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12 - Graham Strachan, Alexander Stephen, John Brown and Scott Lithgow

from Upper Clyde

Hugh Murphy
Affiliation:
University of Glasgow
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Summary

I started an engineering apprenticeship the day after I left school in 1950 at Stephen's of Linthouse. After two years, I went to Glasgow University for my first year in engineering. I then went to Cambridge and completed a five-year apprenticeship, combined with a university degree course in 1955. After National Service in the Royal Navy, I obtained a job in the design office of John Brown's at Clydebank. In 1963, I was appointed Technical Director, and shortly afterwards I became Engineering Director at the age of thirty-one. I remained there until 1966, when, following the recommendations of the Geddes Report, engineering was separated from shipbuilding. I initially became Director and General Manager, and latterly Managing Director of John Brown Engineering. I left in 1984 to take up a position with Trafalgar House, when they acquired the Scott Lithgow yard.

When I came back from my National Service in 1957, I remember that the order books at John Brown stretched well into the early 1960s. John Brown at any one time could be building a large passenger ship, a couple of tankers, a couple of bulk carriers and so on. They had an incredible mix of products. That was seen as strength by some and a weakness by others, because one could say that had they concentrated on one type of vessel they could have done a lot better, rather than dispersing their activities and resources over a range of products. One of the weaknesses arising from this was that everything was made to the highest quality demanded by the one type, whether that was a passenger ship or a naval ship. So a bulk carrier was constructed with too high a finish than was absolutely necessary. The problem was that the owners expected a very high standard of finish from a yard like John Brown, whereas they would have accepted a lower standard from the Lower Clyde, which only made this type of ship, and did not build passenger ships. [Historically, the Lower Clyde yards did build passenger ships, and the districtdid not concentrate on one type of ship]. It was impossible for the workforce to work on dual standard of quality. They tended to work to the highest, and the ship owner insisted on the John Brown standard.

Type
Chapter
Information
Crossing the Bar
An Oral History of the British Shipbuilding, Ship Repairing and Marine Engine-Building Industries in the Age of Decline, 1956-1990
, pp. 47 - 51
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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