pint of milk a day from the government. In Orange in winter the milk froze, having been delivered during the early hours of the morning, and the P&C gave up and made coco instead. Much betterer. In summer no one thought to refrigerate or even keep cool the galvanised iron crates of tiny bottles and by the time the silver foil was cracked at play lunch the milk was often sour.
I also remember a radio serial in the mornings before school called “Strong Lad” a sort of cobber Popeye kid who got his friends out of all kinds of scrapes after consuming a pint of milk. There was a special sound effect that went with it. A sort of glugging, gulping sound repeated one supposes until the bottle is empty. I can still do the sound effect now. Wanna hear it?
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Warrigal, your milk bottle stories make me remember mine.
When at primary school in Finland we took a bottle of milk and a sandwich from home, but we also used to get a so-called warm meal for lunch. Nothing to write home about; sometimes a bland vegetable soup , sometimes just some lumpy porridge.
The cook could not cook and I could not eat her offerings. I was not allowed to bring it back to her after one spoonful. So I drank my milk quickly and then spooned the aweful muck into the empty milk bottle and took it home.
My sister loved the cook and her food, but the bitch hated me…
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I fell off the cliff in Mumbles when I was young. Just a bit of useless information I thought I’d share. FYI – I survived with only a few stitches in the head. It could explain a lot!
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All previous “head cases” are welcome here. You fit right in.
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Hi Gerard,
This is another lovely piece of literary journalism from your pen (keys?)
There is not enough outlets in Australia for this type of journalism. I know I’ve written many that I’ve needed to turn into an ‘opinion piece’ to get published. (apologies Emmjay, but a girl has to eat).
It would be lovely to have more magazines the calibre of ‘Esquire’ and ‘Punch’ in Australia, wouldn’t it? Keep it up Gerard. Love your work.
Apropos to Bex, my grandmother used to let me eat an aspirin every day when I stayed with her – I loved the taste. Yes, I was a strange child.
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Susan,
I loved your articles too, especially your story of your special ‘dad’.
Those fifties and sixties were very interesting in the sense that, all of a sudden, so much of another world was starting to influence and change Australia.
You are right, ‘ A girl has to eat’, and so has this boy.
The UL is featuring the same type of articles by many new contributors and seem to be disregarding many pieces by the original writers.
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You know what Gerard, I think that the new UL is really a vehicle for the opinion of ABC staffers. They are keeping the likes of you and me (and others) on because they need to beef up the content, But have you noticed how most pieces have become the effort of ‘first timers’ – probably commisssioned.?
The story of the publication my latest article (on Julian Moti) that UL published is a doozy. ABC will be hearing from the Media Alliance soon. CT is quite a piece of work. Anyway, we should stop whinging and do something about it. Waddyathink?
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Luvy luvy kiss kiss, what about Post or Pix with half naked bikini models?
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HOO, you’re incorrigible… or severely frustrated!
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Yes I agree atomou. Hoogley
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boo hoo hoo, I’m taking my bat and goin’ home
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The incorrigibles in the prison population are either lifers or habitual reoffenders
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Nice story Gez, yes Panadol which is toxic to the liver in the right amounts took over from Bex
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Gez, I’m yet to read this properly – steaming along with more work than the First Mate and I can handle – as we race towards the March cliff (of no work scheduled) – but my skim alone was wonderful.
My Dad had one of those bags. It was called a “Gladstone Bag” in our family.
My Dad’s diabetes forced the cessation of all non-prescibed analgesics – and probably saved both of their lives from kidney failure. My folks were Bex people and my grandparents took Vincent’s powders. First thing every morning.
I think the bitter bite was the addictive element.
Bye-bye kidneys !
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Now, gerard, that’s a very nicely told story, I almost felt the Sunday afternoon gloom raising it’s sad melancholy head. Maybe time for one or more of those Bex powders…. 🙂
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‘…Europeans from complicated countries and backgrounds’, put the smile back on my face so I did not need that Bex after all.
I used to work with a girl from Uruguay, she was married to an Aussie bloke and her English was very good, her accent was most charming. When she said Vincent, it sounded more like Bincent. I suppose Bex and Bincent make a good pair…sound-wise.
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I worry about Uruguay. All the Uruguayans I’ve ever met have problems.
During our rebuilding a Uruguayan painter offered to drop me were I stood, explaining that he was the painter and he would determine what paint was used and how it would be applied. (Sounds vaguely familiar…., strangely reminiscent of another small person with personality problems….).
I had tried to explain to him that applying cheap acrylic paint over the still active tars left on the walls from the fire would see an ongoing chemical reaction between the tar and the paint that would have our walls turning a kind of stained ugly blotchy brown, probably about the time the cheque would have cleared. I went on to suggest that he might like to clean the tars or maybe apply a coat of “Bleed-Seal” but he had a better idea. The whole thing ended with him walking off the job after throwing paint over me.
His cheque never cleared because we never gave him one and I still don’t know what he thought he might achieve by offering violence to the guy that was covering his bill. Must have something to do with South American machismo.
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