The Neptune Shell Shop bracelet and the response to the shell crisis of 1915 – Part 1

gold bracelet belonging to Jane Ellen Bell

Neptune Shell Shop bracelet TWCMS : 2014.1484

A few weeks back I accepted a donation of a gold bracelet into TWAM’s collection. I am told that as a piece of jewellery it is unremarkable, but I think it is lovely. As TWAM’s maritime historian it is an unusual object to come to my attention, but an inscription on the inside of the bracelet’s clasp, “NEPTUNE SHELL SHOP Nov. 1918” provides a clue to its wider significance. The inscription connects the bracelet to the Neptune Engine Works of Tyne shipbuilders, Swan, Hunter & Wigham Richardson, during the First World War, and thus into my subject area. Further research has shown that shell production by Neptune Engine Works was begun in response to the shell crisis of 1915, which seems to me like a good place to start.

Inscription showing the connection to shell making in the Neptune Engine Works

Close up image of the inscription engraved on the clasp TWCMS : 2014.1484

In the spring of 1915 the shortage of high explosive shells, and its effect on the British offensive on the Western Front, created a political storm in Britain. (1) A failure to capture German fortified positions during the Battle of Aubers ridge was blamed on a lack of ammunition, with an article in The Times of 14th May 1915, demanding an increase in the supply of high explosive shells as quickly as possible. In contrast the French had been successful in their assault, and The Times correspondent had the figures to hand as to how they did it: “By dint of the expenditure of 276 rounds of high explosive per gun in one day, all the German defences, except the villages, were levelled with the ground,”. (2)

The response of the Government was swift, perhaps helped by the resignation of the First Sea Lord, Jacky Fisher, albeit over a different issue. The loss of Fisher forced the Prime Minister, Asquith, to dissolve his Liberal administration and replace it with a Liberal/Conservative Coalition. (3) On 25th May 1915, David Lloyd George, who had been Chancellor of the Exchequer, was appointed Minister of Munitions, a post created to address the shell crisis. Over the next year the energetic Lloyd George transformed munitions production to ensure that the guns at the front were well supplied with shells. One of the ways he did this was to approach engineering works that already possessed the requisite skills and experience, and encourage them to take on the business of shell manufacture. (4)

David Lloyd George, Minister of Munitions

David Lloyd George photographed in 1915 – Wiki Commons David_Lloyd_George_1915

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

At the Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson board meeting of 21st October 1915, negotiations with the Minister of Munitions were reported regarding a proposed contract for the machining and finishing of 6” shells over a period of six months. The Capital expenditure for an addition to the present Neptune Engine Works buildings and for special machines was estimated at £25,000, and it was expected that the six months work would realise a profit of £36,000. The directors agreed to proceed with the scheme provided they could make satisfactory arrangements with the Minister of Munitions and with the Trade Unions and workmen already employed at the Neptune Works.

George Burton Hunter - Swan Hunter 1880 - 1937

George Burton Hunter, Chairman of the Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson Board 1903 -1928. In 1918 he was knighted for his war services.

 

Over the next six months the project progressed rapidly. By the meeting of 16th December, the contract had been arranged, the new building was being prepared and a dozen or so of the machines had been installed. At the same meeting a proposal was put forward to enter into a further contract with the Minister of Munitions to make 2,000 six inch shell forgings per week. The Board of Directors favoured the proposal and authorised expenditure of £4,000 to £5,000 on a hydraulic press and other plant for this purpose.

 

Board minutes of Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson reporting on negotiations to start machining and finishing 6" shells.

Swan Hunter & Wigham Richardson minute book entry for 21st October 1915.

At the meeting of 17th February 1916, it was reported that the hydraulic press had been erected and arrangements made to increase the manufacture of shell forgings to 4,000 per week. A second hydraulic press was to be purchased but “the total outlay authorised by the Board will not be exceeded.” The total outlay could have been up to £30,000, but the expected profit on 6 months of machining and finishing shells was £36,000, without taking into account the profit on the 104,000 shell forgings that would be made in six months. It seems to me that this was very good business indeed! (5)

Rough shell body forgings being stacked outside the shell forge. Just over a third were machined and finished in the Neptune Shell Shop.

