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Pole-lathe Turners

Veron

onica Upton, James Sully, E. J. T. Collins

Further information on relating to appendices,

graphs,

statistical al data and

questionnaires can be found on the website: www.craftsintheenglishcountryside.org.uk

ryside.org.uk

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Pole-lathe

Introduction

Turners

The pole-lathe is a primitive form of lathe operating on the reciprocating principle and is

powered by means of a foot pedal or treadle. Up to the mid-nineteenth century it was widely

used for the manufacture of mop and broom handles, brush stocks, chair legs, textile bobbins,

hollow ware and all manner of turned objects for use, manufacturing and the home.

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Chair-leg turning on semi-automatic wheel lathe (c.1940)

Chair-leg turning on pole-lathe (c .1910)

By the 1920s, pole-lathes had been very largely superseded

by automatic lathes powered by steam,

electricity or oil-

engines, and turnery transformed from a small workshop

or, in the case of ‘bodgers’

– i.e. chair-leg-

-leg-turners rs in the

Chilterns – from a woodland or small workshop into a

factory trade.Among the survivals noted in the early 1920s

by Fitz Randolph and Hay in their report on the woodland

industries, were the 100 or so men employed at a large

timber yard at Wellington (Shropshire) turning wooden

bowls on pole-lathes, a few small firms of bobbin-makers

still using hand lathes in the West Riding, and the remnants

of a once thriving community of bowl-turners at Kingscliffe

in Northamptonshire.The inter-war years saw the virtual

disappearance of chair-bodging in the Chilterns, with only

9 bodgers at work in the Wycombe area in 1939. The last

practitioner,

based at Hampden Wood,

died in 1965.The

treadle lathe ceased to be used for bowl-turning in West

Wales from the 1940s, but survived in West Berkshire until

the death of George e Lailey, the last of the Bucklebury

turners, rs, in 1958.

The tradition of hand-turning on semi-automatic

lathes (as against pole-lathes) held up longer. Up to the

1960s, many rural districts had a local turnery works

making tool handles and kitchen and domestic wares from

locally ly grown birch, willow,

w, alder, sycamore and ash.

These

gradually closed until, by the early 1990s, a bare one or

two were e still in production.

In the north-west,

the Stott

Park Bobbin Mill ceased commercial production around

1980.Whereas in the early 1950s more than 62 million

tool handles were made annually in England and Wales,

today they are almost all imported.A secondary effect of

the closure of the rural turneries was to destroy what in

many coppice-growing districts had been the last bulk

market for poles. The once thriving Chesham

(Buckinghamshire) beech wood industry had by 1980 been

reduced to just one or two small firms.

One old-established

firm was forced to give up because of shortages of hand-

turners and the difficulty iculty in attracting trainees.

It closed its

doors in 1978 with a full order book.

Having been given a lease of life by the Arts and Crafts

movement at the end of the nineteenth century, and by

random survivals here and there in Wales and southern

England, pole-lathing then died out completely for a few

years from the mid-196

-1960s until its reviva

vival at the end of the

following decade.

The renaissance was in large measure the achievement

of Mike Abbott, a science graduate, whose interest was

aroused by a chance reading of H. L. Edlin’s book on

148 Crafts in the English Countryside: Towards a Future


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Mike Abbott,

pole-lathe craftsman,

Herefordshire

woodland crafts,

which contained some photographs of

bodgers.Abbott set up his first pole-lathe in the early

1980s, and in 1985 established Living Wood Training,

an

organisation dedicated to teaching greenwood skills and

promoting their potential. In 1989 he produced the

definitive textbook, ok, Green Woodwork,

ork, now in its 8th

printing, having sold 30,000 copies.The

Association of Pole-

Lathe Turners was formed in 1990 with a founding

membership of 6, which has now risen to more than 550.

Originating out of the Green Movement of the 1970s, and

the search for an alternative lifestyle of sustainability

combined with craftsmanship,

the pole-lathe is symbolic

of the woodcraft revival and its philosophy.

The essential feature of green woodwork is the use of

freshly cut unseasoned wood,

preferably coppice or a

maiden tree, cleft along the grain for strength and ease of

working. After cleaving, the length of the wood is shaped

further using traditional hand tools, shaving horse and

pole-lathe.Where the original bodgers and mop-stick

turners had made rough semi-finished wares,

the modern

pole-lathe turner makes whole items of quality furniture,

principally chairs, the best of which sell for hundreds of

pounds. Other products include bowls, platters and a wide

range of decorative items, from baby’s rattles and bobbins

to wooden containers made from birch wood by a

Gloucestershire turner and used by a fashionable Chelsea

restaurant for serving petits fours (Waitrose Food

Illustrated,Apr April

2004,

p. 26).

As with other greenwood od crafts, there is no system of

certificated training in or outside the NVQ and Modern

Apprenticeship ip frameworks.

Some 55 courses,

aimed

mainly at enthusiasts, ranging from the introductory to the

advanced, are organised by or under the auspices of the

Association of Pole-Lathe Turners.

