PEOPLE
Apprenticeship stories – In the driving seat
IS starting an apprenticeship in the 60th year of your life a good idea? In my exper ience the answer is a resounding yes.
Having had three children, all now adults, a 20-year career in nursing, ten years as a sensory panellist in the coffee industry, (tasting coffee for Douwe Egberts – and yes, that was a dream job), I was faced with redundancy when the panel relocated to mainland Europe. At a time when my own mother would have reached state pension age, I felt I had one more “good career” in me. My redundancy payment allowed me to consider working at an apprentice rate during training and so when I saw a job advertisement that really appealed to me, the £4.81 per hour offered did not put me off. I wondered how appealing it would be to a school leaver, as it would inevitably mean continuing to live at home, but the upside of an apprenticeship is gaining a qualification and a route to a degree without the need for a student loan.
My employer was to be the Jaguar Daimler Heritage Trust (JDHT), based at the British Motor Museum at Gaydon. A registered charity with the following mission statement: “Our purpose is to establish, maintain and promote for the benefit of the nation, the permanent preservation of historic archives, artefacts and motor vehicles manufactured and sold by Jaguar Cars Ltd. (now renamed Jaguar Land Rover Ltd.) and its predecessor companies under the marquee names of Swallow, SS, Jaguar, Daimler and Lanchester, where such vehicles are of actual potential historic, scientific importance and educational value.”
My position was Archive Apprentice. The job role would be to assist with all aspects of promoting, managing and pre serving the archive material and enabling safe access to its contents for users.
What possessed me to imagine I had the skills and abilities required for this job? The fact that both my parents and my sister had worked in
52 INFORMATION PROFESSIONAL
Lavinia Bentley, Archive Assistant, Jaguar Daimler Heritage Trust, Collections Centre, British Motor Museum
the motor industry for most of their working lives and that the Midlands, where I grew up, was the beating heart of this industry strangely didn’t occur to me at the time. In retrospect I think this heritage has been helpful in my understanding of the culture surrounding car manu facturing communities. At the time I applied however, I just loved the idea of looking after “history” and making it available to others, which I think is at the core of an archive service.
My first impression of the archive was the smell, papery, a tiny bit musty, the racking, the sound of the rolling stacks. The beautiful, ordered rows of boxes and the distinctly disordered accessions waiting to have an archivists magic performed on them. Museum life is eclectic and unpredictable. Every day is full of visitors, enthusiasts, researchers, often with deep subject knowledge and the archive holds answers they need, the archive apprentice is constantly learning how to facilitate this.
Confidence
I was extremely lucky to have Joanne Shortland, JDHT’s Head Archivist, to train me. I was never made to feel a mistake was anything other than a learning opportunity and her trust in me gave me the confidence to grow into my role and expand it. I particularly
March 2024
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