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 162,253 pages of information and 244,496 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.

Difference between revisions of "Rolls-Royce"

From Graces Guide
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[[Image:Im195108Fl-RR.jpg|thumb| August 1951. ]]
[[Image:Im195108Fl-RR.jpg|thumb| August 1951. ]]
[[image:Im19530606ILN-RR.jpg|thumb| June 1953. ]]
[[image:Im19530606ILN-RR.jpg|thumb| June 1953. ]]
[[image:Im1953v196-p710.jpg|thumb| 1953. East Kilbride Works for Avon production.]]
[[image:Im1953v196-710b.jpg|thumb| 1953. Engine test bed.]]
[[image:Im1953v196-710b.jpg|thumb| 1953. Engine test bed.]]
[[Image:Im1954CMS-RR.jpg|thumb| September 1954. ]]
[[Image:Im1954CMS-RR.jpg|thumb| September 1954. ]]

Revision as of 12:36, 19 February 2014

January 1920.
January 1920.
January 1920.
1922.Rear Axle of 20-H.P. Rolls Royce Chassis.
1922.20 H.P. Rolls Royce Engine.
1922.20 H.P.Rolls Royce Chassis.
September 1930.
June 1932.
June 1932.
Rolls-Royce 1935 20/25. Reg: CLE919.
September 1937.
1938.
June 1939.
August 1951.
June 1953.
1953. East Kilbride Works for Avon production.
1953. Engine test bed.
September 1954.

of Derby and later of Crewe, manufactured cars and aero-engines.

General

1906 March 15th. The company was registered to take over the manufacture of the Rolls-Royce motor car from Royce Ltd. [1]

1906 December. New shares issued of £200,000 to increase the capital with a view of enlarging the works, and to acquire the business of C. S. Rolls and Co. [2] [3] Directors:

1908 July 9th. The company moved from Manchester to a new factory at Nightingale Road, Derby designed by Royce. The factory was built by Andrew Handyside and Co

1910 Claremont is Chairman, Briggs and Scott are re-elected as directors. [4]

1910 April. C. S. Rolls resigned his position of Technical Managing Director of Rolls-Royce in order to concentrate on his aviation interests[5]; he became an adviser to Rolls-Royce

1911 Formed Automobiles Rolls-Royce (France) Limited. [6]

c1918 Arthur Wormald is MD of the Derby works. A. J. Rowledge is Chief Assistant Engineer.

1919 Established a factory in America

1919 The design team was headed by Timothy B. Barrington with A. G. Elliott and Bernard Day assisting. R. C. Hall looked after metellurgy.

1921 The company opened a second factory in Springfield, Massachusetts.

1931 Aqcuired Bentley Motors (1931) Ltd through the British Equitable Central Trust.

1934 See Rolls-Royce: 1934 Review

1956 Acquired Sentinel for its factory and production capacity[7]

1961 Parent of 13 subsidiaries. Group employs 44,000 persons. Manufacturers of motor car, aero engines, petrol and oil engines, rocket motors and nuclear propulsion. Specialists in designing, developing and procuring of nuclear compartments for naval vessels. [8]

1968 Queen's Award to Industry for Export Achievement. [9]

1971 Financial problems caused largely by development of the new RB 211 turbofan engine led — after several cash subsidies — to the company being nationalised by the Heath government in 1971. (Delay in production of the RB211 engine has been blamed for the failure of the technically advanced Lockheed TriStar, which was beaten to launch by its chief competitor, the Douglas DC-10.)

1971 The receiver created a new company, Rolls-Royce Motors, to contain the profitable parts of the company including the car manufacturing division, the marine and industrial diesel engines, military vehicle operations and rights to the Wankel engine. The new company included the coach building businesses of H. J. Mulliner, Park Ward and Bentley Motors (1931)[10]. The gas turbine businesses were put into a new company Rolls-Royce (1971) Ltd[11]

1972 A new company, Bristol Composite Materials, was established to acquire Rolls Royce (Composite Materials) and the carbon-fibre producer Hyfil from the receiver[12]

1973 Having failed to attract sufficiently high offers in the sale by tender, the automobile business was spun off as a public company, Rolls-Royce Motors Ltd[13]. The main business of aircraft and marine engines remained in public ownership until 1987, when it was privatised as Rolls-Royce plc, one of many privatisations of the Thatcher government.

Cars

Aero engines

Diesel engines

Locations

  • Derby
  • Crewe
  • Hillington
  • East Kilbride
  • Manchester
  • London, Conduit Street
  • Hucknall, Nottingham
  • West Wittering
  • Clan Foundry, Belper

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. The Stock Exchange Year Book 1908
  2. The Times, Monday, Dec 17, 1906
  3. The Early History of Motoring by Claude Johnson
  4. The Times, Saturday, Jan 15, 1910
  5. The Times, Jul 13, 1910
  6. The Times, Wednesday, May 31, 1911
  7. The Times, Jun 17, 1957
  8. 1961 Dun and Bradstreet KBE
  9. The Engineer of 26th April 1968 p650
  10. The Times, Mar 23, 1971
  11. The Times, May 22, 1971
  12. The Times, Sep 16, 1972
  13. The Times, May 04, 1973