6″ Shell bodies being stacked outside the shell forge in Neptune Engine Works. TWAS : DS.SWH.5/3/2/3/2

There had been labour shortages in shipyards and marine engineering works right from the start of the war when men rushed to join the army and navy. Conscription for single men aged between 18 and 41 had been introduced on the 24th January 1916. Recruitment for the Neptune Shell Shop will have been taking place at around this time so it is unsurprising that photographs taken in October 1917 show a largely female workforce. We don’t have records of the ratio of men and women employed, but The Hartlepool National Shell Factory, a similar shell manufacturing operation set up in the Central Marine Engine Works, employed 365 women and 85 men, a ratio of 4 to 1. (6) General views of the Neptune Shell Shop show roughly 4 times as many women as men.

General view of Neptune Shell Shop October 1917

A view looking down No. 2 Bay of Neptune Shell Shop October 1917. TWAS : DS.SWH.5/3/2/3/12

By the meeting of 18th April, shell forging had commenced, as had the machining of shells in the ‘Shell Shop’ – the exact words that appear in the inscription on the bracelet.

So, if we return to the bracelet for a moment, we are fortunate that we know the name of its owner and a little bit about her. Jane Ellen Bell was from South Shields and she worked in a Shell Shop during the First World War. Taking into account the inscription on the bracelet I think we can safely say that she worked in the Neptune Shell Shop. Her family and friends called her “Jenny”. We don’t know exactly when she started work in the Shell Shop, but when shell making began in 1916 she would have been about 31 years old. The “Nov.1918” date on the bracelet makes it likely that she worked there until the end of the war. Jenny Bell never married, but in 1933 she successfully prosecuted her fiancé for breach of promise. She had been engaged to Ferno Fountain for 17 years when he called off the marriage. Jenny was awarded £200 by the court.

gold bracelet belonging to Jane Ellen Bell

Neptune Shell Shop bracelet TWCMS : 2014.1484

These details were supplied by Mrs Brenda Croome, Jenny Bell’s great niece, who donated the bracelet to the museum. What we don’t know is how her great aunt came by this bracelet. It seems unlikely that every female employee received such a lovely gift from their employer to mark the end of the shell contract. If Jenny was a supervisor then perhaps it could have been a gift from the company in recognition of a job well done, but we just don’t know. Could it have been a gift from an admirer, perhaps the dastardly Ferno Fountain, or did Jenny want to mark the importance of her work in the Shell Shop by buying the bracelet for herself and having the inscription put on it?

Has anybody seen another bracelet like this, or something similar from a different shell works? Does anybody have a photograph of Jane Ellen, “Jenny”, Bell? Please add a comment if you can answer, or want to speculate on, any of these questions.

Inscription showing the connection to shell making in the Neptune Engine Works

Close up image of the inscription engraved on the clasp TWCMS : 2014.1484

The bracelet is now on display in Coal, Ships and Zeppelins: North Tyneside in the First World War at Segedunum Roman Fort and Museum, Wallsend. The exhibition runs until 26th April 2015.

In Part 2 I will use contemporary photographs of work going on in the Neptune Shell Shop to illustrate how 6” shells were forged, machined and finished, ready for filling with high explosive.

 

1 – Wikipedia – Shell Shortage of 1915 – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shell_Crisis_of_1915

2 – The Times Digital Archive 1785 – 2006

3 – Massie, Robert K, Castles of Steel: Britain, Germany and the winning of The Great War at Sea, P483 – 91, Vintage Books 2007.

4 – Wikipedia – David Lloyd George http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Lloyd_George

5 – Tyne & Wear Archives, Board of Directors Meeting Minutes DS.SWH/1/4/3

6 – Clarke, J F, Building Ships on the North East Coast: A Labour of Love, Risk and Pain, Part 2 c1914 – c1980, P207, Bewick Press 1997. See also https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3zA9QB5m1GE for a piece about the Hartlepool National Shell Factory created as part of Hartlepool’s Heroism and Heartbreak project to commemorate the First World War.

