Navvy
Navvy, a shorter form of navigator (UK) or navigational engineer (US), is particularly applied to describe the manual labourers working on major civil engineering projects and occasionally (in North America) to refer to mechanical shovels and earth moving machinery. The term was coined in the late 18th century in Great Britain when numerous canals were being built, which were also sometimes known as "navigations", or "eternal navigations", intended to last forever.
Nationalities
A study of 19th century British railway contracts by David Brooke, coinciding with census returns, conclusively demonstrates that the great majority of navvies in Britain were English. He does, however, state that 'only the ubiquitous Irish can be regarded as a truly international force in railway construction'[1] although the Irish only comprised about 30% of the navvies.[2] By 1818, high wages in North America attracted many Irish workers to become a major part of the workforce in the construction of the Erie Canal in New York State and similar projects; they also participated in building canals in Britain,[3] where by the 20th century they were the predominant workforce.[4]
Migration from canal to railway projects
The construction of canals in Britain was superseded by contracts to construct railway projects from 1830 onward, which developed into the railway manias, and the same term was applied to the workmen employed on building rail tracks, their tunnels, cuttings and embankments. There were 250,000 navvies employed during the apex of British railway expansion efforts.[5]
Navvies working on railway projects typically continued to work using hand tools, supplemented with explosives (particularly when tunnelling, and to clear obdurate difficulties). Steam-powered mechanical diggers or excavators (initially called 'steam navvies') were available in the 1840s, but were not considered cost effective until much later in the 19th century, especially in Britain and Europe where experienced labourers were easily obtained and comparatively cheap. Elsewhere, for example in the
- "United States and Canada, where labour was more scarce and expensive, mechanical diggers were used. In the States the machine tradition became so strong that [...] the word navvy is understood to mean not a man but a steam shovel."[6]
Navvy culture
Being a navvy labourer became a cultural experience unto its own during the 19th century. Most accounts chronicling the life of a navvy worker come from local newspapers portraying navvies as drunk, and unruly men, but fail to provide any mention that families were formed and raised despite the navvy's traveling demands.[7]
The navvies working on the Liverpool and Manchester Railway were paid daily and their pay reputedly went on ale, leaving little for food. When the workers were unfit to work, monies were subtracted from their wages and meal tokens were issued. These tokens could be handed in at meal caravans for a bowl of soup and a portion of bread. At first the token was a slip of paper called a "flimsy" because of its thickness. In today's terms it would be similar to a grade called "bank paper". As these tokens could be copied by the forgers, the Liverpool and Manchester Railway supplied its contractors with six-sided food tokens that were surrendered for meals. These were cut from brass and had the initials LMR stamped upon them. This reduced the problems of drunken navvies and eliminated the local farm labourers freeloading from the food caravans. Tokens and a description of their use can be found in the Museum of Science & Industry in Manchester.
In the mid-1800s some efforts were made by evangelical Anglicans led by Elizabeth Garnett to administer to the perceived religious needs of navvy settlements, with preaching, a newsletter and charity work.[8] The construction tycoon Morton Peto encouraged religious services for his workforce, as well as providing some social services to the navvy populations.[9]
Living conditions
Many of the navvies employed to build the railways in England during the early part of the 19th century lived in squalid temporary accommodations referred to as "shanty towns." Due in part to constructing through rural areas, and, in part, the navvies negative reputation, two-thirds of the railway construction sites had housing erected specifically for the navvy.[13] Initially, the housing "huts" were constructed quickly and meant to be temporary. As a result, little thought was given to comfort, let alone sanitation, which was actually a prominent issue for everyone during the Victorian era. Shanties "were clearly unhealthy places in which to live, and it was not uncommon for a navvy community to be overtaken by cholera, dysentery or typhus."[14]
In addition to these unhygienic living conditions, navvies shared housing, some even sleeping on floors. The majority of navvies were Englishmen, with only 30% of the group being Irish. While this ratio varied from navvy shanty town to shanty town, sleeping arrangements were segregated.[15] In at least one documented instance, a riot broke out between the two nationalities in one navvy shanty town, causing local magistrates to arrest 12 individuals.[15] Though, this is not necessarily indicative of relations between the English and Irish in all navvy gangs.
Over time, housing arrangements progressed positively, with the structures being built with more care, and even attached land being offered for use so navvies and their families could grow their own food.[16]
Working conditions for railway navvies
In addition to their nomadic living arrangements, navvies confronted varying degrees of dangerous work environments that depended both on the terrain, and the locals' reception of them.