Many of the leading

training providers offer green woodwork and chair-making

in their teaching programmes. Living Wood

Training,

based at Clissett Wood in Herefordshire,

is

running 14 courses in 2004, each of 3–6 days,

priced at £130–£250, £250, together with personal

tuition at £60–£90 per person per day. Gudrum

Leitz, a leading practitio

titioner and teacher, stages her

own series of courses each summer at the same

venue.A high proportion of respondents to the

Pole-Late Turners’

Survey have attended at least

one training course in the 5 years up to 2003 (see

Appendix A below).

The Association on of Pole-Lathe Turners has

broadened its terms of reference to embrace the

greenwood crafts as a whole.A high proportion of

the membership comprises recent entrants from

the ‘new tradition’,

drawn from a wide range of

social and occupational cupational backgrounds,

many of

them technical, scientific and managerial leading

professionals who derive a substantial income

from teaching and demonstration.

tion. Pole-lathe

turners are sometimes referred to as the

‘aristocrats’ ats’ of the greenwood industry, the most

educated and the most middle class.Abilities

range from the highly skilled with international

reputations, to the barely competent beginners.

All share the same high degree of enthusiasm for

the craft and its traditions.

The Membership of the Association, which

grew strongly over the 1990s, has now levelled off.

A feature of recent years has been a discernable

shift of emphasis from traditional to designer

wares, and historical exactitude to self-expression.

ssion.

Pole-lathe turnery and furniture making are high

added-value crafts,

selling mainly to better-off

customers.This exclusiveness is reflected by the

interest shown in the ‘Chairs 2004’ event held at

the National Arboretum,

um,Westonbirt,

in May. The

cost of tickets for the 2-day event,

ent, including meals,

was £135–£170, which sets the turners apart from

other sections of the industry.

Of the present membership, probably fewer

than 50 can be described as professional

woodworkers,

depending on their craftwork for

all or a significant part of their income. For the

majority, it is a leisure-time activity, though many

make occasional sales.

Crafts in the English Countryside: Towar

ards a Future 149


Pole-lathe Turners

Analysis of Responses to

Pole-Lathe Turners’

Questionnaire

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Personal profile

There were e 25 responses from pole-lathe turners, 21 (84%)

of whom were male. Of respondents, 80% reside in villages

or the countryside, 20% in towns and none in cities. Pole-

lathe turners were asked how many years they had lived at

their present location and if they had moved there from

another part of the country. These answers revealed an

average period of residence of 22 years and a high level of

mobility; nearly two-thirds originally resided in another

part of the UK, 54% of whom had relocated to villages or

the countryside.The average age age was 47 years, ranging

from a minimum of 23 to a maximum of 63.

demonstrations (38%) and chair-making (35%), and less in

making treen,

bowls,

etc. (19%). Pole-lath

-lathe turners

work an

average e of 30 hours per week,

but, where it is their sole

occupation, this average age increases to 38. Nearly half of all

respondents have another occupation.

The overwhelming majority of respondents had no

formal apprenticeship (96%), are either self-taught or

learnt the craft by a combination of self-taught and short

courses. In all, 44% have/had a mentor to turn to for help

and advice. In view of the lateness of the revival of pole-

lathe turnery, in

the 1970s,

it is

perhaps not

surprising that

only 32% of

respondents are

related to a

craftsperson.This

survey very

much mirrors

the membership

of the Association of Pole-Lathe Turners in that a high

proportion of respondents are from the ‘new tradition’.

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Educational profile

Bodgers at work

Professional profile

The questionnaire reveals disproportionately large numbers

entering the industry between the ages of 25 and 40

(60%), the youngest age of entry being 24 (4%) while the

remaining 9 (36%) entered in their 40s or later.The

average e age of starting is 38 years and the average number

of years worked as a pole-lathe turner is 9, distributed

across age bands as follows and reflecting the newness of

the craft in its revived form.

Overall, working time is approximately equally divided

between en chair-mak

-making

(39%), treen,

bowls,

etc. (29%) and

teaching/demonstrations (33%), although those employed

full-time in the industry spend more in teaching/

Supporting the notion that pole-lathe turners are the

‘aristocracy’ of the greenwood industry, this survey found

44% of respondents declaring a university degree,

ee, 8% a

teaching qualification and 24% an HND or HNC. Training

courses are popular, indeed essential, amongst pole-lathe

turners, with 68% having attended a course in the past five

years and 60% expecting to attend one in the next five.

Leaving aside one individual who found course venues too

far away from his place of residence, the only reason given

for not attending courses was where craftsmen considered

their skills sufficient enough already.

Despite their

popularity, more than a third of pole-lathe turners rs felt

training to be poor and nearly half just adequate.

Asked about specific skills, 40% believe there is a need

for NVQs and 60% for training in business methods;

64%

of respondents pointed to marketing as the area where

there is the greatest need for business training.

Book-

keeping (24%), tax returns (20%) and website design

(20%) are also considered necessary. Although 68%

possess limited or more competent ent computer skills, 32%

confess to being beginners or totally ignorant.