 

 

Exploring the Archive with the Archive Service Assistants

To celebrate the start of the national ‘Explore Your Archive’ campaign, the Archive Services Assistants have set ourselves a challenge; to write about our role and work using the key themes of the campaign:

ArchI’ve Discovered, Detected, Learnt, Remembered, Engaged, Unlocked, Unearthed, Explored, Connected, Opened, Created, Imagined, Revealed, Found, Celebrated

Have you Discovered Tyne and Wear Archives yet?

Tucked away in a corner of the Discovery museum, down a long wooden panelled corridor, is our public searchroom. From Tuesday to Friday (10.00am to 4.00pm) this is the home of the Archive Service Assistants and where we will help you explore our Archive.

Don’t worry, you won’t need the sleuthing skills of Sherlock Holmes to search our systems! Our catalogue and user guides are even available online (http://www.twmuseums.org.uk/tyne-and-wear-archives/catalogue-amp-user-guides.html). Once you have Detected what you need for your research, come and see us and we will tell you the next step.

As Archives Services Assistants we are always learning from our visitors and the research we undertake. Recently I’ve Learnt about Newcastle’s Poor Union, mining medals and German raids in the North East during World War II. The range of topics covered in our searchroom in a single day is astounding; plans for model making, west-end pubs for a trip down memory lane, eighteenth century complaints letters about broken lamps and people researching the history of their own home. Our visitors have Remembered lots of things they thought they had forgotten!

Students and academics regularly visit the Archive, from local, national and international colleges and universities. Over the summer a lady travelled from America to see our items on the writer Githa Sowerby (DF.SOW). She was in our searchroom every day for almost two weeks, and we missed her when she left! October and November are especially busy when the planning students come to the searchroom for the first time to view building plans.

Whether they come from the other side of the world or just down the road, family history brings a lot of visitors to the Archive. Many have Engaged with our mentors, volunteers that offer advice and support starting family history research. The Archive Services Assistants can highlight research aids that may be of use to you and log you onto the Archive’s subscriptions with ‘Ancestry’ and ‘Find My Past’.

Our Archive has Unlocked secrets of the past.

Archive Service Assistants answer email enquiries and undertake paid research. We frequently discover interesting items that spark our interest. I found a 19 century information sheet on colliery cholera featuring a blue lizard. And while working on a paid research report, Alyson Unearthed an interesting snippet from our Swan Hunter collection about the Carpathia – one of the first ships to reach the Titanic.

She was 58 miles from the ‘Titanic’ when she sank, although only designed for 14 knots, by hard steaming she covered the distance in 4½ hours an average speed of 16 knots, despite the ice & reached the scene at 3.30am 1¼hours after she had sunk.’ [DS.SWH/5/4/4/7]

Did you know that when you have successfully Explored the Archive, we can (usually) produce copies of items and images. Copies are dependent on the size, condition and copyright considerations of the item, but we frequently produce copies of house plans, general arrangement ship plans for model makers. Have you seen our new Tyne Bridge calendar yet? The images used for the calendar are held within the Archive and large prints can be made, just ask in the searchroom!

The Archive Service Assistants are a very Connected team! We work alongside the archivists and conservators within the Archive Team, with museum colleagues and also with people and organisations outside of Tyne and Wear Archives and Museums. We frequently assist members of the Learning Team to search the archives for items to include in their ‘Boxes of Delights’, while we worked with the Wor Life Team to create the Rivers at War Exhibition in the Archives corridor. The Wor Life Team also used our images in their promotional leaflets. We support Tyne and Wear Archive and Museum’s Project Officer (volunteers) with school work experience placements and facilitated introductions and interviews between a Masters student and members of our team and volunteers. We have also recently supported the Outreach Team with their Culture and Cake project and their adult day care staff training afternoon.

