Author Topic: Railway occupations  (Read 102 times)

Offline jds1949

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Railway occupations
« on: Tuesday 03 February 26 07:44 GMT (UK) »
I am researching a man who worked on the railways. In the 1921 census he was employed as a Railway Traffic Clerk and in 1939 he was employed as an Assistant Goods, Passenger & Docks Manager.
I would be grateful if anybody can give me details of what those jobs were likely to entail, day to day routine etc.
Thanks
jds1949
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Offline Andy J2022

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Re: Railway occupations
« Reply #1 on: Tuesday 03 February 26 08:09 GMT (UK) »
Bearing in mind that this article is based on the American railroad system, it may provide some insight into the work of a railway traffic clerk: https://jobs.community.kaplan.com/career/train-clerk
I would imagine that an assistant manager would be doing much the same sort of tasks at a management level.

Offline jds1949

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Re: Railway occupations
« Reply #2 on: Wednesday 04 February 26 07:46 GMT (UK) »
Thank you for the link - most helpful.
jds1949
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Offline Zaphod99

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Re: Railway occupations
« Reply #3 on: Wednesday 04 February 26 11:32 GMT (UK) »
Railway Traffic Clerk (1921)
A Railway Traffic Clerk handled administrative tasks related to the movement of passengers, goods, and trains. Daily routines included processing tickets and bookings at stations, recording freight shipments, updating manifests for incoming and outgoing trains, and coordinating with guards or signalmen on schedules.

They often worked in station offices or goods yards, managing paperwork like waybills and consignment notes, checking weights and loads, and resolving billing disputes—essentially the operational hub for "traffic" or flow across the network.


Shifts could be long (up to 12 hours), including nights and weekends, with accuracy vital to avoid delays or losses in the busy interwar railway system.

Assistant Goods, Passenger & Docks Manager (1939)
This mid-level management role oversaw operations for freight (goods), passengers, and dock/stevedore activities at ports or combined rail-sea hubs. Day-to-day involved supervising clerks, porters, and foremen; planning train allocations for passengers and cargo; and liaising with shipping agents on transfers at docks.

Routines included reviewing daily reports on loads and revenues, handling complaints or claims for damaged goods, ensuring compliance with safety and rate regulations, and optimizing schedules amid growing road competition pre-WWII.



Offline jds1949

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Re: Railway occupations
« Reply #4 on: Wednesday 04 February 26 11:41 GMT (UK) »
Many thanks for this - exactly what I was looking for.

jds1949
Swarbrick - all and any - specially interested in all who served in WW1