150 Crafts in the English Countryside: Towards a Future


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Business profile

The respondents were,

e, on the whole, optimistic about their

business, with 24 (96%) declaring it to be growing or

stable, and 22 (88%), considering their workloads to be

‘just right’,

and only 2 (8%) too o heavy, and just one (4%)

with too light a workload.

Nearly half have to turn down

offers of work.

None reported their trading profits (2002–3)

to be lower than in 1996–7.

Craft demonstration, Weald and Downland Open Air Museum

The most popular sales channels are home or

workshop (mentioned ed by 76% of respondents),

and craft

fairs (72%). Also significant are word of mouth and

exhibitions (both 60%) and agricultural and horticultural

shows (56%). Less frequently used channels include

shops, subcontracting ting to dealers,

garden centres and mail

order, although up to a third of respondents do regularly

use these channels. Most (84%),

sell less than a quarter

of their output through middlemen, with two selling

between a quarter and half,

and none more than 50%

through this channel.

Overall, 60% of respondents advertise their

products, with promotional leaflets (60%) and personal

websites (60% – a very high proportion compared with

other crafts) the most popular methods. Group websites,

parish magazines and Yellow Pages are used moderately,

but country magazines,

newspaper and trade magazines

rarely so.

The undermining of markets by hobbyists is seen by

60% of respondents as the biggest threat to the future of

pole-lathe turning as a commercial occupation.

However, 56% are concerned about foreign

competition, 52% about falling standards ds of craft

skills, and 44% worry about declining public

interest in craft products.

Appendix A:

Survey of pole-lathe turners

Summary of survey results (25 responses)

Personal profile

1. Gender: 21 male (84% of total)

2. Average age:

47 years

(minimum:

31; maximu

imum: m: 72)

3. Residence: city 0%; town 20%;

village 40%; countrysid

ryside 40%

4. Average years of residence: 22

(minimum:

1 year; maximum:

63 years)

5. Percentage e having moved from another part

of UK: 64%

Professional profile

6. Average hours worked per week: 30

(minimum:

10; maximu

imum: m: 65)

7. Sole occupation turners:

average e 38

8. With another occupation:

yes = 48%

9. Age of starting:

38 years

10. Related to a craftsperson: 32%

Training and educational profile

11. How the craft was learned:

ed: apprentice

ntice: 4%;

self-taught 40%; self-taught plus short course:

56%

12. With a mentor for help and advice: 44%

13. Qualifica

ications:

HND: 20%; HNC: 4%; degre

ree: e:

44%; teaching

qualificatio

ication:

8%

14. Training course in the past year: 4%;

in the past 5 years:

68%

15. Expect training in next 5 years:

60%

Crafts in the English Countryside: Towar

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Pole-lathe Turners

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16. Reasons for not needing training:

already ady skilled: 32%;

too expensive: 0%; too far away:

ay: 4%;

course not on offer:

0%

17. Adequacy

of training:

good: 16%; adequate:

ate: 44%;

poor:

36%

18. Need for NVQ: 40%

19. Need for training in business methods:

60%

20. Topics in business methods:

book-keeping:

24%;

computing:

12%; computer

ter-aided design:

4%;

e-commerce:

12%; website

design:

20%;

tax returns:

20%; marke

keting:

64%

21. Computer

skills: non-existent:

t: 16%; beginner:

16%;

limited compete

mpetence:

56%; more competen

petent: t: 12%;

advanced: 0%

Business profile

22. Business:

growing:

56%; static: 40%; falling:

0%

23. Compared with 1996–7 trading profits are higher:

64%;

similar

ar: 32%;

lowe

wer:

0%

24. Sales channels ranked with scores:

Scored 1–7

% of total

Word of mouth 6.0 60

Craft fairs 5.11 72

Home or workshop 5.3 76

Agricultural/horticultural shows 4.71 56

Other 0.71 28

Shops 4.38 32

Exhibitions 4.07 60

Subcontract to dealers 3.5 24

Garden centres 3.33 12

Mail order 3.0 16

26. Do you advertise products/services? yes: 60%

27. Methods of advertising:

% of all % of those

respondents that

advertise

Yellow Pages 12 20

Newspapers 4 7

Parish magazines 20 33

Countryside magazines 4 7

Trade magazines 0 0

Personal website 36 60

Organisation/group website 24 40

Promotional leaflet 36 60

28. Allocation of professional working time:

Average Max Av. sole

occupation

Chair-making 39 95 35

Treen, bowls, etc. 29 98 19

Teaching/demonstrations 33 100 38

29. Worries about future of pole-lathe turning:

Score out of 4

% of total

Markets undermined 2.9 60

by hobbyists

Foreign competition 2.8 56

Declining public interest

in craft products 2.7 44

Falling standards of craft skills 2.4 52

25. Proportion of sales through middlemen

(% of respondents):

0–25%: 84

26–50%: 8

51–75%: 0

76–100%: 0

30. Workloa

load:

too light:

4%; just right: 88%; too heavy:

8%

31. Having to turn down offers of work: 48%

152 Crafts in the English Countryside: Towards a Future

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