Kirkstall Forge

Once more the fine WordPress Posting Robot has dipped into the archives whilst I am absent from these parts and come up with this fine rendition of the day that Kirkstall Forge upgraded its timekeeping equipment and thenceforth discovered that wood can float…

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A few years later when I’d left the electrical industry and joined my fathers company flogging time recording instruments I discovered another scrap metal – brass.

My dad and my grandad had made a living since the 1920’s selling the big wooden cased, wind-up timeclocks to industry all over Yorkshire, huge industrial timepieces made up almost entirely of brass. By the time I joined the company these relics of a bygone era were already being scrapped in their hundreds and my dad made a tidy few pounds in refurbishing them for household use – idiots who didn’t mind their home lives being ruined by the constant clicking, ticking and clunking would pay him substantial amounts of money (cash) for a refurbished timeclock and after he’d put the mechanisms through our ultrasonic cleaning tanks, in his parlance they’d “shine like shit on a blanket”.

But the brass inside them was worth money too, and it nearly caused big trouble for us once.

Kirkstall Forge used to be one of the city’s major employer, not surprisingly it was a forge where huge industrial axles were stamped out of molten metal, there had been a forge on the site for hundreds of years and it was built alongside the River Aire for want of water power – by the time I grew acquainted with the site it was a huge industrial complex on both banks of the river with its own private bridge to link both parts of the factory.

They had a couple of dozen of the old wood cased clocks that my grandfather had flogged them fifty years previously and when the day came to replace them we did so with a nice lucrative order for some boring anonymous metal boxes made in Germany, the wood cased clocks were all removed to a storeroom as no-one had mentioned what they wanted to do with them.

The clerks who worked in the timekeeping office knew what they wanted to do with the old clocks though and conspiring with my dads business partner Michael they kept them carefully under lock and key for a few months until they decided it was safe to start breaking them up for the scrap brass value.

Four of them were in on the scheme and they decided that a saturday would be the best time to break up the clocks as only a few shifts worked at the weekend and more importantly none of the senior management would be on site.

All went well for a few hours until the conspiring foursome hit upon the first problem – what to do with the wooden cases when the mechanisms had been removed – twenty-odd empty cases were damning evidence of their theft and couldn’t be hidden from peering management eyes forever, they could burn them but it would take time, and a huge bonfire in the factory car park would surely draw attention to their scheming, it was not a viable solution.

The solution came after a few moments of deep thought and a mug of tea – the river.

They carried the huge, highly polished and distinctive glass fronted clock cases out onto the bridge and dropped them one by one into the river – problem solved, the first dozen were gone and they returned to the store room to continue with their subterfuge.

Suddenly there was a knock on the door of the storeroom and a loud voice demanding that they unlock it and reveal themselves – sheepishly they did so to find a security officer standing there – caught red-handed they simply explained that they were going to donate the scrap brass the the company kiddies christmas party fund, words which stuck in the craw of all of them, they were hailed as generous benefactors and received thanks from the board of directors for their initiative and thoughfulness.

And later they discovered how they had been rumbled – by the River Aire.

When they dumped the clock cases in the river no-one had bothered to watch them for a few minutes to see if they’d sink, they didn’t, they floated.

And they floated gently down the wide, mucky River Aire, drifting slowly through the Kirkstall Forge complex until they passed ever so gracefully in front of the glass fronted boardroom where, unbeknown to the conspirator’s, there was a full meeting of the board of directors underway, Saturday being the only quiet day that they could all fully focus on the business in hand.

You can only imagine the look of puzzlement on the faces of the GKN Axles Kirkstall Forge higher enchelon management team as they gazed out of their picture windows at all of their timeclocks floating gently by…

5 thoughts on “Kirkstall Forge

  1. Great story Gary. I lived near the forge, about a mile up Kirkstall Road toward New Road Side. Is the forge still open?

  2. Al – eBay was made for him, “everything has a value” was his motto, he wouldn’t have had auctions though, just “Buy It Now” offers and the speil that accompanied the photos would have made you wonder how you had lived so far without whatever it was he was selling. I’ve also checked eBay today and they don’t seem to have a section for “suit lengths” so he’d have the market all to himself.

  3. Brutus – The Forge has now closed in the past couple of years and the site is up for sale – probably to be purchased when the housing market picks up again and riverside apartments in Horsforth become the vogue.

    They actually had a building right in the middle of the works which was reputed to be the original forge as used by the monks from Kirkstall Abbey 700 years ago, presumably that bit will have to stay.

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