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Hunslet Engine Company

The Hunslet Engine Company is a locomotive-building company, founded in 1864 in Hunslet, England. It manufactured steam locomotives for over 100 years and currently manufactures diesel shunting locomotives. The company is part of Ed Murray & Sons Ltd.

Hunslet Engine Company
IndustryEngineering
Founded1864
Headquarters,
England
ProductsShunting locomotives
ParentEd Murray & Sons

History edit

 
Irish Mail is typical of many small engines built at Hunslet for use in quarries

The early years 1864–1901 edit

 
Louisa, works number 195 of 1877, one of the earliest examples of the Quarry Hunslet type

The company was founded in 1864 at Jack Lane in Hunslet by John Towlerton Leather, a civil engineering contractor, who appointed James Campbell (son of Alexander Campbell, a Leeds engineer) as his works manager.

The first engine was completed in 1865. It was Linden, a standard gauge 0-6-0ST delivered to Brassey and Ballard, a railway civil engineering contractor as were several of the firm's early customers. Other customers included collieries. This basic standard gauge shunting and short haul "industrial" engine was to be the main-stay of Hunslet production for many years.

In 1871, James Campbell bought the company for £25,000 (payable in five instalments over two years) and the firm remained in the Campbell family ownership for many years. Between 1865 and 1870, the company had averaged fewer than ten locomotives a year but, in 1871, seventeen were built, rising over the next 30 years to a maximum of 34.

 
Dolbadarn built for the Dinorwic Slate Quarries in 1922 and now on the Llanberis Lake Railway

In 1870, Hunslet constructed its first narrow gauge engine Dinorwic, a diminutive 1 ft 10+34 in (578 mm) gauge 0-4-0ST for the Dinorwic Slate Quarry at Llanberis. This engine, later renamed Charlie, was the first of 20 similar engines built for this quarry and did much to establish Hunslet as a major builder of quarry engines. The quarry was linked to Port Dinorwic by a 4 ft (1,219 mm) gauge line for which Hunslet built three 0-6-0T engines Dinorwic, Padarn and Velinheli. Much larger than the normal quarry type, 1 ft 10+34 in gauge 0-4-0ST engines Charles, Blanche and Linda were built between 1882 and 1893 for use on the Penrhyn Quarry Railway "main line" between Bethesda and Port Penrhyn in North Wales.[note 1]

Many short wheelbase 0-6-0T locomotives were supplied to the Manchester Ship Canal Company in the 1880s.[1]

The first Hunslet engine built for export was its No. 10, an 0-4-0ST shipped via Hull and Rotterdam to Java. By 1902, Hunslet had supplied engines to over thirty countries, often opening up new markets. In Ireland, Hunslet supplied engines to several of the newly opened narrow gauge lines and also in 1887 built the three unorthodox 0-3-0 engines for the Lartigue Monorail system used by the Listowel Ballybunion Railway.

From 1873 onwards, many Hunslet locomotives were exported to Australia for use on both main line and lesser lines.[2]

1901–1939 edit

In 1901, James Campbell was still in charge as proprietor and his four sons were all working for the company, including the eldest son Alexander III who had taken over as works manager on the death of his Uncle George in 1890. In 1902, the company was reorganised as a private limited company with the name Hunslet Engine Company Ltd. but was still a family business. Following the death of James Campbell in 1905, the chairmanship passed to Alexander III and brother Robert became works manager, while brother Will retained the role of secretary and traveller with a seat on the board.

At about this time, Hunslet was building a series of 2-6-2Ts for the Sierra Leone Government Railway, design elements of which were included in the construction of the famous Russell a 1 ft 11+12 in (597 mm) gauge engine built for the Portmadoc, Beddgelert & South Snowdon Railway.

