Title
Notices of dismissal to staff at Mirfield Shed issued by the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway
Reference
MIR
Production date
17-05-1883 - 04-04-1910
Creator
- Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway CoBiographyBiography
1847-1922, railway company, England
The title "Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway" was adopted by the Manchester & Leeds Railway in July, 1847 following its absorption of a number of earlier local railways, the largest of which was the Manchester and Leeds Railway.
In 1922, Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway amalgamated with London and North Western Railways; the expanded LNWR subsequently formed part of the London and North Western Railway.
Scope and Content
Notices of dismissal issued by the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway Locomotive Department to staff at Mirfield Shed, 1883-1910. The volume contains stubs of printed dismissal forms filled in with the date, name of the member of staff and reasons for the notice given. Contains approx 150 stubs and approx. 15 unused forms. Document number LB 33 285S. Printed forms include the name of superintendent of the LYR Locomotive Department, William Barton Wright, who worked for LYR between 1875-1886.
Extent
1 volume
Physical description
Fair condition
Language
English
Archival history
Donated to the National Railway Museum by a private depositor, 2009.
Level of description
TOP
Repository name
National Railway Museum, York
Associated people and organisations
- Wright, William BartonBiographyBiography
William Barton Wright (1828-1915), Mechanical Engineer, was born in Murton House, near North Shields, Northumberland on 13 November 1828 to father William Clark Wright and mother Charlotte Sarah Parr (married on 25 Jan 1825 in Tynemouth parish). In 1839 the Wrights moved to Bayswater, London, where William’s father died in 1844. In 1845 William started a six-year apprenticeship at Great Western Railway, Swindon, under Daniel Gooch. He worked in the erecting shop, then as draughtsman and lastly as assistant to the works manager Archibald Sturrock. In 1851 he was placed in charge of the GWR loco depot at Paddington, London. In October 1854 he was appointed the first loco carriage and wagon superintendent on the Madras Railway India, where he arrived in March 1855.
In 1875 William was appointed as the locomotive superintendent at the Miles Platting works, Manchester. In ten years he renewed almost entirely the Lancashire & Yorkshire railway (LYR) locomotive stock and was responsible of the establishment of new loco works at Horwich, near Bolton. He resigned from LYR in June 1886 to give more time to private practice as an engineer in London. William became the director of the Balmadies Estates Co Ltd and Assam Rs & Trading Co Ltd in India. He was a member of the Institution of Civil Engineers (associate from 1859, member from 1896 until 1906) and the Institution of the Mechanical Engineers (1878-1892).
William Barton Wright married Janet Forlonge in London 1858 and at least three sons and two daughters survived to adulthood. Son Edward William Barton Wright (1860–1951) worked also as a civil engineer and surveyor. In 1892 William retired following the death of his wife and moved to an ancestral home in Dover, then 1907 to St Leonards on Sea, Sussex, where passed away on 7 May 1915.
- Manchester & Leeds Railway Co.BiographyBiography
Incorporated on 4th July, 1836, the Manchester & Leeds railway was opened in 4th July 1839. Superintended by George Stephenson, its engineer was Thomas Longridge Gooch, a brother of Daniel Gooch of the GWR. It was incorporated into the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway in 1847.
- Mirfield StationBiographyBiography
Mirfield station was originally a part of Manchester & Leeds Railway. Line from Hebden Bridge to Normanton, passing Mirfield, was opened in 1840. At first Mirfild was a stop without buildings, the first station was opened in April 1845 and a larger one due to increased traffic in March 1866. The engine shed was probably built between mid-1840s - 1860s. In 1847 Manchester & Leeds changed its name to Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway. Being one of eleven of the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway sheds Mirfiled had both passenger and goods engines. Decline in freight traffic and elimination of steam power led to the closure of Mirfield engine shed in 1967, being demolished in 2007.
Subject
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