Did you know that the doors of the Archives can be Opened just for you? Archive Services Assistants host Archive Experience days. For more information see: http://www.shoptwmuseums.co.uk/trace-your-family-or-house-history—tyne–wear-archives-experience-days-6446-p.asp

During the school holidays the doors of the Archive are opened for children to get creative. Our Family Fun days have proved really popular and live up to their name! Based on themes associated with collections in our archives, children (and adults) have Created their own family trees, rogues galleries and ships. However we must admit that our recent Halloween Family Fun day was really an excuse for the Archive Service Assistants to dress up and make Halloween cats – not at all scary but a lot of fun!

Have you ever Imagined what items are held in our Archives? When people think of an archive, they think of books, books and more books. And that’s true we do have a large number of books, in many different shapes and sizes, but also negatives, slides, photographs, scrapbooks, minute books, church registers, building plans, maps (including maps as large as our car park!) – the list goes on and on…. Some of our photographic collections can be viewed on our Flickr. I particularly like the images produced from a collection of glass slides of fairground scenes. (https://www.flickr.com/photos/twm_news/sets/72157627692102509/#).

What happens behind the scenes at the Archives is not often Revealed, which is something the Archive Service Assistants hope to remedy in future blogs. Our stores contain over 12 miles of shelving and we can walk up to ¼ mile to get your items so we will have a lot to tell you about!

And our Archive is always growing. Items Found in unexpected places and brought to the Archive include workhouse records rescued from a skip (1842 – 1866, accession 5531), a log book from East Walker School (1878 – 1904, accession 5530) and a 1930’s Police identification book, Newcastle upon Tyne which a member of the public brought to us after acquiring it from a junk shop (DX1190).

Archives enable people to bring stories to life and we feel that this should be Celebrated. Hundreds of archives from all over the UK and Ireland are taking part in the Explore your archive campaign and we at Tyne and Wear Archives are proud to be taking part.

Great North Greats – a guest post by David Wright

Great North Greats is an exhibition exploring the history of individuals that have made the North East what it is today. One of the region’s less well known individuals was Rachel Parsons, as revealed below by David Wright from Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums.

Whenever the name Parsons is mentioned, more often than not, it is in reference to Charles Parsons and his pioneering vessel Turbinia. Much less celebrated is his daughter Rachel, a woman ahead of her time with a fascinating life story.

Born in 1885, the experiences of her youth prepared Rachel for a life away from the conventional path women were expected to follow at the time. She always had an interest in science and would often help her father with his projects, even accompanying him aboard Turbinia during its first trials at sea.

Determined to progress in the male dominated world of industry, Parsons went to study at Cambridge University. Despite being one of the first three women to study Mechanical Science there, Parsons never received her degree as women were not allowed to become full members of the University.

A group of male and female workers during World War I

A group of male and female workers during World War I

At the outbreak of World War I, the 29 year old Parsons took up a place on the board of directors of the Parsons’ Works in Heaton, Newcastle. Filling the role vacated by her brother, she became one of just a few women in the country to hold such a high position in industry.

Parsons’ background led to her taking up a specialist role for the training department of the Ministry of Munitions, providing guidance to thousands of new female workers taking up mechanical jobs on Tyneside.

The female workforce at Wallsend Slipway & Engineering Company during World War I

The female workforce at Wallsend Slipway & Engineering Company during World War I

As soldiers began to return from the war, Parsons was frustrated by government legislation that forced women out of work to make way for men, and began to actively campaign for equal employment rights for women. She clearly laid out her views in an article for the National Review:

Women must organize – this is the only royal road to victory in the industrial world. Women have won their political independence; now is the time for them to achieve their economic freedom too.

It was this manifesto that served as the rallying cry of the Women’s Engineering Society, which Parsons founded along with her mother in 1919. Serving as the society’s first president, Rachel Parsons pressed the agenda of equal employment rights for women in industry that the society continues to promote to this day.

The following year, Parsons was part of a group of young women engineers that founded Atalanta Ltd., the world’s first all-female engineering firm.

