Railway occupations
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Station clerk
The station clerk served at the railway station and, in the hierarchy, was under the highest officer of the railway station, the station master or assistant station master.
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Station porter
The station porter was a kind of jack-of-all-trades, employed by the traffic department. His immediate superiors were the station master and the head porter.
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Train maid
The train maid was an employee of the traffic department. Her immediate superior was the station master where she was stationed.
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Landscape director
The landscape director was in charge of the planting work around the railway stations.
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Line overseer
The line overseer’s main duty was to make sure that the track enabled trains to operate without risk of accidents.
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Gatekeeper
Railway crossings, where roads crossed over the railway, used to be protected by special gates. These were tended by a gatekeeper.
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Locomotive fireman
Tending the boiler, bringing in water, adding coal, cleaning, lubricating, and polishing lanterns – these were some of the duties of the fireman.
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Brakesman
In the early days, locomotives and wagons/carriages were braked by means of screw brakes. The brakes in the wagons/carriages were operated by the brakeman, who would tighten or loosen the brake at the command of the train driver.
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Conductor
Does more than just check tickets. The conductor had many duties.
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Train driver
“The train driver should fully realise the importance and moral responsibility of his position, and that the lives of many others could be endangered any acts of negligence, incompetence or inattention on his part.”
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Station master
The station master was the person in charge of the railway station. In simple terms, he was the station manager.
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Track tender
Track tenders were responsible for ensuring that trains could safely travel along the track. When the railways came into use in Sweden, they needed to be maintained and monitored. Special staff were hired to do this, called track tenders.