Title
Glass Slides of Textile Machinery and Photographic Prints of Engines
Reference
YA1999.24
Production date
1860 - 1940
Scope and Content
Series of glass lantern slides showing illustrated drawings of the spinning process along with textile machinery in mills manufactured by Taylor Lang and Co of Stalybridge and Brooks and Doxey of Manchester. There are a number of black and white photographic prints of Gardner marine and commercial diesel engines both for vehicles and as stationary engines for use as power plants, machine tools and a small number of views of the works at Patricroft.
Extent
0.12 linear metres
Physical description
Good
Language
English
Archival history
Found in the office of Les Alyward, Former Technical Services Manager at MOSI
Level of description
TOP
Repository name
Science and Industry Museum
Associated people and organisations
- Taylor Lang & Co
- Brooks & Doxey LtdBiographyBiography
Cotton machinery manufacturer, Manchester, based at Union Iron Works, West Gorton, Manchester, and Junction Iron Works, Newton Heath, Manchester. The firm was founded by Samuel Brooks in 1859 and became Brooks and Doxey in 1892 when R.A. Doxey joined as partner. In 1931, Brooks and Doxey sold their textile machinery making assets to Textile Machinery Makers (TMM) in return for shares. The individual units continued to trade under their own names until the 1970s, when they were rationalised into one company called Platt UK Ltd.
- L Gardner & Sons LtdBiographyBiography
Lawrence Gardner established a general engineering business in Hulme, Manchester in 1868. The company produced sewing machines, moulds for rubber tyres, bread dough mixers and dentist chairs, among other products. Lawrence Gardner died in 1890, and his sons continued the business as L Gardner & Sons Ltd. The company began manufacturing dynamos in 1892 and by May 1894 started manufacturing internal combustion engines on the Otto four-stroke cycle that ran on town gas. By 1897, the company was experimenting with oil fuelled engines and switching from horizontal to vertical engine production.
The company moved to larger premises in Patricroft, Manchester in 1899, in an area that later became the Barton Hall Industrial Estate. Diesel engine production was established by 1903 and this type became popular as marine diesel engines. During the First World War, the company manufactured munitions, gun parts and tank engines. In 1930, the company developed the L2 diesel engine for use in buses and lorries. This engine type subsequently led to the development of rail traction engines. By the end of the 1930s, the company employed 2,800 people in a site occupying over 30,000 square metres and manufacturing around 3,500 engines per year. The company's heyday was in the 1950s and 1960s, when its diesel engines led the field for bus, lorry, rail and marine transport.
Along with other heavy industries, L Gardner & Sons suffered a decline in the 1970s and eventually became a subsidiary of Hawker Siddeley in 1977. It was later sold off to Perkins Engines of Peterborough in 1986. Automotive engine production ceased in 1994, but marine engine production continued. With its acquisition by L Gardner Group Plc, the company ceased all engine production and focused on the supply of spare parts and repair of existing engines.
Subject
Conditions governing access
Open access.
Conditions governing Reproduction
Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions.
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