- TitleCollection of Engineering Blueprints Relating to Bolton Back O' Th' Bank Power Station
- ReferenceYMS0263
- Production date1920 - 1942
- English Electric Company LimitedBiographyBiographyThe English Electric Company was formed on 14th December 1918 and over the following year acquired Dick, Kerr & Company of Preston, Willans & Robinson of Rugby, the Phoenix Dynamo Manufacturing Company of Bradford, and Coventry Ordnance Works. After the First World War the various German owned Siemens works were distributed to different UK companies and in November 1919 English Electric acquired the Siemens Brothers Dynamo Works at Stafford, which became the company headquarters in 1931. Coventry Ordnance, primary output naval guns, did not feature in the gradual product rationalisation which took place between the First World and Second world Wars. Willans & Robinson’s Rugby works specialised in prime movers, steam, hydro and internal combustion, and their Stafford works on power station and distribution electrics, including transformers and large electric machines for applications such as mining and steel works. Dick Kerr & Company continued building equipment and vehicles for bus, tram and railway applications with the Phoenix Dynamo Manufacturing Company concentrating on medium and small electrical machines. Involvement with aircraft continued a small scale. By 1929 the company was in financial trouble and an American syndicate fronted by Lazard Bros. put in new capital. In 1930 Westinghouse of Pittsburgh entered into an agreement with the company for the exchange of technical information relating to steam turbines and electrical apparatus. This cooperation continued into the 1950s. 1930 saw the closure of Preston West works and the transfer of traction electrical design and manufacture to the Phoenix Dynamo Manufacturing works. The Westinghouse influence included top management changes with Sir H Mensforth becoming chairman and George Nelson managing director. Both had been with British Westinghouse at Trafford Park. The early 1930s saw a remarkable improvement in the company’s finances and domestic appliance manufacture was started at Bradford and Stafford. In 1936 they began production of diesel locomotives at Preston and were later involved in the production of the Deltic locomotive for British Rail, presaging the end of steam traction in the UK. Extensive shadow factory building for war production commenced in the late 1930’s, including at Preston East works and Salmesbury for aircraft production and at East Lancashire Road, Liverpool for D. Napier aero engines. A large variety of military equipment built during the war included thousands of Cromwell tanks from Stafford and over 3000 Handley Page Hampden and Halifax bombers from Preston and Salmesbury. After the war manufacture of smaller products from Bradford and Stafford moved to the large Liverpool works. This included electrical distribution transformers, switchgear, fuse gear, fractional horsepower motors and domestic appliances. Napier’s continued engine manufacture with the development of the ’Deltic’ diesel engine, mainly for marine applications. The nearby Netherton works took over the manufacture of large hydro-electric turbines and generators from Willans and Stafford. In 1942 English Electric acquired D. Napier & Son Ltd and Marconi in 1946. The company went on to extend their railway interests with the acquisition of the Vulcan Foundry and Robert Stephenson and Hawthorn Ltd in 1955. The company tried to take over The General Electric Company (GEC) in 1960 but failed. Traction manufacture, but not the offices, moved back to Preston East works and ‘K’, ‘RK’ and ‘V’ engine design and manufacture moved from Willans to Preston West works which was now also used for locomotive building. Kidsgrove works in Stafford made industrial controls and for a while was a major player in the UK computer industry, merging with Leo Computers and then into ICL. Train performance calculations were an early user of the mid-fifties ‘Deuce’ computer. Preston also became a major player in the aircraft industry taking over the wartime RAF/USAF base at Warton aerodrome - major design and manufacture contracts included Canberra bombers and Lightning fighters. Rationalisation in the 1960s resulted in English Electric Aviation becoming 40% of the new British Aircraft Corporation. In 1961 English Electric took over Dorman Diesels Ltd which in turn had acquired W. G. Bagnall Ltd. In 1966 English Electric Diesels merged with Ruston and Hornsby which already included Paxmans. This company eventually became GEC Diesels. Elliott Automation was acquired in 1967. The following year GEC took over English Electric, ending its independent existence.
- Scope and ContentCollection of blueprints containing details of general arrangement drawings, sectional drawings and plans for the layout of a Type Vm steam turbine, a turbo alternator and ancillary equipment, manufactured by English Electric Co Ltd, later to become part of the General Electric Company group of companies, for Bolton Corporation Electricity Department.
