CHAPTER XI. BRIDGEWATER FOUNDRY-PARTNERSHIP.
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Published:2011
2011. "CHAPTER XI. BRIDGEWATER FOUNDRY-PARTNERSHIP.", JAMES NASMYTH ENGINEER AN AUTOBIOGRRAPHY, Samuel Smiles
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My business went on prosperously. I had plenty of orders, and did my best to execute them satisfactorily. Shortly after the opening of the Liverpool and Manchester Eailway there was a largely increased demand for machine-making tools. The success of that line led to the construction of other lines, concentrating in Manchester; and every branch of manufacture shared in the prosperity of the time.
There was a great demand for skilled, and even for un skilled labour. The demand was greater than the supply. Employers were subjected to exorbitant demands for increased rates of wages. The workmen struck, and their wages were raised. But the results were not always satisfactory. Ex cept in the cases of the old skilled hands, the work was executed more carelessly than before. The workmen at tended less regularly; and sometimes, when they ought to have been at work on Monday mornings, they did not appear until Wednesday. Their higher wages had been of no use to them, but the reverse. Their time had been spent for the most part in two days' extra drinking.
