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Posted By: derekdwc Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 10:43am
When I left school and started work in 1962 my 1st wages were
£3 a week (can't remember if it was 42 or 44 hours per week with overtime as extra))
Posted By: alan128 Re: Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 10:51am
Office boy in drawing office at Cammall lairds £2-3shilings 1961 waiting to become an apprentice.
Posted By: snowshoes Re: Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 10:59am
10 shillings a week as an apprentice with Stewart Bale, Liverpool. Cost me more for the bus and ferry each day!!!
Posted By: missmahjong Re: Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 11:17am
I worked for Mortimers toy shop in Moreton 1969 ,I was 16yrs old . I picked up £4.12.6. for 40 hrs.
My mother toke £2.10 house keeping!!!!!!
Posted By: Paintboffin Re: Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 11:25am
I was on about £7 per week for 40 hours as an apprentice in 1969

PB
Posted By: buddy Re: Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 11:32am
£2.50/week as a Lab Asst in 1955 - 5 days plus sat morning - buy/clean your own lab coats!!!
Posted By: derekdwc Re: Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 11:40am
For those who are wondering what £ s d are check out here the equivalent in today's money



2 halfpennies = 1 penny
12 pennies = 1 shilling
24 pennies = a florin
30 pence = a half crown


20 shillings = £1
10 florins = £1
8 half crowns = £1
240 pennies = £1


click notes
Posted By: BandyCoot Re: Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 11:51am
Boy sailor, 5shilling a week (25p) and the other 30s (£1.50) kept for when you went on leave and sent to your mam. It was all found though so you didn't have to pay anything out. The 5 bob was spent on nutty and pop. To be honest it may even have been 5s a fortnight, my memory aint what it used to be. I'll check up on the Ganges site.
One funny thing is that I had been getting more on my paper round before joining up, not as adventurous though.
Posted By: granny Re: Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 12:04pm
Wm. Henderson, perfumery dept. 1967. £7.0.0d per week. Plus one hour for lunch and two twenty minute tea breaks, morning and afternoon.
Big increase for next job 1968 G.P.O. Telephonist £9.9.6d.per week.
Posted By: jemarc Re: Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 12:57pm
Sayers, big one on the corner in town, started on my 16th birthday, worked 40hrs for £23.50 per week in 1980. gave my mum £10 per week keep.
Posted By: Spellbinder Re: Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 4:27pm
September 1961 - 16 years old - £5 4s a week.
Posted By: lizzie271 Re: Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 5:46pm
1959 I left school to work in the Co-op cheque office in oliver street,birkenhead, wages two pounds six and eight per week,mum had the two pounds for keep and bus fares,but the six and eight lasted me the week!!!!
Posted By: saltytom Re: Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 5:49pm
1970 Apprentice joiner £2 17 6d 5days 45hrs
Posted By: Zubee Re: Your 1st wages - 24th Nov 2012 7:31pm
MPD Hampers 1983 - £25 per week, £15 of it to my mum for keep.
Posted By: goodoldphil Re: Your 1st wages - 25th Nov 2012 12:17am
I started work as an office boy on the wholesale fruit market in Queen Square, Liverpool and had to travel from New Ferry to start at 7 am in 1949 and was paid £1.50 for 5 weekdays and a Saturday morning. Went into the RAF for national Service in 1952 and was paid £1.25 per week, my Mum was allocated 30% of this so I was left with 14 shillings to myself - not bad really because they fed us well.
Posted By: Tatey Re: Your 1st wages - 25th Nov 2012 7:57am
Originally Posted by BandyCoot
Boy sailor, 5shilling a week (25p) and the other 30s (£1.50) kept for when you went on leave and sent to your mam. It was all found though so you didn't have to pay anything out. The 5 bob was spent on nutty and pop. To be honest it may even have been 5s a fortnight, my memory aint what it used to be. I'll check up on the Ganges site.
One funny thing is that I had been getting more on my paper round before joining up, not as adventurous though.


For it is said "Blessed is he who floggeth his Burberry to buy nutty for his oppo's"
Posted By: BandyCoot Re: Your 1st wages - 25th Nov 2012 9:16am
Nice one Tatey, managed to hold on to my burbs for the duration. A lot used to get nicked probably for the same reason as you stated, they were the ones who used to floggeth their mates burbs to buy ale for themselves though. Remember a bloke, well a mate really, who was trying to sell his civvy burbs so me and him could go for a pint in Gosport. I managed to borrow a few bob, used some to buy his burbs from him and we both went ashore on the proceeds so I got a run ashore and a cheap burbs in one go. I think now that I must have been a bit of a shoit, or as we called them in them days, a bit of a skate. I even wore it ashore with him, I was dry, he got wet.
laffin
Posted By: petethebike Re: Your 1st wages - 25th Nov 2012 11:22am
Summer holiday job at "The Bright Spot" in New Brighton in 1964.
£1 a day for 13 hours,clock in,out,1/2hour for lunch and a 7 day week!Wilkies were nothing but generous,no wonder there were so many fiddles going on.
Posted By: Elizabeth Re: Your 1st wages - 26th Nov 2012 4:43am
Littlewoods Pools in 1980 got £57 as a pools clerk trainee for a 35 hour week. They paid really well and you got a good bonus at Christmas too smile
Posted By: Dilly Re: Your 1st wages - 26th Nov 2012 1:40pm
When left school I was on two groats and stale loaf for ninety hour week.
Posted By: chriskay Re: Your 1st wages - 26th Nov 2012 3:47pm
Originally Posted by Dilly
When left school I was on two groats and stale loaf for ninety hour week.



TWO groats??? and only ninety hours????? One of the leisured class eh?
Posted By: jimbob Re: Your 1st wages - 26th Nov 2012 5:24pm
Bandy. Think you should point out that nutty is not bags of nuts or some may think you where in with a gang of monkeys {then again perhaps some where right monkeys so to speak}
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