Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 167,701 pages of information and 247,104 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

R. and W. Hawthorn

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Revision as of 16:16, 26 November 2011 by PeterEllis (talk | contribs) (General)

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1852. Locomotive for Great Northern Railway.
1862. The Ellesmere built at Leith. Exhibit at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh.
1862. The Ellesmere built at Leith. Exhibit at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh.
April 1870.
1880.
1913. Engine for the South Indian Railway.

R. and W. Hawthorn Ltd of Forth Banks Works in Newcastle was a locomotive manufacturer.

General

  • 1817 Robert Hawthorn first began business at the Forth Bank Works building marine and stationary steam engines.
  • 1820 His brother William Hawthorn joined him and the firm became R. and W. Hawthorn.
  • 1829 Possibly after having attended the Rainhill Trials, they became interested in locomotives, and sold their first engine, a 2-2-2 named Modling, to a railway in Vienna.
  • There followed a number of orders for the Stockton and Darlington Railway. They were great innovators - not always successfully - and their locos had many original features.
  • In 1838 two were built for the broad gauge Great Western Railway to the patent of T. E. Harrison, who later became the chief engineer for the North Eastern Railway. These could be viewed as the forerunners of the Garratt, with the boiler carried on a separate carriage to the cylinders and valve gear. This allowed the boiler to be large and low down, being carried on smaller wheels, while the driving wheels could be up to ten feet in diameter. With little weight on the drivers, adhesion was poor, but they ran very smoothly up to sixty miles per hour. However, the flexible steam coupling gave a great deal of trouble and they were withdrawn. They continued to build more conventional engines, possibly under sub-contract, among them, three for the Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway.
  • 1846 They bought the Leith Engine Works in Leith, Scotland, for the assembly of locomotives prepared in Newcastle.
  • 1849 Two Cornish engines for Derby Waterworks (Little Eaton Station), and one for Nottingham (Ropewalk Pumping Station) with combined bucket (lift) and force pumps.
  • 1850 The Leith works were sold to another company also called Hawthorns and Company, which produced some four hundred locomotives on its own account until 1872.
  • In the 1850s, they built a number of Crampton type locomotives, and in the quest for a low centre of gravity, four 0-4-0s with the drivers spaced at twelve feet apart connected to the cylinders by a dummy crankshaft. These were soon withdrawn, but the Cramptons were more successful, particularly on the continent.
  • 1850s onwards, the company placed more emphasis on marine engines. In the next 20 years, they constructed 200 sets of marine engines[2].

Engines

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. Timothy Hackworth and the Locomotive by Robert Young. Published 1923.
  2. The Times, 5 January 1910
  • [1] Wikipedia
  • British Steam Locomotive Builders by James W. Lowe. Published in 1975. ISBN 0-905100-816
  • Engineer and Machinist's Assistant 1847. plate LXVII, LXVIII, LXX, LXXII, LXXIII
  • The Steam Engine in Industry by George Watkins in two volumes. Moorland Publishing. 1978. ISBN 0-903485-65-6