Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

Registered UK Charity (No. 115342)

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,258 pages of information and 244,500 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.

Easton and Amos

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Revision as of 22:33, 30 May 2018 by JohnD (talk | contribs)
1850. Detail of Easton and Amos engine at Taunton Museum (The Museum of Somerset)
1858. Steam Machinery for Driving Rotary Pumps.
1858. Machinery for Atlantic Cable.
1858. Glasmoor engines.
1861. Easton, Amos & Sons engine at Westonzoyland Museum
1861. Engine at Weston Zoyland.
1861. Engine at Westonzoyland Museum
1862 Appold drainage machine. The same type of machine may be seen running at Westonzoyland
1864. Engine at Curry Moor Pumping House
1869.

of London. Also Easton, Amos and Sons

1837 The founding partners were Charles Edwards Amos and James Easton

1843 James Beswick leaves the partnership. '...the Partnership heretofore subsisting between us, James Easton, Charles Edwards Amos, and James Beswick, carrying on the business of Plumbers, at the Grove, Great Guilford-street, in the parish of Saint Saviour, in the borough of Southwark is this day dissolved, by mutual consent...'[1]

1849 Mentions as insolvent debtor James Butterworth, of No. 6, Belvidere-road. Lambeth, Surrey, Clerk and Traveller to Messrs. Easton and Amos, of the Grove, Great Guildford-street, Southwark, Surrey, Engineers, and also Clerk of the District Church of All Saint's, Lambeth.[2]

1850 Easton & Amos beam engine at Taunton Museum (The Museum of Somerset), formerly in Pearsall's Silk Mills, Taunton. Numerous photos of various features of this engine are shown in Easton and Amos Beam Engine in Taunton

c.1855 Four column Woolf-type beam pumping engine for the Ashbridge Estate, Little Gaddesden [3]

c.1855 Engine for West Butterwick Drainage, Lincs (South Common Area).

Late 1850s: Modernisation works at Alnwick Castle: '....The numerous larders and sculleries have been conveniently placed on one level; and hydraulic lifts from the kitchen to the principal floor also combine to save unnecessary labour: these latter are the engineering works of Messrs. Easton & Amos.' From The Builder[4]. The lift's prime mover, which remains in situ, is unusual, having a large horizontal hydraulic cylinder, apparently working at relatively low pressure, whose piston moves a rack engaging with a pinion driving speed-increasing gearing to turn the winding drum.[5]

1857 Supplied six hydraulic rams for raising the main spans of the Royal Albert Bridge, Saltash.[6]

1860 Became Easton, Amos and Sons.

c.1860 Stationary steam engines for Portsmouth Water Works.

1860 Provided pumps for North Wall Dock, Dublin[7]

1861 Drainage machine for the Somerset Rivers Drainage Board (Westonzoyland Station). This is a two-cylinder steam engine driving Appold centrifugal pump preserved in running order at Westonzoyland Pumping Station Museum. In 2016 it received an Engineering Heritage Award from the Institution of Mechanical Engineers.

1863 Beam pumping engine from Cliftonville Pumping Station (Northampton) now preserved at Kew Bridge Steam Museum

1863 Supplied hydraulic lifts for Exeter St David's railway station[8]

c.1863-5 Supplied a hydraulic lift to raise carriages to the carriage and harness sales gallery at Tattersall's auction rooms, Knightsbridge Green[9]

1864 Easton Amos & Sons pumping machine preserved at Curry Moor Pumping Station in Somerset.

1864 Supplied five hydraulic lifts for the Brighton Hotel[10]

1864 Gas pumping engine used at Old Kent Road gasworks. (Exhibit at Birmingham Thinktank museum)

1864 William Anderson joined the company and planned the new works at Erith. The company's business was making pumping machinery of all kinds, centrifugal pumps, cranes, boilers, and paper and sugar machinery.

1864 Engine for Somerset Rivers Drainage Board (Stanmoor Station).

1865 New works at Erith 'are progressing rapidly towards completion'[11]

1865 Easton & Amos supplied five hydraulic lifts to the Langham Hotel, Portland Place, London[12]Paisley Herald and Renfrewshire Advertiser - Saturday 17 June 1865

1866 'James Easton the elder, Charles Edwards Amos, James Easton the younger, Edward Easton, Percy Shaw Easton, James Chapman Amos, and William Anderson, carrying on business together as Engineers, Ship Builders, and Iron Workers and Founders, at the Erith Works, Erith; in the county of Kent, expired on the 30th day of June, 1866, by effluxion of time, so far as respects the said James Easton the elder and Charles Edwards Amos' [13]

1866 Easton, Amos and Sons. Largest makers of the true Appold pump. [14]

1866 James Easton and C. E. Amos retired from the company which became Easton and Anderson

1867 Company refered to as Easton, Amos and Anderson. [15]

In 1863 an advertisement for the sale of Twyford Mills at Bishops Stortford included the steam engine and mill equipment made by Easton & Amos[16]

From 1863 to 1869 a 'new engine and pumping machine' were included in advertisements for the sale of the Northern Estate, Wexford, formerly the property of John Edward Redmond M.P., deceased, reclaimed by the Wexford Harbour Embankment Co.[17][18]

In 1869 a 35 HP compound Easton & Amos was included in the sale of the Abbey Print Works, West Ham[19]

In 1873 Tunbridge Wells Water Works advertised for sale two Easton & Amos engines: one 1 HP table engine of 6.5" bore, 18" stroke, and one 18 HP beam engine, high and low pressure combined, 2 ft 10" stroke[20]

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. [1] Gazette Issue 20296 published on the 15 December 1843. Page 22 of 48
  2. [2] Gazette Issue 20962 published on the 30 March 1849. Page 37 of 40
  3. Plate 103, 'Stationary Steam Engines of Great Britain, Volume 6: The South Midlands', by George Watkins, Landmark Publishing Ltd
  4. Alnwick Mercury, 1 September 1860
  5. AIA Industrial Archaeology News, 176, Spring 2016, 'The Hydraulic Lift at Alnwick Castle' by Tim R Smith. The article includes two recent photos of the machine
  6. 'Brunel's Royal Albert Bridge' by John Binding, Twelveheads Press, 1997
  7. Freeman's Journal - Friday 10 February 1860
  8. Exeter and Plymouth Gazette - Friday 14 August 1863
  9. [3] British History Online - Knightsbridge Green Area: Knightsbridge Green
  10. [4] Scientific American, 16 April 1864, quoting from the Building News
  11. Gravesend Reporter, North Kent and South Essex Advertiser - Saturday 28 January 1865
  12. Kentish Chronicle - Saturday 9 September 1865, reporting the death of William Chasmar, killed by being struck by the lift due to him operating it incorrectly
  13. Gazette Issue 23216 published on the 5 February 1867. Page 42 of 78
  14. The Engineer of 13th April 1866 p279
  15. The Engineer 1867/12/13.
  16. Bell's Weekly Messenger, 9 May 1863
  17. Wexford Constitution - Wednesday 3 January 1866
  18. Wexford Constitution - Saturday 27 March 1869
  19. Public Ledger and Daily Advertiser - Saturday 18 September 1869
  20. Kent & Sussex Courier, 5 September 1873
  • Stationary Steam Engines of Great Britain by George Watkins. Vol 10