A Gazetteer of Lock and Key Makers

JAMES GIBBONS LTD

by Frank Spittle


8.  World War 2 and its Impact

One item that has survived the years of the war and since is a metal box. Used after the war as document holder for transport records, it now stands in a small museum and hardly attracts a glance. Having two carrying handles on the sides, a lockable door with holes drilled around the top and bottom, it does look something like a pigeon carrier. Its lock is of the type made specially for it - for instance you cannot take the key out without locking it first. Two heavy brackets on the sides complement the handles, which have a stop when they reach the horizontal to avoid trapping the hands. Not one person has guessed what it was for.  Now, with this story of Gibbons and the war time things that they produced, it can be revealed to everyone just what it is and the story of its use.       

At the time of the U-Boat menace and the German commerce raiders such as the Bismark, merchant ships were  being stopped and before being sunk were looted and searched to find out what they were carrying and from where and to.  On being stopped the captain was supposed to grab his log books, way bills and code books, place them in a weighted canvas bag and sling them overboard.  Unfortunately canvas, however heavily weighted, tended to float for a time, sometimes long enough for the Germans to fish the bag out.  The Gibbons Box was the answer.  Everything that was of use to the enemy was kept in the box and just lifted onto the bracket holders on the wall of the Captains cabin.  On being stopped for boarding or sinking, the box was first lifted off, run to the side and dropped overboard. Water rushed into the bottom as air  escaped from the top and the box and contents sank like a stone. Thousands were produced.  How many remain or are at the bottom of the seas across the world?

The war of 1939-45 changed much of the old way of production in factories, necessity of volume to survive by mass production would see much of the old handskill disappear, the young people would not get the love of a perfect piece of architecture if a cheaper thing that did the job just as well and paid perhaps even better by saving of man hours;  pride started to lose out.  Aluminium replaced bronze or brass, easier to cast, quicker to work or file, cheaper to produce and complete.

After World War one, the bomb shops that had made millions of hand grenades or Mills Bombs turned to making cast iron window frames.  Some of these can still be seen off the M.5  at Birmingham in the old but still massive Dunlop Factory called the Fort. 

Gibbons workmanship, that was the bedrock of the factory in Church Lane, was not needed so much in the new era.  So it is that examples of hundreds of years of exquisite door handles and architects designs are now sought after as works of art.


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