big respect to the RMT!I got a job in Perth (railway, track and drainage engineering). I did drop into Rattray's on occasion, but mostly for unusual cigarettes like Sobranie Black Russian, Sobranie Cocktail and Sullivan Private Stock.
big respect to the RMT!I got a job in Perth (railway, track and drainage engineering). I did drop into Rattray's on occasion, but mostly for unusual cigarettes like Sobranie Black Russian, Sobranie Cocktail and Sullivan Private Stock.
Ah, I didn't qualify for RMT, or ASLEF obviously. No, I was in TSSA who were "meek", I would say.big respect to the RMT!
nothing worse than a meek union, I've probably been on many train journeys that will have benefited from your work back thenAh, I didn't qualify for RMT, or ASLEF obviously. No, I was in TSSA who were "meek", I would say.
Ah, most of the projects went ok. I had one at Longforgan that was a shocker though lol.nothing worse than a meek union, I've probably been on many train journeys that will have benefited from your work back then
a friend and I made an enemy of a Longforgan farmer when we were younger, we used to roll his haybales down to the burn and sit on them and ride them downstream until they'd get stuck, then go back and repeat... we may have partially flooded one of his fieldsAh, most of the projects went ok. I had one at Longforgan that was a shocker though lol.
A mishandled JCB or a poorly marked signalling trunk... every signal between Perth and Aberdeen went to red, they say....
Well done tracking down those photos for us all Smokeyjock! Great stuff!I found some photos of the interior of the shop and the blending room on the Perth museum archive website
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I used to purchase packets of Sobranie Cocktail for my missus for parties and social events, dinner dances and the like.I got a job in Perth (railway, track and drainage engineering). I did drop into Rattray's on occasion, but mostly for unusual cigarettes like Sobranie Black Russian, Sobranie Cocktail and Sullivan Private Stock.
It’s so interesting to see these old photos. They were made on a view camera, where the image is backwards and upside down on the ground glass. That screws with people’s inate sense of composition, and you end up with a photo showing a lot of ceiling, instead of foreground!I found some photos of the interior of the shop and the blending room on the Perth museum archive website
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