I
started school in Bessbrook Convent School in 1921 and in 1923 transferred to
St Malachy’s Boys School where I completed my school Leaving Certificate in
1931.
On
my fourteenth birthday I was recommemded by Mr Campbell who was the chief cashier
of Bessbrook Spinning Company, to take employment as junior clerk in the Mill’s
wages department.
At
that time there were 2500 people employed by the company and my job was to
stamp and date insurance cards and to post any mail. On Wednesday mornings I accompanied the chief
clerk in the company’s Rolls Royce to withdraw the wages for the entire
workforce. Two policemen, the chief
clerk and me went into the Belfast Banking Company in Hill Street, Newry and the amount
required would be withdrawn in cash.
In
order to make it easier to make up individual wages, it was my job also to have
a list of any individual coins or notes needed – shillings, florins,
half-crowns, ten-shilling notes, pound notes and five-pound notes. The odd ten-pound note was also withdrawn but
only very rarely because nobody ever earned as much as that in those days.
The
average earnings then was about one pound ten shillings per week. On returning to the Mill the wages were made
up by the chief clerk on Wednesday evenings. They were stored in the main strong-room safe and paid out to the
employees on Thursday mornings by Mr Honeyford.
While
I was working in the wages office I attended night school in Newry Technical
College where I studied
shorthand and accountancy up to final balance. I then studied English and Latin in Stapleton’s Academy for two further
years.
I
had an ambition to go into engineering and I left the Mill to complete my
three-year course in ‘precision engineering’ and ‘workshop practice’ at Chester
College of Technology. I then was
employed by Cammill & Laird in the engine-repair shop and I worked there
during the Second World War.
I
returned to Bessbrook where I met and married Kathleen Kelly from Dorsey,
Cullyhanna. We settled in Flynntown
where we reared nine children.
I
was employed for a number of years by BICC where I worked as a machine-fitter.
In
Bessbrook we always had a number of good neighbours both in Rock Row and Quarry
Row but the houses had no bathroom or flush toilets or hot water supply. In the early Seventies the houses were
demolished to make room for the present Fr Cullen Park, where we finally
settled.