Following family disagreements, both Will and the youngest brother Gordon left the company and a serious injury left Robert disabled and unable to continue as works manager. The post of works manager was advertised and Edgar Alcock, then assistant works manager at the Gorton Foundry of Beyer-Peacock, was appointed in 1912. Alcock came to Hunslet at a time of change when the industry was being asked for far larger and more powerful locomotives than had ever been required in the past. This was true at Hunslet, which found its overseas customers asking for very large engines. One example was an order for two 86 ton 2-8-4Ts from the Antofagasta, Chile & Bolivia Railway.[3]

During the First World War, overseas orders dried up. The company, like many others, found itself employing women on the shop floor and engaged in the manufacture of munitions. It continued to produce limited numbers of locomotives, significant examples being lightweight narrow gauge 4-6-0T designs for the War Department Light Railways.

After the First World War, Hunslet was once more able to attract overseas orders and it also received a series of repeat orders from the London, Midland & Scottish Railway for 90 LMS Fowler Class 3F "Jinty" 0-6-0T shunting engines. During the 1930s, Hunslet built its largest locomotives, two 0-8-0T engines, built for a special train-ferry loading job in China – they were at that date the largest and most powerful tank engines ever built. A year or so later, the same design formed the basis for an 0-8-0 tender engine for India. Many other "large-engine" orders were received in these inter-war years.

Other independent British manufacturers failed to survive the depression of the 1920s and 30s and Hunslet acquired the patterns, rights and designs of other builders including Kerr, Stuart & Company and the Avonside Engine Company.

1930–2000 edit

John Alcock, who, following in his father's footsteps, became managing director of Hunslet in 1958, recalled his father telling him circa 1920, when he was still a schoolboy, that his main endeavour for the company would be in the application of the internal combustion engine to railway locomotion. Throughout the 1930s, Hunslet worked on the perfecting of the diesel locomotive.

 
Austerity 68081

During the Second World War, the company again served the country well in the manufacture of munitions, but it also built engines, both steam and diesel for the war effort. Noteworthy is its role in the production of the "Austerity" 0-6-0ST shunting locomotive. It was an austerity revision of the 50550 shunter design, itself a development of the Hunslet 48150 shunter design, of which 16 had been built pre-war.[4] Hunslet produced 149 Austerities during the hostilities, and sub-contracted construction of almost 200 more. A total of 485 Austerities were built by Hunslet and other builders between 1943 and 1964, of which over 70 examples have been preserved.

Locomotive construction resumed after the war. Important in post-war production was the Hunslet flame-proof diesel engine for use in the coal mines, as well as further batches of Austerity shunters for the National Coal Board (NCB) and the British Army, and rebuilding some older Austerities, work which continued into the early 1960s. The last three Austerities were sold in 1970, one directly to preservation, one for scrap and one to the NCB.[5]

The last industrial steam engine built in Britain was built at Hunslet in 1971 for export to Trangkil sugar mill in Central Java, Indonesia.[note 2]

The "Jack Lane, Hunslet, Leeds" works was closed in 1995, the last order being a batch of narrow gauge diesel locomotives for tunnelling on the Jubilee Line Extension of the London Underground.[7]

2000–present edit

 
The former Hunslet works in 2009

In 2004, the Hunslet Engine Company was acquired by the LH Group. Production was moved to Barton-under-Needwood while other operations remained in Leeds.[8]

In 2006, the company manufactured remote-controlled diesel electric shunters for John M. Henderson & Co[9] to be supplied to POSCO's coking plant in South Korea.[10] In the same year, several orders for underground and mining diesel locomotives were completed.

In 2007, Hunslet began developing a new family of locomotives ranging from shunters to vehicles weighing up to 100 tons.[11] The first locomotive of the new class, the DH60C, a three-axle C diesel hydraulic shunting locomotive, was unveiled in July 2010.[12]

The company also operated a locomotive hire business (including a British Rail Class 08 shunter acquired in 2006[13]), mainly of industrial shunting locomotives.

