‘Lavatory Lill’ – the scourge of the Dick, Kerr wartime workers

Meg Davies sent us the following account of working conditions at the Strand Road factory during the last war, with a request for similar memories to help with a project started by a small team of which she and her husband, Stephen, are members:


Who knew Lavatory Lill? Women who worked at Dick, Kerr during the war years certainly would have encountered her. My late mother did. She used to tell me that women could only leave the factory floor once per shift to use the toilet. Not only that – despite having oily hands, they were only allowed to wash their hands once. They had to choose – wash before to avoid getting oil on their clothes, or wash after to be hygienic but go home with oily underwear.

The fearsome person who maintained these rules was Lavatory Lill. If she thought that you had been too long in the cubicle, she would push the wet – and probably dirty – floor mop under the door to get you out.

This is some of the information being recovered by a team based at St Michael’s church in Ashton, in preparation for an ‘Eighty Years On’ evening at Remembrance-tide in 2025. They want to know more about what life was like in Ashton during the war years. They have spoken to people who grew up in the war, or even served in the forces, and recorded memories passed down from parents and grandparents. Fascinating stories, some serious, some funny.


If you have information to share, Meg would love to hear from you: megindex@aol.com

Dick Kerr & English Electric Works, Strand Road, Preston. Aerial Image, May 1951
Dick Kerr & English Electric Works, Strand Road, Preston. Aerial Image, May 1951
Image courtesy of Kate Yates, Curator, BAE Systems Heritage Image Collection, Warton.
© BAE Systems Heritage, Warton.


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