Railwaymen would have worn keys on them at all times. Sometimes more important keys and not within a special box with a combination lock.
Ipcress, I really didn't mean to infer that a "signalman" actually carried that "lock-box" with him on the job. On the contrary, my "
thinking" was that the "lock-box" was
always kept at the Depot under supervision of the Station Agent or "call boy" and the employee would retrieve the "key" from the "box" and then return it at the end of his shift, thus the "key"
never left RR property.
Like now days, some employees are "assigned" special keys or combinations to safes, etc., ... and they best know where they are
at all times ...... because if they "
fall-into-the-wrong-hands" the employee is held responsible.
And
in the US, the safe-guarding of those track "switch" keys, and
especially the "signal light" keys, were just as, if not far more important than "combinations" to safes or bank vaults. The reason being there were lots of dastardly thinking people that were angry with a RR and would intentionally "cause a train wreck" even if it killed 100+- people. In those days the RRs were pretty much immune to civil law suites thus it was a "get even" recourse.
Anyway, Ipcress, your cited link proves the old adage of .... "
Two heads are better than one", ..... thus I stand corrected at offering a
bad guess.
HA,
... I am still prone to "think US" if the poster does not state a location. And the only "personalized" objects I could think of at the time were Shaving Mugs which were kept at the Barber Shop. And ps, I now know here is a town with the name of
Leominster in Herefordshire, England and also in Worcester County in the state of Massachusetts, USA.
And Ipcress, to wit:
Snuff and tobacco was far more personal and expensive.
Maybe so in Great Britian, etc. ....... but
not in the US. It was pretty much "
dirt cheap" here .... and iffen you were stingy, .... or poor as a fieldmouse, ..... you could "plant n' raise it" for your own use.
To wit again:
Tobacco farming in Connecticut has a long history. When the first settlers came to the valley in the 1630s, tobacco was already being grown by the native population. By 1700, tobacco was being exported via the Connecticut River to European ports.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connecticut_shade_tobacco