In 2012, LH Group was sold to Wabtec for US$48 million.[14] The company owns the rights to the names and designs of a number of former British locomotive manufacturers including Andrew Barclay, Avonside Engine Company, North British Locomotive Company, Greenwood & Batley, Hudswell Clarke, John Fowler & Co, Kerr, Stuart & Company, Kitson & Company and Manning Wardle. It also maintains and supplies spare parts for those brands.[15] In 2021, the business was purchased by Ed Murray & Sons.[16]

The Hunslet Steam Co. edit

The Hunslet Steam Co. is part of the LH Group. The company is involved in new-build steam locomotives (including two Quarry Hunslet 0-4-0ST locomotives), boiler making and locomotive maintenance.[17]

Related companies edit

Hunslet-Barclay Ltd edit

The locomotive manufacturer Andrew Barclay was acquired by the Hunslet group in 1972, and renamed Hunslet-Barclay. It chiefly undertook maintenance and refurbishment of diesel multiple unit passenger trains at the Andrew Barclay Caledonia Works in Kilmarnock. In 2003, the LH Group acquired the locomotive interests of the company. In October 2007, Hunslet-Barclay went into receivership and in November was purchased by FKI (the owner of Brush Traction) and renamed Brush-Barclay. In 2011, Brush Traction and Brush-Barclay were purchased by Wabtec.[18]

Preserved locomotives edit

 
Much-rebuilt Hunslet Blanche running on the Ffestiniog Railway
 
Hunslet AD36 "Champion" at the Old Kiln Light Railway

Preserved examples edit

Ireland edit

Israel edit

  • Old Gesher Museum, Kibbutz Gesher

Sri Lanka edit

 
Sri Lanka Railways Class Y, No 681 working in Galle, Sri Lanka

New Zealand edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Two of these still operate on the Ffestiniog Railway and Charles is preserved in the Penrhyn Castle Railway Museum
  2. ^ This engine was acquired by the Statfold Barn Railway in 2004 and returned to Britain, being regauged and named "Trangkil".[6]

References edit

  1. ^ . Canal Archive. 17 May 2004. Archived from the original on 26 November 2015. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
  2. ^ McKillop, Bob (December 1982). "Hunslet Locomotives in Australia". Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin: 266–279.
  3. ^ Rolt 1964, p. 69.
  4. ^ Spare Parts List, Austerity Locomotive. Camden Miniature Steam Services. 2006 [1946]. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-9547131-4-0.
  5. ^ Austerity Spares List, p. 32
  6. ^ . www.statfoldbarnwailway.co.uk. Archived from the original on 18 March 2015. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
  7. ^ "Jack Lane – Built for Hunslet Locomotive Company". Quarry Hunslet. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  8. ^ "LH Group Services expands to buy Hunslet Barclay". Rail (480): 19. 4 February 2004.
    - "LH acquires Hunslet locos". Entrain (28 April 2004): 8.
    - . Rail News. 28 July 2010. Archived from the original on 25 August 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  9. ^ . John Henderson. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 27 November 2009.
  10. ^ "Hunslet Builds New 50 tonne Locomotive for Korea". Hunslet Engine. 18 April 2007. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
  11. ^ "Hunslet Developing New Shunter". Hunslet Engine. 27 April 2007. Retrieved 14 January 2012.
  12. ^ "Hunslet launch new locomotive on open days 6th & 7th and 8th July". Hunslett Engine. Retrieved 14 January 2012.
    - Abell, Paul (September 2010). "A New Shunter from Hunslet". Today's Railways UK (105): 54–56.
  13. ^ "Hunslet Adds 08 to Fleet". Hunslet Engine. 25 January 2006. Retrieved 24 September 2011.
  14. ^ "Wabtec buys LH Group for US$48m". Railway Gazette International. DVV Media UK. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
  15. ^ "Hunslet Engine Company". Hunslet Engine. Retrieved 14 January 2012.
  16. ^ "Hunslet Group". Rail Express (302): 31. July 2021.
  17. ^ "Hunslet Steam Co". Hunslet Engine. Retrieved 14 January 2012.
  18. ^ "Wabtec buys Brush Traction". Railway Gazette International. DVV Media UK. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
  19. ^ . Railway Preservation Society of Ireland. Archived from the original on 20 August 2016.

