Sunday, 31 July 2016

A CARPENTER'S STORY - BEGINNINGS


Well I did it, I finally did it. Three years of my life, dedicated to learning. But now I am a qualified Carpenter/Joiner, City and Guilds Level 3. At least that is what the certificates will say when they finally arrive through my letter box. I can officially say, I have changed my occupation from graphic artist to carpenter or chippy. But I can honestly say I don't really feel that I can really call myself a carpenter just yet. I still feel more comfortable in front of a computer screen with a mouse in my hand, getting to grips with Photoshop, than I do with hanging a new street door and fitting all the locks.

To call yourself a carpenter/joiner you need many years of practice and experience. At 52 years if, God willing, I reach retirement, I might be able to say, yes I was a carpenter. Working as a maintenance man for Southwark Council is probably not the best environment to hone and practise your new skills as a carpenter, youre more likely to be handling, plastic and chipboard than timber. But maybe I will touch on that in another blog in the future.

The craft of carpentry goes back to the very beginning of man's existence on this earth. I remember many years ago doing a series of Bible talks for some young people on a camp. The subject was Noah. I told the children that Noah had a lot in common with Jesus, who would arrive many years later. Noah as well as being a preacher and a saviour, was a carpenter too. He had to be a skilled carpenter if he was a going to build an ark or gopher wood, which would be used to save the world. Jesus was firstly a carpenter, then a preacher and finally a saviour, crucified on a cross of wood.

My journey into carpentry has much more humble beginnings, and there is no large amounts of water involved, thank goodness! Though once, when putting back some floors in a council house, I did manage to place a screw directly into a copper water pipe. Thankfully, that day, a plumber was on hand, to put right a potentially disastrous situation, avoid a flood and a call to Direct Line.


My journey started with my lovely Dad, Sidney Walter Whitton. My dad was never a carpenter, but like men of that generation, who had lived through the war, he seemed, to a young lad like myself, to be able to do just about everything: fix my bike, mend my toys and make things work that didn't. My dad had several jobs after the war, the most scary of which was that of a steeple jack. I have pictures of him at the top of these enormous tall chimneys, dangling there in very basic bosun's chair, a piece of wood and some rope. No hard hat, no safety clothing, just a bare torso, painting away, smiling and laughing, not scared at all. I miss my Dad terribly sometimes. Just writing this brings back so many memories. When Dad wasn't working, which he was, 6 full days a week, and half day on Sunday sometimes, up and down the country, he was making things at home. I think my mum missed him a great deal when he was working away from home. But when he made things, it was not always with wood but rather with metal like brass and aluminum. He made buses, canons, planes, a sword etc and all in miniature and from scratch, no kits. He would sit at a little table or in the kitchen, a cup of tea next to him, a woodbine cigarette smoking away in the ash try (in the days before he gave up and became addicted to Polo mints). There he would use a small vice, along with an assortment of tools and put together these one-of-a-kinds. My older brother Steve obviously inherited that love of all things metal. He worked with my dad for several years and went on to own his own foundry in Charlton.


But my dad also put his hand to making things out of wood. He made wooden forts for soldiers, a full size sewing box for mum, a miniature sewing box, a tiny model of the Cutty Sark, crib boards and small tables. One of the small tables he made, I can only describe as a double top table. On one top he painted a simple chess board and on the other a colourful bird. It's these memories that maybe placed a seed in me and gave me that interest in wood and the desire to make things.

I am 52 as I write this and some might say I have left it a bit late to life to begin a new career as a carpenter. For 32 years of my life, since leaving school in 1980, I worked in the print industry. For the greater part of those 32 years, I was an artworker or a graphic artist. I assumed that would always be my trade until retirement or death, whatever came first. But life doesn’t always turn out like you plan, or hope for. In my 32 years in the print I had just 4 jobs and pretty much continuous employment in that time. But then I lost my job, the details of which I have tried to forget. Thereafter followed a period of over 2 years where I was out of work. Anyone who has been out of work for a long period will know how difficult it is, especially when you have a family. It grinds you down, reduces your confidence, makes you feel useless, and make you think you'll never be employed again. But worst of all is the stigma that clings to you. That said, those two plus years had some real highs as well. The extra time I got to spend with my family was probably the biggest advantage. But also, in that time, I took a Post Graduate course in Design, became a volunteer gardener and took up wood carving.

Then one day a friend I knew at Southwark Council suggested, “why don't you try for one of the apprenticeships on offer at the council”. I thought to myself “me an apprentice, at the age of 49, your joking....aren’t apprentices young people who have just left school, still covered in spots and living with mum and dad? What hope do I have of becoming an apprentice at my age, married with 4 children?”

But, I swallowed what pride I had left and looked at the vacancies on offer. Amongst the list of various office jobs, there was also a sign maker, a surveyor, a cemetery worker, a plumber and a carpenter. So I went for the position of apprentice carpenter with Mears, a maintenance contractor with the council. After 3 interviews, 2 tests and a six month process, for some reason they picked me.

Three years on, I find myself writing about my experiences, carpentry, wood carving and working for the council. As I said at the beginning, I maybe be a qualified carpenter on paper, but I am not worthy of the title yet. In my opinion carpenters are some of the most skillful people there are. They build houses, boats, churches, furniture, areoplanes, wheels, toboggans etc, the list is endless. In a book I just finished reading, called 'The man who made things out of trees' by Robert Penn, it mentions the fact that carpenters were even employed in the early days of the car industry, when the car frames were made out of ash wood. In the 1960's the London Routemaster buses were still built with wooden structural bodies. There is also a company today who make wooden bike frames, a bit pricey though at £2000. In his book he was able to get over 40 different objects made from just one ash tree. From wooden wheels to a simple tent peg, made by carpenters and related trades.

One of the reasons I chose to be come a carpenter, was that by becoming one, I would never be out of work again. Let's hope that’s the case. Anyway, I hope you have enjoyed chapter one of this story and you stick with me in the weeks and months to come. So I can share with you, the stories behind my carvings, working as a carpenter for the council, and maybe even how to make things out of wood.

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