In my experience, the wood is a ply wooden back box with dovetail joints. Originally, the faceplate screws would have been woodscrews that would have been driven straight into the backbox.
It has been butchered a tad at the top to let in the cables. I can't tell if that is capping or conduit.
The original switch drop could, of course, have been altered to make a two way.
In my experience, I have seen both wooden and metal back boxes from houses built in the 50s. The metal ones were standard size, but with fixed lugs and manufactured of very much thicker metal than today's efforts! Also the 50s boxes were black japanned.
I have also seen a different style of light switch in the early 90s, a bit like a 4 gang but portrait instead of landscape and slimmer. I can't for the life of me remember the brand. IIRC, I only ever saw them in 30s houses in Sale Moor, M23. They had wooden back boxes.
It was similar to this, but not the same.
Back to the cables in these switches. The conductors are not tinned, so I don't think they are imperial. The sleeving predates 1978.
I have known houses to be rewired, but the lazy beggers leave the old wooden boxes in!
I've even seen rewires where the spark used Ashley sockets (going back to the 80s) and 16mm lighting back boxes.
Can't believe he crammed it all in...
I have wooden backboxes in my 1968 house
Can't believe that!
Maybe he had leftover stock?
I had a house built in 1968 and it had metal back boxes, cpcs to the lighting and a TN-C-S intake.
Surely not compliant with the 14th Ed, then! I'm positive that wood had gone out by then. I "grew up" on the 14th as, although the 15th was technically issued in 1981, it wasn't compulsory until 1985, hence why VO ELCBs were deleted from the regs in that year.
I also worked for a chap who was still stuck in the 14th Ed when the 16th came along!