Literature edit

  • Clarke, B. R.; Veitch, C. C. (1986). The Eighteen Inch Gauge Royal Arsenal Railway at Woolwich. Privately published by B.R. Clarke. ISBN 0-948951-00-1.
  • Neale, A. (1995). Hunslet Narrow Gauge Locomotives. Plateway Press. ISBN 1-871980-28-3.
  • "Second new Hunslet just £152,750!". Railway Magazine. Vol. 153, no. 1270. IPC Media. February 2007. p. 57.
  • Rolt, L. T. C. (1964). A Hunslet Hundred: one hundred years of locomotive building by the Hunslet Engine Company. David & Charles.
  • Townsley, D. H. (1998). The Hunslet Engine Works. Plateway Press. ISBN 1-871980-38-0.

External links edit

  • Hunslet Engine Company website
  • The Quarry Hunslet web site
  • The Leeds Engine web site


hunslet, engine, company, locomotive, building, company, founded, 1864, hunslet, england, manufactured, steam, locomotives, over, years, currently, manufactures, diesel, shunting, locomotives, company, part, murray, sons, industryengineeringfounded1864headquar. The Hunslet Engine Company is a locomotive building company founded in 1864 in Hunslet England It manufactured steam locomotives for over 100 years and currently manufactures diesel shunting locomotives The company is part of Ed Murray amp Sons Ltd Hunslet Engine CompanyIndustryEngineeringFounded1864HeadquartersLeeds EnglandProductsShunting locomotivesParentEd Murray amp Sons Contents 1 History 1 1 The early years 1864 1901 1 2 1901 1939 1 3 1930 2000 1 4 2000 present 1 4 1 The Hunslet Steam Co 2 Related companies 2 1 Hunslet Barclay Ltd 3 Preserved locomotives 3 1 Preserved examples 3 2 Ireland 3 3 Israel 3 4 Sri Lanka 3 5 New Zealand 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Literature 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp Irish Mail is typical of many small engines built at Hunslet for use in quarriesThe early years 1864 1901 edit nbsp Louisa works number 195 of 1877 one of the earliest examples of the Quarry Hunslet typeThe company was founded in 1864 at Jack Lane in Hunslet by John Towlerton Leather a civil engineering contractor who appointed James Campbell son of Alexander Campbell a Leeds engineer as his works manager The first engine was completed in 1865 It was Linden a standard gauge 0 6 0ST delivered to Brassey and Ballard a railway civil engineering contractor as were several of the firm s early customers Other customers included collieries This basic standard gauge shunting and short haul industrial engine was to be the main stay of Hunslet production for many years In 1871 James Campbell bought the company for 25 000 payable in five instalments over two years and the firm remained in the Campbell family ownership for many years Between 1865 and 1870 the company had averaged fewer than ten locomotives a year but in 1871 seventeen were built rising over the next 30 years to a maximum of 34 nbsp Dolbadarn built for the Dinorwic Slate Quarries in 1922 and now on the Llanberis Lake RailwayIn 1870 Hunslet constructed its first narrow gauge engine Dinorwic a diminutive 1 ft 10 3 4 in 578 mm gauge 0 4 0ST for the Dinorwic Slate Quarry at Llanberis This engine later renamed Charlie was the first of 20 similar engines built for this quarry and did much to establish Hunslet as a major builder of quarry engines The quarry was linked to Port Dinorwic by a 4 ft 1 219 mm gauge line for which Hunslet built three 0 6 0T engines Dinorwic Padarn and Velinheli Much larger than the normal quarry type 1 ft 10 3 4 in gauge 0 4 0ST engines Charles Blanche and Linda were built between 1882 and 1893 for use on the Penrhyn Quarry Railway main line between Bethesda and Port Penrhyn in North Wales note 1 Many short wheelbase 0 6 0T locomotives were supplied to the Manchester Ship Canal Company in the 1880s 1 The first Hunslet engine built for export was its No 10 an 0 4 0ST shipped via Hull and Rotterdam to Java By 1902 Hunslet had supplied engines to over thirty countries often opening up new markets In Ireland Hunslet supplied