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Banging Out!

Fleet Street Remembered

"There used to be a tradition in Fleet Street newspapers called "banging out". It involved an employee, on the day he retired after a life-time's stalwart service to his chosen rag, being walked by his colleagues through the presses in the print room. As he wandered towards his rendezvous with a carriage clock, the printers serenaded him by whacking the metal benches with their hammers, beating out a ceremonial slow-march to mark his departure."
Jim White

Banging out also occured when apprentices passed out and when Fleet Street presses were shut down and moved to Wapping and Westferry in the 1980s.

digital:works worked with two primary schools near Fleet Street to chart the history of printing in the area from around 1500, when William Caxton's apprentice set up a printing shop in Shoe Lane, until the digital revolution saw presses move east to Wapping and elsewhere in the 1980s and 90s. This project put former print workers at the forefront of this history and allowed them to tell their story in their own words.

The children worked with Westminster Archives and St Bride Lbrary to study the history of that period and then conduct oral history filmed interviews with former print workers from Fleet Street. They also produced some historical and creative writing for a booklet and exhibition.

A documentary film based on these oral history interviews was launched at St Brides in the summer of 2014. The film was also form part of an exhibition which, along with the children's writing, was be shown at libraries and archives around London as well as in schools. This website hosts the young people's work including some interview extracts they have undertaken, their final edited film and their writing, both historical and creative. There is also a blog which followed the progress of the project.

film now online