Due to limited safety protocols, navvies were frequently injured or killed on the job. For each mile of rail laid, there was an average of 3 work related deaths,[17] which was even higher when working on sections that required tunneling.[18] The particularly high incidence of navvy mortality during the construction of the Woodhead Tunnel prompted the Enquiry of 1846, which eventually lead to the need for the formation of and evaluation by a Select Committee on Railway Laborours 1846.[19]
The natural tension between locals and outsiders sometimes bred distrust of the navvies. Occasionally, this strain between the two would result in violence such as riots, or death. One such instance occurred at Sampford Peverell in 1811. John Chave, a local who was regionally well-known for living in a "haunted house," was approached by a group of inebriated navvies.[20] The encounter left Chave feeling threatened, so after proceeding home with the navvy group in tow, he used a gun to shoot a warning shot into the crowd, which hit and killed one of the group members causing a riot to ensue.[21] The death was later deemed a justifiable homicide.[21] As newspapers reported on similar conflicts, anticipated tensions grew for the local inhabitants of the regions the navvy worked in, when they arrived.
In many cases, though, as time passed, the local establishments benefited from navvy business, which strengthened relations, and even forged friendships with an occasional local helping teach reading and writing to some navvies.[22]
Navvy slang
Many slang terms were used as a method of communication among navvies.[23] The use of slang facilitated bonding among the navvies as it was frequently used for a laugh, or as a method of asking a buddy to watch your back while you sneaked a smoke break, or went off for a drink. Although, they would also use slang nicknames to talk about themselves, newcomers, gangers (foremen), or inspectors. Much of the terminology appears to be fluid, relying primarily on rhyming with the intended meaning. One example provided by Daniel William Barrett in his book, "Life and work among the navvies," shares the following navvy slang, "'Now, Jack, I'm goin' to get a tiddley wink of pig's ear; keep your mince pies on the Billy Gorman.'" [24] This purportedly means that the speaker is going for a beer, and for the person being addressed to keep his eyes on the foreman. Their exclusionary code usually left outsiders confused.
Contemporary use of the term "navvy"
- An excavating machine or steam shovel, as noted above.
- In Britain, "navvy" sometimes means a workman digging a hole in a public road to get access to buried services such as gas mains or water mains.
- In Britain, the name "navvies" is sometimes given to members of the Inland Waterways Protection Society and other canal restoration societies.
- In Australia, the term "navvy" is still applied to railway workers.[25] Some areas of the country, particularly towns and cities along the sugarcane belt of the state of Queensland, still employ teams of navvies on a permanent basis to lay and maintain the state's narrow-gauge cane-train tracks. Whereas Council workers who work on general civic projects advise of their worksites with fluorescent orange "Workers Ahead" signage, navvies use pale blue "Navvies at Work" signs.
- In British Columbia, "navvy jack" is a common term in construction and landscaping trades and in their respective supply stores for 1/2", 3/4" crushed rock and sand to be mixed with Portland cement to make concrete.[26] The usage derives from "Navvy Jack", by ordinary name Jack Thomas, a former navvy who used a rowboat to mine good-quality gravel from beaches in West Vancouver and infrequently ran a rowboat-ferry for settlers on Burrard Inlet and English Bay.
- The term "navvy" has also been used with a wide variety of other meanings, such as a synonym for "hitman".
In popular culture
- John Henry, an American folk hero.
- Alfred Doolittle in George Bernard Shaw's play Pygmalion is referred to as a navvy.
- Navvies are referenced throughout George Orwell's fictionalized memoir Down and Out in Paris and London.
- Gordon Lightfoot used the term navvies in his "Canadian Railroad Trilogy," a song written to commemorate Canada's centennial in 1967: "We are the navvies who work upon the railway, swingin' our hammers in the bright, blazing sun." The song debuted on CBC's "100 Years Young" and later appeared on the album The Way I Feel.
- Andy Partridge's song "Towers of London" on XTC's album Black Sea is inspired by a Dickensonian perspective of the thankless contribution of navvies to Victorian era London.
- The first song on Pere Ubu's second album, Dub Housing, is called "Navvy."
- The Pogues song "Navigator" is based on the life of a navvy.
- Dominic Behan's song "McAlpine's Fusiliers" describes the navvy life.