engines to several of the newly opened narrow gauge lines and also in 1887 built the three unorthodox 0 3 0 engines for the Lartigue Monorail system used by the Listowel Ballybunion Railway From 1873 onwards many Hunslet locomotives were exported to Australia for use on both main line and lesser lines 2 1901 1939 edit In 1901 James Campbell was still in charge as proprietor and his four sons were all working for the company including the eldest son Alexander III who had taken over as works manager on the death of his Uncle George in 1890 In 1902 the company was reorganised as a private limited company with the name Hunslet Engine Company Ltd but was still a family business Following the death of James Campbell in 1905 the chairmanship passed to Alexander III and brother Robert became works manager while brother Will retained the role of secretary and traveller with a seat on the board At about this time Hunslet was building a series of 2 6 2T s for the Sierra Leone Government Railway design elements of which were included in the construction of the famous Russell a 1 ft 11 1 2 in 597 mm gauge engine built for the Portmadoc Beddgelert amp South Snowdon Railway Following family disagreements both Will and the youngest brother Gordon left the company and a serious injury left Robert disabled and unable to continue as works manager The post of works manager was advertised and Edgar Alcock then assistant works manager at the Gorton Foundry of Beyer Peacock was appointed in 1912 Alcock came to Hunslet at a time of change when the industry was being asked for far larger and more powerful locomotives than had ever been required in the past This was true at Hunslet which found its overseas customers asking for very large engines One example was an order for two 86 ton 2 8 4T s from the Antofagasta Chile amp Bolivia Railway 3 During the First World War overseas orders dried up The company like many others found itself employing women on the shop floor and engaged in the manufacture of munitions It continued to produce limited numbers of locomotives significant examples being lightweight narrow gauge 4 6 0T designs for the War Department Light Railways After the First World War Hunslet was once more able to attract overseas orders and it also received a series of repeat orders from the London Midland amp Scottish Railway for 90 LMS Fowler Class 3F Jinty 0 6 0T shunting engines During the 1930s Hunslet built its largest locomotives two 0 8 0T engines built for a special train ferry loading job in China they were at that date the largest and most powerful tank engines ever built A year or so later the same design formed the basis for an 0 8 0 tender engine for India Many other large engine orders were received in these inter war years Other independent British manufacturers failed to survive the depression of the 1920s and 30s and Hunslet acquired the patterns rights and designs of other builders including Kerr Stuart amp Company and the Avonside Engine Company 1930 2000 edit John Alcock who following in his father s footsteps became managing director of Hunslet in 1958 recalled his father telling him circa 1920 when he was still a schoolboy that his main endeavour for the company would be in the application of the internal combustion engine to railway locomotion Throughout the 1930s Hunslet worked on the perfecting of the diesel locomotive nbsp Austerity 68081During the Second World War the company again served the country well in the manufacture of munitions but it also built engines both steam and diesel for the war effort Noteworthy is its role in the production of the Austerity 0 6 0ST shunting locomotive It was an austerity revision of the 50550 shunter design itself a development of the Hunslet 48150 shunter design of which 16 had been built pre war 4 Hunslet produced 149 Austerities during the hostilities and sub contracted construction of almost 200 more A total of 485 Austerities were built by Hunslet and other