First
Generation
John and
Mary Worrall
John
Worrall (1754 - 1834) settled in Willenhall during the 1780s.
Like many in the Willenhall area, he used a small building at
the back of his house to make locks. There was no machinery in
those days; the locks had to be made entirely by hand. The
master locksmith was intelligent and inventive, John and
Mary had three children, who were baptised in St. Giles’
Church, Willenhall.
Second
Generation
William |
John
(1788-1851) |
Elizabeth |
Lock
makers taught their sons to make locks at a very early age, maybe as
young as nine or ten. It was usual for family members to help with
the business, as young John did. The children rarely received a
school education, but they became professionals in their trade.
Young
John Worrall married Mary Taylor on the 5th April 1812 in St.
Peter's Church, Wolverhampton. They had four sons, who also became
locksmiths.
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This
picture, taken in the mid twentieth century, shows a derelict lock
factory at the back of a house in Willenhall. In the 18th and 19th
centuries this building would have been just one of the many used in
the family lock making industry, but naturally it would have been in
better condition. |
Third Generation
Daniel
(1813-1877)
born in
Willenhall |
Thomas
(1818-1894)
born in
Willenhall |
David
born in
Walsall |
John
born in
Willenhall |
And
so father, son and grandsons would be at their workbenches each day
making the different parts that would eventually become a lock, which
was a hard job. They relied on the locally found coal and iron to
produce the wrought iron needed for the locks. The iron was bought in
round or square bars and hammered over the anvil, usually at night.
Parts were hammered out to a rough size and then filed down to shape.
The file and hammer were in fact the most important tools of the
locksmith. Any holes in the locks were punched in over the anvil or
drilled out with a bow and stock, a process carried on until very late
into the nineteenth century.
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To
sell their products the master of the firm used to travel every
Saturday to the factors in Wolverhampton or even Birmingham, and
return with orders for the next week or so. Padlocks could be sold in
the nineteenth century at a wholesale price of 6/6d. per gross and
retail at a penny each.
In 1833, according to the Bridgen’s Directory of the Borough of
Wolverhampton, John Worrall was a Rim Locksmith, of New Square [maybe
New Street], Willenhall. In 1834, at the age of 78, John Worrall
senior died. His son, John, carried on the business of lock making and
moved to Walsall Street.
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This
is from an etching by an unknown artist of the locksmith's forge in
the late eighteenth century.
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Daniel,
his eldest son (1813 - 1877) also worked in the business. He married
Ellen Meanley from Bromley, Niddlesex and after their son, Thomas, was
born in 1837 they moved to East St. George, London, where they had two
more sons. During the time they lived there Daniel was employed as a
locksmith.
Fourth
Generation
Thomas
(1837-1900s)
born in
Willenhall |
Daniel
born in
London |
George
born in
London |
In
1841 when the first national census was taken, John and Mary Worrall,
who were in their fifties, were living with three of their sons,
Thomas, David and John (who were the third generation), and making
locks in King Street, Willenhall. Also living with them and working in
the lock factory were four apprentices whose ages were 10, 11, 12 and
14, and a labourer. The ten-year-old apprentice was named John Hunt,
whose father had died.
As
apprentices were a cheap form of labour for the lock makers, they
deserve a mention, as they were a part of the history of the
lockmaking trade. |
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Children
who were in the care of the Parochial Officers or in the Workhouse
were placed as apprentices to the lock-makers, to spend ten years as
members of their household. Some were badly treated and made to work
long hours, sometimes from dawn to dusk each day with very little to
eat and sometimes poor food.
The
Apprentices often developed humped backs; because of their age their
bones were still undeveloped.
This
pictures shows how they had to stand for many hours in an unnatural
position whilst they filed the metal.
A
lot of them died from consumption or other ailments because of the
cramped space in the workshops. |
When
nearing the end of his apprenticeship, at around the age of twenty or
twenty one, an apprentice had to design and make a lock entirely on
his own. These locks were usually very decorative, and had a very
complex system of wards. They would often have unusual extras, such as
a set of chimes that played when the bolt was “shot”, or an
indicator to show the number of times the lock had to be used. These
locks were then sold for a very high price by the apprentice's master.
The
qualified apprentices then moved on, sometimes being self-employed as
a Journeyman Locksmith travelling the country, as the master could not
afford to pay them a man's wage. |
This
young boy, Alexander Pitt, born in 1895 was twelve years old and
working in a lock factory when this picture was taken. He had left
school when he was eleven.
He
had been a pupil at the Catholic School where the parents had to pay
threepence per week for their children's education. Children at that
time had to stay at school until they were twelve years old, and so
his parents had to continue paying threepence per week until he could
officially leave school.
His
job in the lock factory was filing, which was a hard job. Because he
wasn't tall enough to reach the bench, he had to stand on a box to
carry out this arduous task.
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Return to
the Gazetteer |
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Proceed to
Part Two |
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