- TitleIron foundry costs book
- ReferencePECK2/2
- Production date08-03-1955 - 31-10-1961
- Fox Walker & Co.BiographyBiographyThe partnership formed in 1864 between Francis William Fox (born 1841) and Edwin Walker (1840-1917) marked the beginning of specialist locomotive manufacturing in Bristol. They established Atlas Engineering Works at Deep Pit Road, St George, to the east of Bristol. The railway boom of the 1860s saw Fox Walker & Co. develop a successful business, concentrating on the manufacture of standardised locomotives, mainly small tank engines suitable for industry and engineering both at home and overseas. By the mid 1860s, 40% of Fox Walker’s production also supplied narrow gauge railways in Europe and South America. By the mid 1870s, the railway boom had collapsed. The private locomotive manufacturers concentrated on their specialist markets and in doing so their businesses weathered the storm. During this time, Fox Walker & Co. continued to develop their successful export business, exhibiting at both the Vienna Exhibition in 1873 and the Paris Exhibition of 1878. However, by the late 1870s private locomotive manufacturers were struggling to survive. Attempts at Diversification by Fox Walker & Co. from 1875 led to a number of unsuccessful investments, first in the Handyside Steep Gradient Company Limited and then in steam tram technology. By December 1878, mounting loses resulted in the Fox Walker partnership coming to an end in 1878.
- Peckett & Sons LtdBiographyBiographyFox, Walker & Co. was taken over by Thomas Peckett (1834-1891) and his four sons in 1881. Peckett & Sons continued in the business tradition of Fox, Walker, producing industrial locomotives to standardised designs. By the start of the twentieth century the industrial locomotive manufacturing industry was flourishing once more. To cope with demand the Atlas Works expanded with a rebuilt boiler shop and new machine shop. Throughout the early twentieth century Peckett built their reputation on ‘specialisation and standardisation’. Theirs was a strong brand name and it dominated its market supplying industrial locomotives. In 1914, Peckett & Sons became a limited company. Peckett was busy through the years of the First World War with new orders and locomotive repairs. In the years after 1918 the majority of work passing through the works was repairs, especially after the grouping of railway companies in 1923. However, the prosperity was not to last. Peckett managed to survive the 1930s depression as the business benefited from the company’s past prudence. The recovery in the market towards the end of the 1930s continued during the Second World War as the company received large orders as a result of the war effort. However the company’s fortunes suffered as a result of acute shortages after 1945 and the railway industry’s increasing movement towards diesel traction. Peckett & Sons Ltd were reluctant to invest in the advancing diesel technology. Consequently the business was left behind, only making the move towards diesel in 1955 as a result of the British Railway Modernisation Plan decision to phase out steam locomotives. By this time it was too late for Peckett & Sons Ltd. Their first diesel locomotive was completed in 1956. Only five diesel locomotives had been produced by the time the last Peckett locomotive left the Atlas Works in August 1959. Peckett & Sons Ltd continued producing spares and carrying out repairs at the Atlas Works until the company was taken over by Reed Crane & Hoist Company of Brighouse, Yorkshire in October 1961. The Atlas Works closed when the last repaired locomotive left the premises in January 1962. Reed Crane & Hoist Company continued to supply spares under the name of Peckett & Sons from Brighouse. At this stage it is not clear when Reed Crane & Hoist Company ceased trading. However by the 1980’s Peckett & Sons Ltd had became a subsidiary of the Myson Group Limited. When the National Railway Museum acquired the engineering archive from the Company in 1982 demand for Peckett steam locomotive spares was virtually nil.
- Scope and Content1 accounts book from the Iron Foundry detailing a weekly return for materials for production, expenses, wages, order numbers and account balance; includes several inserts.
- Extent1 item
- Level of descriptionITEM
- Repository nameNational Railway Museum, York
Creator
Hierarchy browser
- contains 8 partsTOPPECK Peckett & Sons Archive
- contains 2 partsSERIESPECK/2 Financial records