builders between 1943 and 1964 of which over 70 examples have been preserved Locomotive construction resumed after the war Important in post war production was the Hunslet flame proof diesel engine for use in the coal mines as well as further batches of Austerity shunters for the National Coal Board NCB and the British Army and rebuilding some older Austerities work which continued into the early 1960s The last three Austerities were sold in 1970 one directly to preservation one for scrap and one to the NCB 5 The last industrial steam engine built in Britain was built at Hunslet in 1971 for export to Trangkil sugar mill in Central Java Indonesia note 2 The Jack Lane Hunslet Leeds works was closed in 1995 the last order being a batch of narrow gauge diesel locomotives for tunnelling on the Jubilee Line Extension of the London Underground 7 2000 present edit nbsp The former Hunslet works in 2009In 2004 the Hunslet Engine Company was acquired by the LH Group Production was moved to Barton under Needwood while other operations remained in Leeds 8 In 2006 the company manufactured remote controlled diesel electric shunters for John M Henderson amp Co 9 to be supplied to POSCO s coking plant in South Korea 10 In the same year several orders for underground and mining diesel locomotives were completed In 2007 Hunslet began developing a new family of locomotives ranging from shunters to vehicles weighing up to 100 tons 11 The first locomotive of the new class the DH60C a three axle C diesel hydraulic shunting locomotive was unveiled in July 2010 12 The company also operated a locomotive hire business including a British Rail Class 08 shunter acquired in 2006 13 mainly of industrial shunting locomotives In 2012 LH Group was sold to Wabtec for US 48 million 14 The company owns the rights to the names and designs of a number of former British locomotive manufacturers including Andrew Barclay Avonside Engine Company North British Locomotive Company Greenwood amp Batley Hudswell Clarke John Fowler amp Co Kerr Stuart amp Company Kitson amp Company and Manning Wardle It also maintains and supplies spare parts for those brands 15 In 2021 the business was purchased by Ed Murray amp Sons 16 The Hunslet Steam Co edit The Hunslet Steam Co is part of the LH Group The company is involved in new build steam locomotives including two Quarry Hunslet 0 4 0ST locomotives boiler making and locomotive maintenance 17 Related companies editHunslet Barclay Ltd edit Main article Hunslet Barclay The locomotive manufacturer Andrew Barclay was acquired by the Hunslet group in 1972 and renamed Hunslet Barclay It chiefly undertook maintenance and refurbishment of diesel multiple unit passenger trains at the Andrew Barclay Caledonia Works in Kilmarnock In 2003 the LH Group acquired the locomotive interests of the company In October 2007 Hunslet Barclay went into receivership and in November was purchased by FKI the owner of Brush Traction and renamed Brush Barclay In 2011 Brush Traction and Brush Barclay were purchased by Wabtec 18 Preserved locomotives editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Hunslet Engine Company news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message For a complete list of preserved locomotives of the Austerity design see List of preserved Hunslet Austerity 0 6 0ST locomotives For a complete list of preserved Hunslet narrow gauge steam locomotives and links to the railways they work on see List of preserved Hunslet narrow gauge locomotives nbsp Much rebuilt Hunslet Blanche running on the Ffestiniog Railway nbsp Hunslet AD36 Champion at the Old Kiln Light RailwayPreserved examples edit No 1440 Airedale Preserved and currently stored at Embsay amp Bolton Abbey Steam Railway No 1 Brookes No 11 Preserved and currently undergoing cosmetic restoration at the Middleton Railway No 243 Preserved and currently undergoing cosmetic restoration at the Fundacion Camilo Jose Cela assignment Madrid Railway Museum Fundacion