Heritage Filmmaker at Bowes Railway: The Joinery Workshop and Creating a Replica Tub
In 2018, I returned as a Heritage Filmmaker to Bowes Railway Museum to film The Joinery Workshop.
This is the third in a series of short films capturing the skilled volunteer-led restoration work happening across this historic site. As a heritage filmmaker, this project gave me the chance to observe the final stage in the making of a replica “tub”—a small wheeled cart historically used to transport coal from deep underground to the surface.
Bowes Railway, located in Springwell, Gateshead, is an extraordinary survivor from the industrial age. Designed in 1826 under the guidance of George Stephenson, it was part of the Hetton Colliery Railway network and used a rope-haulage system powered by stationary engines to move wagons—a pioneering method in the pre-locomotive era. Today, it remains the world’s oldest working standard gauge rope-hauled railway and is protected as a scheduled ancient monument.

As a heritage filmmaker, I’ve come to appreciate how Bowes Railway is more than a static display—it’s a living, working archive of industrial ingenuity. The joinery workshop, like the forge and engineering shed, plays a vital role in keeping that legacy alive. Historically, the joiners would have supplied the entire yard with timber parts—props for the mines, track components, and rolling stock repairs. As one volunteer in the film puts it, “There was no B&Q. You didn’t buy it—you made it.”
In The Joinery Workshop, we see the final top section of the tub being carefully crafted. Using circular saws, planers, and belt sanders, the volunteers shape raw timber into fitted panels. Safety is second nature here, with guards and cut stops in place, but the atmosphere is calm and focused. A clear understanding of tools and process guides every step—from cutting, squaring, and sanding to gluing and assembly.

I filmed the process over several hours, using a small setup to stay unobtrusive. For this kind of industrial heritage filmmaking, I find it important to let the natural rhythm of the work shape the visual style. The light inside the joinery is dappled and warm—ideal for capturing grain, movement, and texture. I focused on close detail and slow tracking shots, allowing viewers to feel the process unfold.
One of the things that struck me was the precision involved in building the tub. The side panels, end pieces, and internal battens were measured, cut, and test-fitted before final assembly. The end result—glued, screwed, and sanded—was a perfectly square wooden container, soon to be fixed atop the forged axles and wheels made in previous films. It will eventually become a planter, but its structure is true to the original form used underground by women and children hauling coal while men worked the cutting face.
Each yard once had its own style of wagon, built for the terrain and work at hand. As a heritage filmmaker, that detail matters. What might seem like a simple cart carries deep echoes of labour, hardship, and invention. The replica tub brings those stories forward—not in words, but in wood, steel, and sweat.

The Joinery Workshop completes a trilogy of films I’ve made with Bowes Railway: starting with the blacksmith forge, then the axle and wheel assembly in the engineering shed, and now this final timber structure. What links them all is not just the craftsmanship, but the sense of pride and care that the volunteers bring to every task.
For me, heritage filmmaking is about revealing how the past survives in practice—not just in archives or plaques, but in calloused hands, old tools, and shared knowledge. At Bowes, history isn’t just preserved—it’s rebuilt piece by piece.
If you’d like to watch more of my work exploring community stories, creative resilience, and diverse subjects across arts, heritage, and the environment, you can explore all my films here: https://alanfentiman.co.uk/films-by-alan-fentiman/
You can also browse more of my heritage-related films here: https://alanfentiman.co.uk/vimeo-videos/heritage-films/