- TitleTanganyika Railway contractor drawings of mechanical parts for tank locomotives
- ReferenceGEC/2/2/5/85
- Production date1925 - 1929
- Vulcan Foundry LtdBiographyBiographyThe Vulcan Foundry was originally opened in 1830 at Newton-le-Willows, as Charles Tayleur and Company. It initially produced girders for bridges, switches and crossings, and other ironwork following the opening of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. Robert Stephenson became a partner in 1832, and in the same year, the first locomotives ‘Tayleur’ and ‘Stephenson’ were delivered to the North Union Railway. By 1840 locomotives had been delivered to five European countries and to North America. The company became The Vulcan Foundry Company in 1847 and acquired limited liability in 1864. From the beginning of 1898, the name changed again to The Vulcan Foundry Limited, dropping the word 'company.' Vulcan locomotives were exported all over the world, with the first locomotives for Russia and Japan supplied in 1837 and 1871 respectively and a long association with India began in 1852. First World War production included shells, gun mountings and mine sweeping equipment. The first non-steam locomotive, an electric, was produced for India in 1929. The first diesel locomotive design commenced in 1932/33 and an agreement was reached with A/S Frichs in Denmark. The English Electric 6K engine was used from this time. The “Waltzing Matilda” tank was developed in 1938 and produced in large numbers and over five hundred ‘Austerity’ steam locomotives were produced for the War Department. Other wartime production included gun mountings and torpedo parts. In 1944 Vulcan acquired the locomotive business, Robert Stephenson & Hawthorns Ltd, based in Newcastle-upon-Tyne. In 1946 the company began working with the English Electric Company producing diesel and electric locomotives and became part of the English Electric Group in 1955. All locomotive building from Preston was transferred to Vulcan Foundry and Robert Stephenson’s in Darlington. Under the new ownership, the works produced many locomotives for both domestic and foreign railways, notably the Deltic. The mid-sixties saw the ‘RK’/’V’ engine production at Preston moved to Vulcan and Ruston & Hornsby Ltd merged with English Electric Diesels in 1966. After the General Electric Company plc (GEC) takeover in 1968 the Ruston name was used for some time inside what became GEC Diesels Ltd in 1975. Engine production and development continued for locomotive, industrial and marine applications until after the GEC-Alsthom merger in 1989. The company took over Mirlees Engines, Stockport in 1997 and was renamed Alstom Engines Ltd.
- Scope and ContentThe roll contains c 20 waxed linen drawings of Tanganyika Railway contractor drawings of mechanical parts for tank locomotives.
- Extent1 roll
- Archival historyThis roll of drawings was compiled by Vulcan Foundry Ltd
- Level of descriptionFILE
- Repository nameNational Railway Museum, York
- WG Bagnall LtdBiographyBiographyWG Bagnall Ltd was established as a locomotive manufacturer in 1875 by William Gordon Bagnall in Stafford at what became the Castle Engine Works. Bagnalls first locomotive was produced in 1876, the company going on to produce machines for collieries and overseas plantations. The majority of the products that were manufactured were small four and six-coupled steam locomotives for industrial use, the company were noted for building steam and diesel locomotives in standard and narrow gauges. In 1891 Ernest Edwin Baguley joined the company, he left in 1902 to start his own business. Bagnalls introduced several novel type of locomotive valve gear including the Bagnall-Price and the Baguley. They also used marine (circular) fireboxes on narrow gauge engines, a design that was cheap but needed a different firing technique. Some of the designs of Kerr, Stuart and Co were brought to Bagnalls when they employed William Sydney Edwards, the Chief Draughtsman of Kerr Stuart and Co. Examples of such locomotives can be seen on the Sittingbourne and Kemsley Light Railway. In addition to locomotives, Bagnalls constructed rolling stock and trackwork enabling the complete equipping of light railways. In 1933 Bagnalls entered into an agreement with Deutz of Germany to manufacture their locomotives under licence using engines imported from Germany. In 1948 WG Bagnall Ltd was sold to the Bridge and Steelwork Company, Heenan and Froude, whose owner also owned The Brush Electrical Engineering Co Ltd of Loughborough and in 1951, Bagnalls formed an association with Brush to create Brush-Bagnall Traction Ltd. This association only lasted two years. Heenan and Froude sold Bagnalls to W H Dorman & Co in 1959 in exchange for Dorman ‘A’ shares.
- Hunslet Engine Co LtdBiographyBiographyThe Hunslet Engine Company was founded in 1864 at Jack Lane, Hunslet, Leeds by John Towlerton Leather. In 1871, James Campbell bought the company for £25,000. By 1902, Hunslet supplied engines to over thirty countries worldwide. During 1902, the company was reorganised as a private limited company with the name Hunslet Engine Company Ltd. During the First World War the company was engaged in the manufacture of munitions. Hunslet was one of the early pioneers in the 1930's that worked on the perfecting of the diesel locomotive and acquired the patterns, rights and designs of other builders including Kerr Stuart and the Avonside Engine Co. During the Second World War the company’s best known contributions to the war effort was production of the famous 'Austerity' locomotives. Post-war locomotive production included many of the Hunslet flame-proof diesel engines for use in the coal mines. During the 1970s the company bought the Scottish firm Andrew Barclay and local firms Hudswell Clarke and Greenwood & Batley. In 1987 Hunslet was taken over by Telfos Holdings Ltd who in 1989 split the Group into two major components - Hunslet GMT (handling underground locomotives) based in Leeds, and Hunslet Barclay (covering surface locomotives and rolling stock) based in Kilmarnock. A new company, Hunslet Transportation Projects, was formed to build the British Rail class 323 electric trains, the last project to be executed at the Hunslet works in Leeds before it was closed and demolished. Kilmarnock continued, building a capability of refurbishing main line trains. The remaining Hunslet Barclay businesses have since been absorbed into Wabtec.
- Tanganyika RailwaysBiographyBiographyTanganyika Railway, was the most important railway line in Tanganyika, constructed in 1905 by the Germans, running west from Dar es Salaam to Kigoma on Lake Tanganyika, with a branch line to Mwanza on Lake Victoria created in 1931 by Tanganyika Railways and Port Services. In 1948, Tanganyika Railways and Port Services merged with Uganda Railways and Kenya Railways to form the East African Railways and Harbours Administration.
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- contains 4 partsTOPGEC GEC Traction Archive
- contains 5 partsSUB-FONDSGEC/2 Drawing Office records
- contains 35 partsSERIESGEC/2/2 Drawings