Read Tales of London's Docklands Online
Authors: Henry T Bradford
donkey-man
an oiler or greaser in a ship's engine room
down-holder
a member of a ship's gang working in a ship's hold
fall-back money
a guaranteed payment based on the number of âattendances' proved for each signing-on period in any one week
free call
the gathering of dockers hoping to be picked up for a day's work
full-back guarantee
monies paid by the Dock Labour Board to registered dock workers who had attended the âcall on' but had been unable to obtain work.
job and finish
a payment made by an employer for the men to complete a work operation as quickly as was possible
Lascar
an Indian seaman
LDLB
London Dock Labour Board
luff
a term used when cranes' jibs are moved in or out
measurement rate
each item of cargo being exported was measured for piecework purposes and gangs were paid by the measurement ton (although, if the weight of the cargo was greater then the measurement tonnage, then the gang (should have) received the greater weight of the two); Port Authority quay gangs were always paid either âdead weight' tonnage or two-fifths the measurement rate
NDLB
National Dock Labour Board
non-continuity
jobs that either were or could be discontinued at the employer's or a dock worker's convenience
OST clerk
an overseas tally clerk responsible for checking and recording all freight loaded on to or discharged from working vessels
out-of-sector allocations
each dock system within the Port of London was categorized as a sector; men transferred to another dock or port were said to be âout of sector'
paid off
on the completion of a work operation, attendance books were given back to the dock workers, who then returned to the Dock Labour Compound to look for another job
perm
registered dock workers who were permanently employed, rather than those who sought work twice a day on the âfree call'
pitch
the spot on the quay where the cargo was discharged to or loaded from before being transferred to a transit shed or warehouse
pitch hand
men who were members of a ship's gang but worked on the quay, or in barges or Thames lighters
PLA
Port of London Authority
pressed men
men allocated to work an operation by the Dock Labour Board manager
pro-rata men
men, extra to a ship's or quay gang, employed on specific work operations
quay receiving
cargo discharged from ships to quay gangs for storing in transit sheds or warehouses
registered dock worker
a docker or stevedore registered with the National Dock Labour Board under the Dock Workers (Regulation of Employment) Act 1946
serang
Indian seaman equivalent to a ship's bosun
ship worker
an employers' representative (always a previous docker or stevedore) responsible for all registered men employed on a ship
ship's gang
twelve men (plus 1 pro-rata man if working under ship's winches) who worked together to load or discharge a ship
tick note
a chit issued daily to each gang showing the tonnage handled, the piecework rate per ton for each commodity, and any day-work time lost
told off
allocated to a work operation
top hand
the crane driver's eyes and ears on a ship's deck, signalling instructions to him in the crane cabin above
a turn
a 4â6-hour work period
under plumb
a point directly under a derrick's head or crane's jib
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