Sam began her apprenticeship as one of just three engineering apprentices in 1984. In a testament to the close-knit nature of the company—one of the young men who trained alongside her eventually married her sister, becoming her brother-in-law years later.
Engineering in the Mid-80s: A Different World
The engineering environment Sam entered was very much a product of its time. On the shop floor at Woods, the workforce was entirely male; the only other women in the building were in the offices or the Winding Shop. At college, in the apprentices’ area, Sam found she was the only woman, and the building didn’t even have a women’s toilet.
Technology itself was also at a very different stage. As a Mechanical Engineering Technician, one of Sam’s very first tasks was to build her own toolbox—and some of the tools to go in it—drawing on the modest metalwork and woodwork skills she’d picked up at school. At that time, it was still far more common for girls to be steered toward home economics or needlework instead of practical trades.
Sam completed her City & Guilds qualifications through day-release college study, steadily building the foundations of her engineering career.
Holding Her Own
Despite being “a bit of a new thing at Woods,” Sam took the atmosphere in her stride.
“I was always good at banter and developed a thick skin pretty quickly. It was a jokey, blokey atmosphere and I was really well treated, but there was a fine line – I didn’t want special treatment and I didn’t want anyone to feel they had to change the way they did things.”
Her apprenticeship included six-month rotations across the business, including a three-month period in the Research and Development lab—she remembers this place with particular fondness.