Leicester, c. 1959 — At Work

In a factory in Leicester, a worker concentrates on shaping a leather shoe, his hands steady as he fixes it to a last. The tools and materials around him speak to a trade learned through practice—measured, repetitive, and precise.

Leicester, c.1959: A worker shapes a leather shoe in a factory, part of the post-war workforce that included many from the Caribbean.

Dressed in a shirt and tie beneath a worn apron, he works with quiet focus. The scene is practical and unadorned: benches, racks of shoes, the rhythm of production continuing around him.

By the late 1950s, factories such as this relied increasingly on labour from across the Commonwealth. Men and women arriving from the Caribbean became part of Britain’s industrial workforce, contributing to sectors that were essential to the country’s post-war economy.

This photograph captures that contribution at its most immediate level—not in policy or debate, but in the act of work itself. A single task, carried out with care, within a wider story of migration and industry.