Title
Letter from John Wesley Hackworth, under the pseudonym of ‘Wylam’ to ‘Editor’ presumably sent to various editors including Editor of the Daily Herald
Reference
HACK/3/1/46
Production date
1885 - 1885
Creator
- Hackworth, John WesleyBiographyBiography
John Wesley Hackworth was born at 6.30 pm on 8 May 1820 at Warbottle, Northumberland. His father was Timothy Hackworth and his mother was Jane Hackworth (nee Golightly). The family moved to Shildon in 1825 as his father had taken up work with the Stockton and Darlington Railway Company. John Wesley was involved with his father’s work from an early age and accompanied his father’s locomotive to Russia in 1837 when he was just 16 years old. He married Ann Turner, this was after he had proposed to Jane Dunton, who turned him down. Ann herself appears to have been betrothed to someone else. They had nine children, the youngest three died at an early age. One of his children was Albert Hackworth whose papers are listed in series HACK 6/1. Ann died in a Coxlodge Asylum, Northumberland 28 July 1872.
John Wesley Hackworth was works manager at Soho and continued to there after his father’s death until the works were sold in 1855. He then set up business at Preistgate Engine Works in Darlington and made stationary engines and machinery. John Wesley patented a number of inventions including the horizontal steam engines and a type of valve gear known as the ‘dynamic valve gear’ or ‘Hackworth radial valve gear’. In the mid 1860’s he began manufacturing cotton machinery for Egypt and built a works at Bank Top, Darlington, however this business was affected by the fall of the Khedive in Egypt and the works failed. After his wife’s death he visited Canada and the United Stares in an attempt to introduce his valve gear, which appears to have been relatively unsuccessful. He returned to England and began work as a consulting engineer in Darlington, moving to Sunderland and then London. He also worked to devise better ways to ventilate mines.
John Wesley Hackworth campaigned throughout his life for recognition of his father. He sent a public letter challenging Robert Stephenson to a locomotive competition in 1849 (HACK 3/1/15) presumably with an aim to bring Hackworth to more prominence. After his father’s death his campaign became much more pronounced. He reacted to what he felt were inaccurate and unjust claims on the behalf of people involved in the early days of railways, particularly claims that Stephenson was responsible for the success of the locomotive. He was particularly angered by the claims made by Samuel Smiles in his published works. John Wesley Hackworth played out his anger in public, writing letters to newspapers and personally to railway writers such as Zerah Colburn. According to his nephew Robert Young Pickering he also gave talks supporting his father that made wild claims, he was a supporter of the theory that the Sanspareil was sabotaged in Forth Street Works, therefore causing his father to lose the Rainhill trials. Robert Young, his nephew writes in his book Timothy Hackworth and the Locomotive (London: Locomotive Publishing Company, 1923)
‘He wrote vigorously, and pounded his opponents in sledge-hammer style. Sometimes he did harm to his case by his downright methods, and on more than one occasion quarrelled with those not ill-disposed to himself or his cause, and his impetuous and abrupt disposition told against him’
John Wesley appears to have had money difficulties towards the end of his life. In 1887 his sister Prudence Nightingale (nee Hackworth) writes to Thomas Greener to ask him for help to lobby members of parliament, apparently the family could not support him and they were concerned he may end up in the workhouse. John Wesley died of cancer in Sunderland on 13 July 1891.
- Hackworth, AnnBiographyBiography
Ann Turner married John Wesley Hackworth, Ann herself appears to have been betrothed to someone else before this. They had nine children, the youngest three died at an early age. Ann died in a Coxlodge Asylum, Northumberland 28 July 1872.
Scope and Content
Printed and draft letters under the heading ‘The Locomotive and Railway System’
Reprinted letter ‘the Locomotive and Railway System’ a letter from the London Daily Chronicle s
Discusses early railways, the ‘parent of this unique device is comparatively unknown’, goes on to state the ‘facts’ quotes letter to from Robert Stephenson re bellows, criticises Samuel Smiles’ publication on George Stephenson. States that Hackworth introduced the locomotive in 1811 ‘the merit of which has been erroriously [sic] ascribed to William Hedley the viewer’, also printed version, some copies include letter to ‘the Echo’ by Thomas Greener ‘the Inventor of the Locomotive’
’locomotive and Railway System’ Refers critically to Mr Stretton [railway author]’s ‘power of steam notes’ and letters to newspapers. Stephenson is not the founder of the railway system ‘perverted truth’, testimony of William Gowland loco driver who worked for Stephenson. ‘what can Mr Stretton know personally of the trickery plaid off at the Rainhill contest in 1829? Does he imagine the combined perpetrators of the nefarious deeds would publish their infamy? Would they rather do their upmost to obliterate every trace of it? That such deeds were done I have indisputable evidence’. Criticises Theodore West. John Wesley Hackworth wished to write an ‘illustrated history of locomotive development’ but was unable to because of his duties [not complete].
’Locomotive and Railway System’ ‘I can’t imagine why Mr Stretton keeps sending me mutilated prints’ says that Stretton is sending him ‘abuse’, discusses supporters of Stephenson and their claims against Timothy Hackworth, William Gowland loco driver who worked for Stephenson, discusses early railways [not compete]. See Stephenson bellows letter.
Extent
1 bundle
Level of description
ITEM
Repository name
National Railway Museum, York
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