Calling all Barrow Boys (and Girls!)

Photo:Visitors arriving at Beach Coach Station, 1960s

Visitors arriving at Beach Coach Station, 1960s

Gt Yarmouth Museums

New Recording Project
By Colin Stott

In days gone by, local children earned pocket money by transporting visitors' luggage, from the train and bus stations in Great Yarmouth, to the hotels and guesthouses, using home-made barrows.

If you were one of those enterprising children, then we would like to hear from you!  Perhaps you have old photographs to share, or have memories of the hard work and fun.

Was there any rivalry between the children, which visitors were the best tippers, and what did you spend your hard-earned cash on?  Would you be interested in having a reunion to meet up with your fellow barrow boys and girls?

If you would like to become involved, then please leave a comment on the website or contact Colin Stott on 01493 745526.

This page was added by Colin Stott on 01/05/2008.

Comments about this page

Barrow for your luggage sir? Hard work on a Saturday . .

By Martin Philpot

Saturday morning in the holiday season in the mid-sixties was a real earner for a young lad if you were up to real graft. Crowds of holidaymakers ladened down with heavy suitcases would pour out of the main train and coach stations needing to find their way to the hotels and guesthouses along the seafront. On a good day, I could earn over ten pounds. . My record was eleven pounds five shillings (an important boast for many years). This was a massive amount considering that I also earned three pounds and ten shillings for 5 days work on Rosatti's tea stall!

I started at the age of 12 and the pattern of my day went something like this; Up at 6am , walked from my home near Tollhouse Road in Southtown to my uncle's Steve's on Stafford Road to borrow his barrow (I didn't have my own). By 7am I was at Vauxhall Station awaiting the early arrivals, weighing up the opposition with their barrows also at the ready. As the holiday makers arrived I would call out "barrow for your luggage?" and try and beat the others to custom. I was young and the older barrow boys were tough and aggressive towards me if they felt I was on 'their' patch. I had many a dust-up and you had to be wary - there was a definite pecking order!

There wasn't a rate for your service, you simply said "it's up to you sir" when asked "how much?" People were generally reasonable although I do remember Yorkshire folk or "Yorkies" were the meanest (certainly not the Scottish) and Londoners were the most generous.

A barrow with suitcases piled high pushed from Vauxhall or Beach coach station to a guesthouse in Camperdown is a tough call for a 12 year old and I would carry on all day back and forth until around 4pm - exhausted but loaded! Fish and chips on the way home!

This page was added by Martin Philpot on 06/05/2008.

By Colin Stott
On 12/05/2008

Poor old (Martin Philpott), Vauxhall Station sounded a hard patch.

I on the other hand I had it easy It was Beach Station just up the road from where I use to live. I also had two older brothers who made me a go cart wide enough to take large suit cases.

Most holiday makers went to Nelson Road Central. I think the furthest one I had was on St.Peters Road corner of Blackfriars. They gave me 2/6 -22p new money. An average Saturday you could earn about ten shillings.

I soon found a better way. I went around some of the b&bs who my mum knew. She was a holiday landlady and found out when the summer visitors were going back home, so all I had to do was collect their cases and take to the station. Mostly it was beach station. I only got one for southtown station but they gave 5/- shillings about 60 pence new.

I was about ten years old at the time.Idont know how some people feel but my summers the sun always seemed to shine. Happy days.

By colinbrowne
On 17/06/2008

I used to hire a barrow from Mr Harvey on the South Quay for 6 old pennies a day. Then onto vauxhaull station. This was in the late fifties.

By ronald hughes
On 15/07/2008