Beyer, Peacock and Company
Beyer, Peacock and Company was an English railway locomotive manufacturer with a factory in Openshaw, Manchester. Founded by Charles Beyer, Richard Peacock and Henry Robertson, it traded from 1854 until 1966. The company exported locomotives, and machine tools to service them, throughout the world.
Founders
German-born Charles Beyer had undertaken engineering training related to cotton milling in Dresden before moving to England in 1831 aged 21. He secured employment as a draughtsman at Sharp, Roberts and Company's Atlas works in central Manchester, which manufactured cotton mill machinery and had just started building locomotives for the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. There he was mentored by head engineer and prolific inventor of cotton mill machinery, Richard Roberts. By the time he resigned 22 years later he was well established as the company's head engineer; he had been involved in producing more than 600 locomotives.Richard Peacock had been chief engineer of the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway's locomotive works in Gorton when he resigned in 1854, confident in his ability to secure orders to build locomotives. Beyer’s resignation presented Peacock with a partnership opportunity. However, the business at the outset was a legal partnership and the partners were therefore liable for debts should the business fail; in a mid-Victorian economic climate of boom and bust, it was a risky venture. Beyer could raise £9,524 and Peacock £5,500, but they still required a loan from Charles Geach, of which Beyer and Peacock had been founding members. Soon afterwards, however, Geach died, the loan was recalled, and the whole project nearly collapsed. Thomas Brassey came to the rescue, persuading Henry Robertson to provide a £4,000 loan in return for being the third partner. It was not until 1883 that the company was incorporated as a private limited company and renamed Beyer, Peacock & Co. Ltd. In 1902 it took on its final form as a public limited company.
During the Great Depression, faced with competition from tramways and electric railways, the company began to look for alternatives so that they were not dependent on one product. In 1932 they acquired their first company and in 1949 formed a joint company with Metropolitan-Vickers to build locomotives other than steam. By 1953 Beyer, Peacock had acquired more than five subsidiary companies; two others followed five years later. In 1958 Beyer, Peacock Ltd was formed.
Gorton Foundry
Beyer and Peacock started building their Gorton Foundry in 1854 two miles east from the centre of Manchester at Openshaw on a 12-acre site, on the opposite side of the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway line from Peacock's previous works. The site was chosen because land was cheaper than in the city, allowing ample room to expand, and there was a good water supply from an MS&LR reservoir. At the Foundry, Beyer designed and manufactured machine tools needed to build the locomotives, and oversaw locomotive design and production. Peacock dealt with the business side, often travelling to continental Europe to secure orders.In July 1855 the first locomotive, built for the Great Western Railway, left Gorton Foundry. Between 1854 and 1868 the company built 844 locomotives, of which 476 were exported. The company sold mainly to the British colonies, Southern Africa and South America; it never broke into the North American market.
During the First World War Beyer, Peacock manufactured artillery; in August 1915 Gorton Works was put under government control with production switching almost entirely to the war effort, especially heavy field artillery. During the Second World War, the company was again brought under government control but continued to build locomotives throughout the war.
