The song is actually called 'A Servant of the Company' and was written by the unforgettable Paul Connor, Manchester performance poet commomorated on this thread. Tony Hill may have composed the tune - not sure about that. There's a recording of my old pal Mark Dowding singing the song on this rather good radio programme. Mark's lyrics aren't the same in every detail as the ones I sing, which Tony Hill wrote down for me about thirty years ago. This is from memory (and I think it's possible I made up the first line of verse 32 myself, to get rid of a repetition). Repeat the last line of each verse. My Dad started off on the old North Western He left school at just fourteen He got a job on the shed at Longsight Helping to keep all the engines clean Bottom of the heap on the LMS railway The only way to get ahead Was a sixty-hour week on a 9A Jinty Shunting up and down in the engine shed Dad passed fireman on the LMS railway Graduated in the course of time Working like a navvy on a 4-6-4 tank Toiling away on the Buxton line The hungry '30s on the LMS railway Saw my Dad pretty well content Newly in charge of a jolly old Jumbo Bucketing away into Stoke-on-Trent Thirty years sweat on the LMS railway Thirty years labour, hard and hot Daddy became a top-link driver London trains with a rebuilt 'Scot' Thirty years toil on the LMS railway Thirty years, don't you wonder why I've got a photo took in '47 Of my Daddy on the footplate of HLI My Dad lived for the LMS railway Long ago, and it's rather sad It'll soon be forgotten, will the LMS railway And who's ever heard of my dear old Dad? Paul's railway references are all authentic, as far as I can work out. Steam buffs won't need to be told that a '9A Jinty' was a small shunter designated by its 9A 'shed plate' as belonging to Longsight, the big LMS depot just down the line from Piccadilly station. Or that 'HLI' was Highland Light Infantry, one of the rebuilt Royal Scot class mentioned in the previous verse.
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