Buoyed by her success in raising the profile of women’s economic rights, Parsons decided to enter the political world and became a member of the London County Council for the Progressive Party. Parsons’ high profile brought her influential friends and she often entertained society figures and visiting dignitaries at her London home.

The death of her mother and father in the early 1930s can be seen as a turning point in the life of Rachel Parsons. The vast wealth which she inherited was widely reported and began to bring her unwanted attention.

By the time Parsons moved out of London at the outbreak of World War II, rather than devoting time to expanding her social circle, she found a new love in buying and training race horses. True to form, Parsons fell out with the Berkshire Jockey Club who opposed a woman training horses on the heath, leading her to develop her own stables on her 2,600 acre estate.

Perhaps due to a lifetime of campaigning and conflict, Parsons had become increasingly combative, not least with her stable staff who would regularly be dismissed as rats and guttersnipes, with any riposte leading to a lashing from her handbag.

Although undoubtedly fierce, Parsons was generally viewed as eccentric rather than dangerous, which made the clash which led to her death all the more surprising.

A stable boy named Dennis Pratt had been warned by police to stay away from Parsons’ estate after stealing some of her property in a dispute over withheld holiday pay. Ignoring this demand, Pratt confronted Parsons at her home and felt the wrath of her famous handbag. His response of three blows to the head with an iron pipe would leave much more lasting damage.

Arrested the next day while trying to sell some of Parsons’ property in Cambridge, he began his statement to the police with the words: “This will be a shock to you, I’ve done her in!”

Sure enough, Rachel Parsons’ body was found that day hidden in the larder of her home.

It is a sad irony that a woman who spent her life fighting for justice and successfully campaigning for ground-breaking rights for women was killed over such a small and trivial quarrel.

The combative nature of Parsons was a major part of her success, but ultimately also led to her downfall. Despite the controversial end to her life, Rachel Parsons’ work in campaigning for equal educational and employment rights for all women, regardless of their background is an achievement which should not be forgotten.

Great North Greats is a touring exhibition celebrating the millionth finish of the Bupa Great North Run and Tyneside’s incredible sporting and industrial heritage. It is on show at Cleadon Park Library in South Shields until 3 January 2015.  Supported by Heritage Lottery Fund, Arts Council England and Port of Tyne. 

Next year Henrietta Heald – author of William Armstrong: Magician of the North – will come to Discovery Museum to talk about Rachel Parsons and her role in training women engineers during the Great War. Rachel Parsons: Queen of the Machine will take place on 25 April 2015 as part of Wor Life 1914-1918.

A trip into the past in Jesmond Vale


2000_4081

jesmond vale at burn view reduced col corr2At the time of the First World War, there was a thriving community along the edge of the Ouseburn in Jesmond Vale. The street pictured is probably Woodbine Terrace, in the Vale, which has since been demolished. However, we can still see a similar scene from Burn View, which did survive. We’re looking across the burn towards Armstrong Park and Heaton Park.

The  old photograph shows Jesmond Vale Peace Tea, which was held on Wednesday August 13th 1919 to celebrate the Peace Treaty at the end of the war. It looks like prizes have been laid out on the table on the far left, for the children’s fancy dress competition and possibly also for sports. The tea party collected £2 (quite a large sum at that time) for the Blinded Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Fund, which was run from The Evening Chronicle office. It was handed over by Mrs Welsh – very probably the wife of R. Welsh, brass finisher, who lived at 1, Woodbine Terrace in Jesmond Vale (Ward’s Directory of Newcastle upon Tyne, 1918). I like to think that she’s the woman in the white dress with a spray of flowers pinned to the bodice, standing near the centre, but I don’t know for certain.

2000_4081banner copy 2

Bacon's Map Newcastle 1920 Jesmond Vale detail1

 

 

 

 

 

 

As well as flags and bunting, the villagers have strung up a ‘Jesmond Vale Peace Tea’ banner. Woodbine Terrace is marked on the centre top of the map section, which is taken from Bacon’s Map of Newcastle upon Tyne of 1920 (Newcastle City Library Local Studies collection). Jesmond Vale extends from Jesmond Dene to Sandyford and on to the Ouseburn area. There was a chapel, a mission hall, Sunday school, and three pubs. One of these, the Blue Bell, survives.