- Extent3 bundles containing 81 drawings
- Physical descriptionFair
- LanguageEnglish
- Archival historyProvenance unknown
- Level of descriptionTOP
- Repository nameScience and Industry Museum
- County Borough of BoltonBiographyBiographyIn 1838 under the Municipal Corporations Act 1835, the townships of Great Bolton and Little Bolton along with the Haulgh area from Tonge with Haulgh township were incorporated as a municipal borough, making it the second to be created in England after Devonport. The legality of the charter was disputed until the Borough Charter Confirmation Act, 1842 confirmed its status. By 1889 the population of Bolton exceeded 50,000 and as a result it was constituted as a county borough by the Local Government Act 1888. Although situated in the County of Lancashire, it was administered independently from Lancashire until the Local Government Act 1974 when the County Borough of Bolton was abolished, and it was transferred to Greater Manchester to form the Metropolitan Borough of Bolton.
- Hick, Hargreaves and Company LimitedBiographyBiographyHick, Hargreaves & Co Ltd was a company of engineers and millwrights located at Soho Foundry, Bolton, and specialised in locomotives, beam engines and Corliss engines for mills, boilers, and marine diesel engines. Established in 1845, when John Hick, an engineer, entered into partnership with William Hargreaves, his brother-in-law, the new company emerged from Benjamin Hick and Sons. John Hick had been a partner in the predecessor company with his father and brother, both Benjamin. The elder Benjamin Hick died in 1842 and the younger Benjamin left the company around the same time. When John Hick retired in 1868, William Hargreaves assumed sole ownership of the company. On Hargreaves’ death in 1889, the company retained its name under new directorship and gained limited liability under the name Hick, Hargreaves & Co Ltd. Expansion in 1891 saw the acquisition of the Phoenix Boiler Works, with all boiler production moving from the Soho Foundry to the new works. The business registered as a public company on 29 March 1892, and was listed as engineers, millwrights and boiler makers. By the end of the 19th century, Hick, Hargreaves & Co Ltd was a supplier of stationery steam engines for electricity generating stations. From 1911, the company manufactured marine diesel engines. The 1914 edition of Whittaker’s Red Book listed the company as “Engineers, millwrights, manufacturers of diesel oil engines. Specialities: Corliss and drop valve engines up to 10,000 IHP, diesel oil engines, mill gearing, super-heaters. Employees 1,000.” During the First World War, the company began manufacturing high vacuum condensing plant, used in power generation. With the adoption of centralised power generation under the National Grid, the manufacture of plant for power stations became an important part of the company’s output. In 1933, Hick, Hargreaves & Co Ltd acquired the records, drawings and patterns of three defunct steam engine manufacturers, which they used to manufacture spare parts and carry out repairs to the large stationary steam engines still in use in many textile mills. After the textile industry went into decline after the Second World War, the company expanded its work in electricity generation, as well as branching out into food processing, oil refining, petrochemicals and offshore oil production. By 1961, the company was mainly manufacturing power station equipment, and employed 600 people. In 1968 the company was acquired by Electrical and Industrial Securities Ltd (EIS). Hick, Hargreaves & Co Ltd continued to trade as a general engineering company, specialising in the manufacture of condensing plant, feed heating system, rotary compressors and vacuum pumps, condensers and high vacuum plants for industrial purposes during the 1970s. The increased exploration for oil in the North Sea and the modernising of power station equipment saw the company’s fortunes improve due to the demand for high vacuum pumps. The company invested in new machine tools and as a result gained important orders from Japan along with important contracts for water flood equipment for the North Sea Oil Fields and for central vacuum plant for nuclear power stations. The difficult trading conditions in the 1990s brought about the decision to close the Soho Works and restructure the UK business after a significant financial loss in 1999. A cash offer from BOC Netherlands Holding Limited was accepted in 2001 against the background of continuing losses for the company. In 2002, after the company had been sold to BOC Limited the directors took the view that an orderly run down of the affairs of the company was in order. Since 2003 the company has not traded and has acted as a name protection for Hick Hargreaves.
- Conditions governing accessOpen access.
- Conditions governing ReproductionCopies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions.
Creator
Associated people and organisations