Flintknapping Interviews
1960 , Brandon (Suffolk)
Cat no. 197
No video
There’s no web video for this work.
Please do get in contact to discuss other ways you could view this work.
Ralph Tuck interviews Herbert Edwards about his specific job as a flint knapper.
The film opens with a shot of Brandon Town Centre. There is a shot of the Flint Knappers Public House. Ralph Tuck interviews Mr. Herbert Edwards at the back of the Flint Knappers. There are piles of flints in the background. Mr. Edwards explains that he employs three knappers; that flints are used produced for muzzle loading guns and for facing churches. Mr. Edwards points out that in Napoleonic times a hundred flint knappers were employed at Brandon. He describes how the job is done with demonstrations from the knappers. First a gun flint is made, 60,000 a month are being exported to Nigeria. There are other markets in muzzle loading chips around the world. For building purposes dressed flints are made in specific shapes, square, round, diamond or, for facing churches, random. Some examples are shown. Mr. Edwards talks about the sources of flints and expresses confidence that an industry that has lasted thousands of years will last for thousands more
Featured Buildings
The Flint Knappers Public House
Keywords
Brandon; flint; Herbert Edwards; Ralph Tuck
Other Places
Brandon
Background Information
Mr. Herbert Edwards appears in other films in the Archive's collection. (See Ref. below.) He died in 1973, aged 82. The Edwards family claimed to have knapped flints in Brandon for 300 years. Their claims have been authenticated to the eighteenth century, beginning with Francis Edwards. After Herbert Edward's death, his son-in-law, Mr. James English, continued the family business. He was helped on a part time basis by Mr. Fred Avery. (See also Brandon, Suffolk. The Flintknappers. 1949.) The BBC began broadcasting a nightly television news programme from St. Catherines House on 5th October, 1959. In December 1960, they began a fortnightly programme under the title Outlook. This was a section of the first programme of the series, produced by Malcolm Freegard, the first television producer at BBC East. Also included in this programme were interviews with George Bulton, a warriner, and with General Talbot, regarding the Stanford battleground. The programme also included a short item by Paul Jennings about the origins of Piccadilly Corner, Alburgh, Norfolk. (See Refs. below.)
-
Maker : BBC East
Manifestations
Flintknapping Interviews
-
Genre: Industrial / Sponsored Film
-
Locations: Brandon (Suffolk)
-
Description Type: monographic
-
Subject: Herbert Edwards / flint knapping / Flint Knappers (public house), Brandon
Copyright restrictions apply.
Please see our terms of use. Films on this website are provided for personal viewing. Should you wish to use the films in any other way please contact eafa@uea.ac.uk
terms of useThe data for this page was generated on 22/11/2024 17:41:35+00:00. Click to regenerate this page .