
Glasgow's new ship hall named honour of pioneering woman
Two of Ms Harvey's nieces, June Cofflet and Lynne Vernall, were the guests of honour, cutting the ribbon with Lord Provost Jaqueline McLaren.
The 13,000 sq metre hall has two 100-tonne cranes and two 20-tonne cranes inside.
HMS Belfast and HMS Birmingham are being built in the hall.
Jen Blee, BAE systems manufacturing and facilities director, said the story of Janet Harvey connects the past with the future.
(Image: PA)
She said: Janet Harvey on her 18th birthday, had three choices. Join the army, become a welder of an electrician.'
She chose the latter and Ms Blee added: 'She was made redundant when the men returned from the war.
'So often facilities are named after prominent men but achievements of women are forgotten.'
As well as honouring the contribution of Janet Harvey and the many other women who stepped in during wartime to keep production going BAE said the new hall is a commitment to the future and future workforce.
Ms Blee added: 'This hall also acts as a beacon for a new generation of shipbuilders who join our great endeavour.'
June Cofflet, said: 'Janet would have been absolutely delighted to have the ship build hall named after her.
'She was so very proud of the work she did during the war.
'She had great memories of her time working on the Clyde and felt that the work she did made a difference.
'As a family, we are delighted that BAE Systems has chosen our aunt's name to go on the ship build hall, it is a real honour.'
Workers at the yard joined the family and other VIPs for the opening ceremony.
(Image: newsquest)
Ritchie Linford, general manager of the Janey Harvey ship hall, said: 'This is a place where ships, for generations, will be built.
Already, 100 staff are working in the hall of the two frigates and eventually, said Mr Linford, there will be around 1000 working on three ships at a time.
Building them under one roof, he said, will be 'more efficient'.
He added: 'The building will set a new standard just as the ships will.'
(Image: newsquest)
Kenny Smith GMB union convenor, said: 'It is right we tip our hats to the past and in naming the hall after Janet Harvey, we do that.
'Her name will be remembered with every ship that passes through here.
'And it's about the future. It's great to see the resurgence of this yard. This hall will be a huge part of the future generations to come.'
Janet Harvey, after being awarded an honorary doctorate by Glasgow Caledonian University aged 96, died in 2023 aged 101, on November 11, Armistice Day.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Record
13 hours ago
- Daily Record
King Charles drives Queen Camilla to Sunday church service near Balmoral
King Charles and Queen Camilla were seen arriving by car at Crathie Kirk near Balmoral, with the Queen waving to onlookers. King Charles and Queen Camilla attended a Sunday service at Crathie Kirk, the Church of Scotland parish near their Balmoral estate in Aberdeenshire. The royal couple were seen arriving in a car, with the King at the wheel and the Queen waving to onlookers as they reached the small kirk, which has been the family's regular place of worship during summer stays at Balmoral. The late Queen Elizabeth II was also known to attend services here. The church outing comes shortly after King Charles delivered a poignant address marking VJ Day on 15 August, commemorating the end of World War II. In a powerful audio message recorded in the Morning Room at Clarence House earlier this month, Charles reflected on the sacrifices of the wartime generation and the enduring lessons for the present day. 'Those heroes of VJ Day gave us more than freedom; they left us the example of how it can and must be protected,' he said. 'Countries and communities that had never before fought together learned to coordinate their efforts across vast distances, faiths and cultural divides. "Together they proved that, in times of war and in times of peace, the greatest weapons of all are not the arms you bear, but the arms you link. That remains a vital lesson for our times.' On the anniversary itself, the King donned his military uniform for a Service of Remembrance at The National Memorial Arboretum in Alrewas, Staffordshire, marking 80 years since VJ Day. He was seen speaking with Alfred Conway, who served alongside Prince Philip during the war. Queen Camilla joined her husband and was also observed conversing with war veterans, visibly moved at moments during the service and subtly wiping a tear from her eye. The event drew further attention as British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer attended, accompanied by his wife, Victoria. The service offered a solemn opportunity to honour those who fought and sacrificed during World War II while reflecting on the importance of international unity in both war and peace. Crathie Kirk remains a significant location for the royal family during their summer stay at Balmoral. Visitors to the estate will often see the couple attending Sunday services, continuing a long-standing tradition of royal worship in the area. Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. The small parish church offers a quieter and more intimate setting compared to services held in London or other major cities, providing the royal family with the chance to attend without the usual public fanfare. The King's recent remarks on VJ Day emphasised the broader significance of collective action and international cooperation, noting that lessons from the wartime generation remain relevant today. 'Together they proved that, in times of war and in times of peace, the greatest weapons of all are not the arms you bear, but the arms you link,' Charles stated, underlining the value of unity and collaboration across nations. Following the commemorations, the royal couple returned to Balmoral, where they continue their traditional summer residency.


