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1980
UNKNOWN - "Singers"
Bo'ness as a town has
suffered its fair share of
industrial closures over the
years. From a brisk
shipping community, coal
mining, pottery, woodyards,
production of fertilizer,
distillery and the like, our
indigenous industries have
for the most part
disappeared. It could have
been worse. We could
suffering fate like
Clydebank at this time - the
loss of "Singers" and
its accompanying job loss.
Although it must be on the
record somewhere, it's
generally unknown that the
giant American firm of
Singers who produce the home
and industrial sewing
machines decided that the
place to locate their U.K.
activities was in Bo'ness.
The usual American
thoroughness was employed,
engineers, experts, planners
were dispatched to Great
Britain when an in-depth
look was taken into a number
of sites.
In the end, they favoured
Bo'ness with its mines for
coal, foundries for castings
and an abundant water
supply. There would have
been jobs for thousands as
the plant grew up and no
doubt, Bo'ness would have
been developed into a far
larger community.
This industry would have
diversed and would have
taken the reliance on
shipping and more
particularly coal away from
the local economy.
But this was the precise
reason why Singers did not
come to Bo'ness. The coal
barons of the day happened
to be the largest land
owners and despite
protracted negotiations and
the fact that there was land
in plenty for such a
development, they could not
encourage the landowners to
part with the required
parcel of acreage.
The Americans offered
inducements which would have
been attractive in other
circumstances, the big fear,
however, was the likelihood
that a competition for
labour would be the outcome
and the pit owners feared
this possibility.
In fact, Town Provost at the
time was Mr George Cadell
Stewart and he held some
influence at the time and
wasn't above using it in
favour of locking out
Singers.
So far as can be
ascertained, the Americans
spent some six months in the
town looking at sites and
trying to secure ownership,
all in no avail. The policy
adopted by the Town Council
and the landowners, who by
and large were one and the
same, was that to sell land
would invite disaster in the
mining industry, a manpower
auction.
They had a workforce of low
paid men, women and children
and the wages the Americans
were to pay would be an
inducement to leave the
pits. The "No Sale" sign
was put up and the Yanks
were frozen out.
After six exasperating
months, the Americans
centred their interest in
Clydebank and soon the vast
complex was built on the
banks of the Clyde instead
of the banks of the Forth
where its spin-off
industries far less the
production of the sewing
machine which was considered
to be the " Eighth Wonder of
the World " with home
dressmaking more the rule
than the exception.
However, Bo'ness wasn't
completely locked out of the
development of Singers. The
giant four sided clock on
the tower at the Singer
factory in Clydebank was
cast in A. Ballantyne & Sons
New Grange Foundry. It
stands as a constant
reminder of the fruitless
months of negotiation which
took place in Bo'ness all
those years ago.
UNKNOWN
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