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Senin, 04 Juni 2018

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The Song of the Knocker-up - YouTube
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A knocker-up, sometimes known as a knocker-upper, was a profession in Britain and Ireland that started during and lasted well into the Industrial Revolution, when alarm clocks were neither cheap nor reliable, and to as late as the beginning of the 1950s. A knocker-up's job was to rouse sleeping people so they could get to work on time.

The knocker-up used a baton or short, heavy stick to knock on the clients' doors or a long and light stick, often made of bamboo, to reach windows on higher floors. At least one of them used a pea-shooter. In return, the knocker-up would be paid a few pence a week. The knocker-up would not leave a client's window until they were sure that the client had been awoken.

A knocker upper would also use a 'snuffer outer' as a tool to rouse the sleeping. This implement was used to put out gas lamps which were lit at dusk and then needed to be extinguished at dawn.

There were large numbers of people carrying out the job, especially in larger industrial towns such as Manchester. Generally the job was carried out by elderly men and women but sometimes police constables supplemented their pay by performing the task during early morning patrols.


Video Knocker-up



In media

Charles Dickens's Great Expectations includes a brief description of a knocker-up. Hindle Wakes a play written by Stanley Houghton and then a movie (of the same title) directed by Maurice Elvey, similarly involves one.

The profession of a knocker-up is documented and explained in the episode "The Industrial Revolution" of the television series The Worst Jobs in History.

A knocker-upper appears at the very beginning of the musical The Wind Road Boys by Paul Flynn. He walks along a group of children who are all holding slates with a number chalked upon them. The number on the slates denotes at what hour the householder wished to be woken in the morning and he calls and raps on the windows with his stick accordingly.


Maps Knocker-up



References




External links

  • Silent footage of a knocker-up c.1946 Produced by Sam Hanna in Burnley (Vimeo - North West Film Archive)
  • https://web.archive.org/web/20050128021501/http://recollectionbooks.com/bleed/Encyclopedia/WoodcockGeorge/tyrannyClock.htm
  • Knocker-up Man in action - (apparently in Oldham)
  • The Knocker-up Man - rendition of song by Mike Canavan describing the occupation
  • A Miner's House Slate in Ferryhill, a mining town in the North East of England.

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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