The Guardian
14 hours ago
- The Guardian
‘Animal Farm was my parents' teamwork': Orwell's son on 80 years of the satirical classic
As the second world war reached its height, the winter of 1943-4 was one of the coldest of the century. My parents were living in a poorly heated flat in Kilburn, north-west London. My mother was working at the Ministry of Food. She was deeply involved in BBC Radio's Kitchen Front which tried to help people conjure nutritious meals from their rations. My father became literary editor of Tribune magazine in November 1943. He was only required in the office three days a week, which gave him the time to write Animal Farm. Every evening, my father would read what he'd written to my mother under heavy blankets in bed. It was the only warm place in the flat. They would discuss the developing story and where it might go next. Lettice Cooper, the novelist and my mother's Ministry of Food colleague, remembered my mother updating them every morning with the animals' latest adventures. That my father and mother worked together so closely is no surprise. My father respected my mother's talents greatly and later told a friend she had helped plan Animal Farm. Indeed, for some years, my mother had been typing and copy-editing my father's writing and offering him detailed corrections and revisions. She was probably more deeply engaged with Animal Farm than with his previous work, perhaps even suggesting it should be a 'beast fable' rather than the originally planned political polemic. The result of my parents' teamwork, by the time Animal Farm was finished in February 1944, was one of the most beautifully written books of the century. On one level, Animal Farm is an ever-relevant satire of the Russian revolution and its betrayal into Stalinist autocracy. That was an evil my father and mother knew first hand. During the Spanish civil war they had witnessed the Stalinists slander, imprison, torture and murder dozens of their friends and comrades who did not slavishly follow the Soviet party line. They even had to flee Spain themselves under threat of Stalinist arrest and execution. Nothing dispels political illusions quicker than being pursued by fanatical murderers. These experiences, and the endless darkness of Stalin's famines, gulags and purges, convinced my father that Soviet Russia was the very opposite of true socialism. He believed fervently that if democratic socialism was to flourish in the west, then the 'myth' that Russia was a socialist state had to be debunked. But there were profound challenges that had to be overcome before Animal Farm could be published. There was a deep-rooted institutional reluctance to allow any criticism of Soviet Russia while it was a British ally leading the destruction of Nazi Germany. This attitude was compounded by relentless Soviet government lobbying and the comprehensive infiltration of British institutions by Soviet agents. Peter Smollett (AKA Smolka, Soviet agent codename ABO) was head of Soviet relations at the Ministry of Information and the now notorious Cambridge spy Guy Burgess was a BBC producer. Everywhere, negative stories about Russia were quietly downplayed or suppressed and positive ones megaphoned. In this climate, five major publishing houses (at least one of them advised by Smollett) turned down Animal Farm as an inappropriate attack on a vital wartime ally. Even Faber, following its director TS Eliot's advice, doubted 'that this is the right point of view from which to criticise the political situation at the present time'. Finally, in July 1944, Fredric Warburg of Secker & Warburg, known for courageously publishing controversial leftwing books, agreed to take it on. Even then, paper shortages and possibly ongoing reluctance to offend Britain's ally, meant Animal Farm was not published until 17 August 1945. When it finally appeared, my father was surprised at how little fuss there was about his bold satire of Stalinism and dictatorship. But relations with Russia were by then rapidly cooling and, as my father said, people were 'fed up with all [this] Russian nonsense'. Animal Farm's time had come. Since its first publication 80 years ago, it has sold more than 11m copies and never been out of print. But Animal Farm is more than just a satire of the Russian Revolution. This 'fairy story' (as my father called it) is an eternal warning against political leaders who hijack potentially noble movements for their own selfish purposes. My father thought all politicians should be watched hawkishly, confronted truthfully (whatever the price) and kicked out when they put their interests before those of their country. Sign up to Inside Saturday The only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday magazine. Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend. after newsletter promotion Animal Farm has had a remarkable life story, playing its part in democratic protests behind the iron curtain and more recently in Myanmar, Zimbabwe and Ukraine. It remains an unforgettable inspiration to all those fighting for freedom. In a world where authoritarianism, nationalism, xenophobia and political lying are all on the rise, we need Animal Farm by our side more than ever now.


BBC News
19 hours ago
- BBC News
Holy Trinity: The church that survived the Coventry Blitz
On the night of the Coventry Blitz on 14 November 1940, 550 German Luftwaffe rained down 30,000 incendiary devices on the city over an 11-hour buildings in the city centre were destroyed, including the cathedral, but the Holy Trinity Church survived, and that was in large thanks to Reverend Graham Clitheroe, the church's vicar at the and two others, including his curate and one of his sons, defended the church and stopped it from going up in flames - even pushing bombs off the church roof to stop further to their actions, the church lived on to be one of Coventry's landmark three spires, offering stunning views of the city skyline. The church already had a long history before that fateful night - with the first known reference to it in original Norman church was destroyed by a fire in 1257, and was rebuilt entirely during the 14th tower was rebuilt in about 1650, with the spire built later in the 17th 237ft (72.2m) high, it is one of the tallest non-cathedral spires in the UK. To get to the tower and spire, there is a fair bit of climbing to enter by some worn stone steps, leading to a wooden door. Behind this, you are met with another spiral staircase that leads to the one point, the staircase splits - one section continuing up into the sky, while the other leads onto the lower up, you enter a bell room. "This is a floor that was laid when Gilbert Scott - an architect in the 1850s - renovated the whole of the inside of Holy Trinity Church," said Bill Johnson, the buildings bell ringers would have rung the bells at a lower level than the current bell room."The tower supports the spire, but it was decided when Scott was doing the renovations that these huge bells would make the tower and the spire too unstable," said Mr Johnson."So, Gilbert Scott took the bells out, and arranged for a wooden structure to be built just on the other side of the church called a campanile."The bells were hung in this structure and could be rung from the campanile… at ground level." Continuing up the steps towards the spire, they are far less worn - because it was a route that was not well travelled."It was only [for] the issue of maintenance – gutter clearing, whatever might be necessary," said Mr the base of the spire, he said: "We can look right up inside because it's hollow, and we can see right up to the very top."Listen: Climbing the tower of Coventry's Holy Trinity ChurchAs you glance up, you can see steel ladders, which, although mostly used for maintenance purposes, did have an intended second use."There was a chance we might get a peregrine falcon nesting here... on the first set of windows down from the spire, there's a falcon scrape which is a nest for the peregrine falcon," he said."So we installed that, we installed a camera with it, but the ungrateful falcons went to nest in St Michael's next door." Follow BBC Coventry & Warwickshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.