- The Genesis song "Driving the Last Spike" describes the life of the navvies.
- In the Doctor Who episode "The Unquiet Dead", the Doctor introduces himself to Charles Dickens, prompting Dickens to reply "Doctor? You look more like a navvy." In "Destiny of the Daleks", after Romana answers several questions about the chemistry of concrete, the Doctor says she "would make a first class navvy".
- In the Gaelic Storm song "Don't Go for 'The One'", Tracey McCall is described as having "arms like a navvy and a face like dried fruit".
- In Brendan Behan's Borstal Boy, the protagonist joins a prison navvy gang.
- The Bitmap Brothers' steampunk styled video game, The Chaos Engine (1993), includes a playable character called "The Navvie", who is said to have single-handedly constructed the Banshee Boardwalk.
- The British TV show Time Team, in the episode titled "Blood, Sweat and Beers", covered the living conditions of a railway navvies' construction site that was in use for five years on the Settle-Carlisle Line
See also
Notes
- ↑ Brooke (1983). Page 167.
- ↑ "Railway songs". www.nrm.org.uk. 2014-05-09. Retrieved 2015-12-10.
- ↑ Way (1997). Page 94.
- ↑ Cowley (2001)
- ↑ "A story from The Last Main Line - DEV SITE". www.railwayarchive.org.uk. Retrieved 2015-12-11.
- ↑ Coleman (1968). Page 54.
- ↑ "A story from The Last Main Line - DEV SITE". www.railwayarchive.org.uk. Retrieved 2015-12-11.
- ↑ Coleman, Terry The Railway Navvies Penguin 1968 pp176-86
- ↑ Coleman, Terry The Railway Navvies Penguin 1968 p174
- ↑ "Wymondham Heritage Trail" (PDF). Wymondham and Edmondthorpe Civic Society (WECS). April 2009. Retrieved 2012-11-24.
- ↑ "Navvies Cottages Number 2, Wymondham". British Listed Buildings Online. Retrieved 2012-11-24.
- ↑ English Heritage Building ID: 355268
- ↑ Barrett, Daniel William (1883-01-01). Life and work among the navvies. pp. 39–44.
- ↑ "A story from The Last Main Line - DEV SITE". www.railwayarchive.org.uk. Retrieved 2015-12-11.
- 1 2 Barrett, Daniel William (1883-01-01). Life and work among the navvies. p. 77.
- ↑ "A story from The Last Main Line - DEV SITE". www.railwayarchive.org.uk. Retrieved 2015-12-11.
- ↑ "Railway songs". www.nrm.org.uk. 2014-05-09. Retrieved 2015-12-10.
- ↑ "Navvies - History Learning Site". History Learning Site. Retrieved 2015-12-10.
- ↑ BROOKE, DAVID (1989-01-01). "The Railway Navvy—a reassessment". Construction History 5: 35–45.
- ↑ Burton, Anthony (2012-12-01). Canal 250: The Story of Britain's Canals. The History Press. ISBN 9780752494623.
- 1 2 "The Navvies' Riot". Sampford Peverell Society. Retrieved 2015-12-10.
- ↑ "A story from The Last Main Line - DEV SITE". www.railwayarchive.org.uk. Retrieved 2015-12-11.
- ↑ Barrett, Daniel William (1883-01-01). Life and work among the navvies. pp. 39–44.
- ↑ Barrett, Daniel William (1883-01-01). Life and work among the navvies. p. 40.
- ↑ The Navvy. Hempsted, N.C. Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin, February, 1998 pp 61-63
- ↑ "Navvy Jack". Aggregates. Butler Brothers Supplies Ltd. Retrieved October 27, 2011.
References
- Brooke, David, (1983). "The Railway Navvy: 'That Despicable Race of Men'". David & Charles, London. ISBN 0-7153-8449-X
- Coleman, Terry (1968). The Railway Navvies: a history of the men who made the railways. London: Penguin Books Ltd.
- Cowley, Ultan (2001) "The Men who Built Britain: A History of the Irish Navvy". Dublin: Wolfhound Press. ISBN 0-86327-829-9
- Dónall Mac Amhlaigh, Dialann Deoraí (Dublin: Clóchomhar, 1968), translated into English as An Irish Navvy: The Diary of an Exile, London: Routledge, 1964. ISBN 1-903464-36-6
- Way, Peter (1997). Common Labor: Workers and the Digging of North American Canals, 1780-1860. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-5522-5.