2000_4081old_people

The Vale party was one of the 1919 Peace teas that included needy elderly people. Generally, they would be given a present of money – anything from sixpence to two shillings. The men also usually received tobacco and the women were given packets of tea.

2000_4080_grp_childrenA large number of children attended the celebration, as we can see in another photograph of the event. There are also some ex-servicemen in the crowd, both soldiers and navy men. It’s such a large party that it may have included people from streets leading down to the Vale, as well as from Jesmond Vale village itself.

The tradition of greenhouses and allotments in the Vale has continued, as the modern snapshot shows. During the war, extra allotments were set up all over Britain to provide food and reduce pressure on the merchant fleet, which was at risk of attack by the German submarines.

2000_4079_sectionThe Deputy Lord Mayor, Richard Mayne, is in the centre of this line-up, wearing a chain of office (he’s identified in the photo of the event that appeared in The Illustrated Chronicle). The man on the far left may be Mr Martin, known locally as the Mayor of Jesmond. According to Newcastle Libraries booklet Bygone Jesmond Vale, he lived in the village, and wore a top hat on ceremonial occasions (rather over-formal for a tea party such as this). I’ve checked, and the decoration he wears is nothing to do with Newcastle corporation, so it looks like he made up his own regalia.

P

2000_4079_2_girls_-_Copy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

At quite a few of the Victory teas, the children received commemorative mugs, like those on the ground by the two girls in the photo. Occasionally, some lucky children were also given a Peace Medal. Mugs, medal and Victory tea photographs are some of  fascinating things you can see in the exhibition When the Lamps Went out: Life on Tyneside in the First World War at Discovery Museum until 28th June.

There’s also many things to see in Home of Heroes: Home of Heroes: South Tyneside in the First World War until January 25th at South Shields Museum and Art Gallery. Another exhibition on Tyneside’s war experiences, Coal, Ships and Zeppelins,is on show at Segedunum until 26 April.

FLAG at 50

 

Laing window (537x640)

As this is our first blog – we thought we’d tell you why we’ve decided to do this and also to tell you a little bit about us.

We are Friends of the Laing Art Gallery (FLAG) and next year we celebrate our 50th anniversary. To commemorate this event we thought it might be a good idea to look back over the years. Everyone likes a bit of nostalgia! So to that brief we thought about how we could do this and let as many people know about this momentous occasion as we could. We all know that the internet is a powerful medium, so with the help of Emma and Sam (who are a lot more digitally savvy than we are!) at the gallery, we took the giant leap and here we are!!!

We are hoping to have a series of blogs in 2015 with the emphasis on how we’ve supported the gallery and how FLAG encourages and promotes interest in Art. We do this in many ways – we have regular afternoon talks from visiting speakers and from our own members on a variety of subjects.  In the last few months we have heard all about the pubs of the west end of Newcastle (only through photographs and not as a pub crawl!), we’ve heard about stained glass windows and the building of ‘The Big One’ – the most heavily gunned ship ever built on Tyneside.  Our evening lectures include supper and wine – they can cover topics as wide ranging as Ralph Hedley a remarkable local artist to Christmas themed talks. We also organise day trips and longer holidays on a regular basis. Next year to celebrate our 50th in style we are touring Scotland over a 7 day period taking in sights such as The Kelpies, Falkirk Wheel, Skara Brae and much much more!!!

Our enthusiastic members provide an information desk in the stunning Marble hall (you’d be surprised at some of the questions we are asked – although the most popular is directions to the cafe, toilets or exit). We also have a ‘picture of the month’ talk, again given by our knowledgeable FLAG members.

So as you can see there is always plenty going on. If you’d like to find out more or to join in any of our events please e-mail us art@flag.fslife.co.uk  Or you can ring us at the gallery on 0191 261 0962.