Condensing locomotives for underground railways
A technological innovation that strengthened the company's reputation was the world's first successful condensing locomotive design for London's first underground railway – the Metropolitan Railway A Class 4-4-0 tank engine. Between 1864 and 1886, 148 were built for various railways; most operated until the lines' electrification in 1905. The locomotives' main designer, Hermann Ludwig Lange, was a native of Beyer's home town, Plauen, Saxony who had undertaken an apprenticeship followed by engineering training. Beyer had invited him to England in 1861 and employed him for the first year in the company workshops, then as a draughtsman under his direction. He became chief draughtsman in 1864 or 1865. After Beyer's death in 1876, he became chief engineer and co-manager of the company.Beyer-Garratt articulated locomotives
An articulated locomotive design that became renowned in the 20th century was another innovation, the Beyer-Garratt articulated locomotive, invented by Herbert William Garratt, who was granted a patent in 1908; Beyer, Peacock had sole rights of manufacture in Britain. After the patents ran out in 1928, the company began to use the name "Beyer-Garratt" to distinguish their locomotives. They became widely used throughout Africa, South America, Asia, Australia and the South Pacific, where difficult terrain and lightly laid, tightly curved track, usually narrow-gauge, severely limited the weight and power output of conventional locomotives. In Garratt's design, two girders holding a boiler and a cab were slung between two "engine" units, each with cylinders, wheels and motion. The weight of the locomotive was therefore spread over a considerable distance. Both engine units were topped by water tanks. The unit adjoining the cab end also held a fuel bunker.Between 1909 and 1958, Beyer, Peacock built more than a thousand Garratts; significant types are [|listed below]. Among them, three of the most significant are preserved :
- first: the Tasmanian Government Railways K class, built in 1909 for the North East Dundas Tramway of western Tasmania
- most powerful: the East African Railways 59 class of 1955
- last: the South African Railways NG G16 class locomotive of 1958.
Diesel and electric locomotives
Decline and closure
The late 1950s saw a rapid transformation in locomotive manufacture. In 1955 British Railways decided to switch from steam to diesel traction and by then overseas railways had done the same. A major problem the company soon faced was that it had chosen to make diesel-hydraulic locomotives when the Western Region had opted for lightweight locomotives with hydraulic transmission under the British Railways Modernisation Plan of 1955; but British Railways opted for diesel-electrics. The company all but closed down the Gorton Foundry at the end of 1958.In 1966, after 112 years of operation, all production ceased at Gorton Foundry. During that time, the company had built nearly 8,000 locomotives.
As of 2012 the building that housed the former boiler shop, tender shop and bolier mounting shop – 550 feet in length – remained in use as part of the Hammerstone Road Depot of Manchester City Council.
Gallery
Classes of locomotives
Steam
Conventional
- 1859 VR J class, later
- 1859 VR P class
- 1861 VR B class
- 1861 VR O class
- 1864–1885 Metropolitan Railway A class
- 1871–1886 District Railway
- 1873–1926 Various locomotives for the Isle of Man Railway
- 1874 VR F class
- 1874 VR T class
- 1878 NSWGR Z12 class
- 1879 VR M class
- 1879 VR 'Old' R class
- 1884 VR 'Old' A class
- 1898 Tobu Railway B1 class
- 1902 VR DD class
- 1911 WAGR G class
- 1921 Rhymney Railway R class
- 1922 DSER 15 and 16
- 1928 LNER B12 / GER Class S69
- 1931 GWR 5700 Class
- 1952 WAGR W class
Beyer-Garratt (articulated)
- 1909 Tasmanian Government Railways K class
- 1910 Darjeeling Himalayan Railway D class
- 1925 London and North Eastern Railway class U1
- 1926 Victorian Railways G class
- 1927 London, Midland and Scottish Railway Garratt
- 1928 New Zealand Railways G class
- 1928 South African Railways GL class
- 1936-39 Fyansford Cement Works Railway
- 1939 South African class NG G16
- 1940-52 Rhodesia Railways 15th class
- 1949 East African Railways 56 class
- 1951 Queensland Railways Beyer-Garratt class
- 1951 South Australian Railways 400 class
- 1952 New South Wales AD60 class
- 1954-68 Rhodesia Railways 20th class
- 1955 East African Railways 59 class
- 1956 South African Railways GMA/M Class
Steam turbine
- 1935 Beyer-Ljungström steam turbine locomotive, under licence, for the LMS
Diesel
- 1954–56 Western Australian Government Railways X class
- 1961–63 British Rail Class 35
- 1962 British Rail Class 25
- 1964 British Rail Class 17
Electric
- 1956–58 New South Wales 46 class
- 1960–62 British Rail Class 82
Preserved locomotives
|| On display at Swedish Railway Museum, Gävle