No rush.Hope your dad is feeling better soon
Thanks for the kind words dogg. It has been a long road.
Today I actually had my dad lucid enough to actually talk about some things. There is a very strange bit of confusion for me.
My dad did not recall the steps leading to my granfather's final position but he said he started there driving "Baker Trucks" in the plant, basically toting carts of paint or other products to and from where they were needed.
Here is the freaky twist that maybe "someone" can shed some light on. Now, my dad has gotten some time frames of his life quite out of order lately, even regressing, but this one is too impossible for him to even have gotten confused about or crossed up.
My dad said to me specifically... "All they really were, was just a rolling battery that pulled carts and trailors"
O.K. gives me a start, so I go on the hunt. Sure enough, Baker Electric trucks existed... and unless I am missing something in a little bit of web looking, they ceased to be made by the company in the very early 1900"s!!!
So I says to myself, "Self, maybe they were still used as workhorses long after they were out of production",
"Maybe, they remained a practical little mule in a factory environment for transport".
Problem is, this would have been decades later. That seems a bit farfetched to me. I see these online as treasured antique auto collectables. (Go figure, Jay Leno has a working one)
Could (A) These things actually have remained in use that long, (B) Another company or manner of plant transport was used and because it was employed for so long, the name "Baker Truck" just stuck? Maybe even my own grandfather just using the "factory term" since that is what they called them. (Like today it might be an electric forklift toting stuff around),
or (C) my dad just be way off base. This last still has me perplexed.
Anyway, a little more of a tidbit for you as asked dogg, and it is nice to have dad talking more. I try to help keep his mind active.
so in the end, It is kind of a neat little thing to ponder, or study on, but for your direct question... for now that is all I got about Charles Haig Mossop and the paint works. I now know that whatever it was, a Baker, a forktruck, a Willie's Jeep, or GTO Judge, my grandpop started his career at the paint works driving it around in the warehouse, right from the bottom and worked his way up.
g.