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 167,756 pages of information and 247,134 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.

Sir Arthur P. Heywood

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Sir Arthur Percival Heywood of Duffield Bank, Derbyshire

1849-1916

1874-1916 Built six miniature locomotives in 15 inch gauge. The boilers were built by Abbott and Co of Newark.

Heywood's Life and Work

A detailed account of Sir Arthur Heywood's railway engineering activities was published in 1995 [1]. The following information is extracted from that book.

Sir Benjamin Heywood, the first holder of the Heywood Baronetcy, was a wealthy banker. The Baronetcy passed to Thomas Percival Heywood (b.1823 at Acresfield). His eldest son was Arthur Percival Heywood, born at Doveleys near Uttoxeter on Christmas Day 1849.

From an early age APH was interested in lathework, having watched his father use his Holtzapffel lathe (bought from the estate of Sir H. Fleetwood). His interest in things mechanical continued, but social constraints ruled against a career in engineering.

In 1871 Heywood graduated in Applied Science at Trinity College, Cambridge.

He married his cousin, Margaret Effie Sumner, in 1872. His father bought the couple a house and grounds at Duffield Bank near Derby. Here he built a workshop and railway, and undertook extensive experiments with 15-inch gauge railways, ostensibly with a view to establishing that gauge for commercial and military use. The railway became known as the Duffield Bank Railway.

A workshop was built, with a well-equipped machine shop, forge, erecting shop, iron foundry, brass foundry, carriage shop, pattern shop, saw mill. These were powered by a Crossley gas engine. In the yard was a 5 ton hand crane made by R. C. Gibbins.

Heywood completed his first locomotive, EFFIE, in 1875. It was an 0-4-0 well tank.

The second locomotive, the 0-6-0 tank engine ELLA, was more interesting, particularly in regard to the articulation system and the valve gear. A description was given in The Engineer 1881/07/15. The locomotive ended up on the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway.

The next engine was MURIEL, an 0-8-0T, completed in 1894. Again this had a flexible wheelbase. On one occasion it hauled a train of eight bogie vehicles with 124 passengers around a loop of 40 ft radius with a gradient of 1 in 47. Heywood copied the design of split enclosed oupling rod brasses from Samuel Geoghegan.

Heywood built a railway system, including the locomotives KATIE (0-4-0T, SHELAGH (0-6-0T) and URSULA (0-6-0T) for the Duke of Westminster's Eaton Hall Railway.

Heywood built 9-inch and a 15-inch gauge railway systems - the Dove Bank Railway - at his other home, Doveleys.

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. 'Sir Arthur Heywood and the Fifteen Inch Gauge Railway' by Mark Smithers, Plateway Press, 1995
  • British Steam Locomotive Builders by James W. Lowe. Published in 1975. ISBN 0-905100-816