de los Ferrocarriles Espanoles Spain No 686 Lady Armaghdale Preserved and on static display at Highley on the Severn Valley Railway No 1444 Preserved and running at Museum of Transport amp Technology Auckland New Zealand No 1800 Preserved and running on the Nene Valley Railway No 1821 No 1873 Jessie Preserved and running on the Pontypool amp Blaenavon Railway No 1982 Ring Haw Preserved and running on the North Norfolk Railway No 2705 Beatrice Preserved and running on the Embsay amp Bolton Abbey Steam Railway No 2868 B amp W Engineering No 3694 Whiston preserved an in operational condition at the Foxfield Railway though on loan at end of March 2019 at the Churnet Valley Railway No 3715 Primrose No 2 Preserved and currently when undergoing an overhaul at Embsay amp Bolton Abbey Steam Railway No 3782 Arthur Preserved and undergoing overhaul at the Buckinghamshire Railway Centre No 3783 Darfield No 1 Preserved and running on the Chasewater Railway Holly Bank No 3 Preserved and running on the Chasewater Railway Jack s Green Preserved and currently stored at the Nene Valley Railway No 1589 Newstead Preserved and undergoing overhaul at the Spa Valley Railway Robert Nelson No 4 No 79 Plum 16 inch 0 6 0ST preserved on static display at the NSW Rail Museum Thirlmere Australia No 2705 2 6 0 T loco preserved and currently running at the NSW Rail Museum Thirlmere Australia No 1168 0 6 0ST built in 1914 preserved and on static display at Fort San Andres Museum Port of Spain Trinidad under the unofficial number 42 Ireland edit Tralee and Dingle Light Railway County Kerry Ulster Folk and Transport Museums County Down 19 Israel edit Old Gesher Museum Kibbutz GesherSri Lanka edit nbsp Sri Lanka Railways Class Y No 681 working in Galle Sri LankaSri Lanka Railways uses Hunslet diesel shunting locomotives in most railway yards New Zealand edit NZR PWD Y class number 542 Hunslet No 1444 is preserved at the Museum of Transport amp Technology See also editList of Hunslet narrow gauge locomotive designsNotes edit Two of these still operate on the Ffestiniog Railway and Charles is preserved in the Penrhyn Castle Railway Museum This engine was acquired by the Statfold Barn Railway in 2004 and returned to Britain being regauged and named Trangkil 6 References edit Locomotive Sale Canal Archive 17 May 2004 Archived from the original on 26 November 2015 Retrieved 25 November 2015 McKillop Bob December 1982 Hunslet Locomotives in Australia Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin 266 279 Rolt 1964 p 69 Spare Parts List Austerity Locomotive Camden Miniature Steam Services 2006 1946 p 31 ISBN 978 0 9547131 4 0 Austerity Spares List p 32 TRANGKIL No 4 www statfoldbarnwailway co uk Archived from the original on 18 March 2015 Retrieved 25 February 2012 Jack Lane Built for Hunslet Locomotive Company Quarry Hunslet Retrieved 19 January 2021 LH Group Services expands to buy Hunslet Barclay Rail 480 19 4 February 2004 LH acquires Hunslet locos Entrain 28 April 2004 8 Turning the clock back Rail News 28 July 2010 Archived from the original on 25 August 2011 Retrieved 14 August 2011 Locomotives Mechanical Engineers John Henderson Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 27 November 2009 Hunslet Builds New 50 tonne Locomotive for Korea Hunslet Engine 18 April 2007 Retrieved 12 January 2012 Hunslet Developing New Shunter Hunslet Engine 27 April 2007 Retrieved 14 January 2012 Hunslet launch new locomotive on open days 6th amp 7th and 8th July Hunslett Engine Retrieved 14 January 2012 Abell Paul September 2010 A New Shunter from Hunslet Today s Railways UK 105 54 56 Hunslet Adds 08 to Fleet Hunslet Engine 25 January 2006 Retrieved 24 September 2011 Wabtec buys LH Group for US 48m Railway Gazette International DVV Media UK Retrieved 12 April 2017 Hunslet Engine Company Hunslet Engine Retrieved 14 January 2012 Hunslet Group Rail Express 302 31 July 2021 Hunslet Steam Co Hunslet Engine Retrieved 14 January 2012 Wabtec buys Brush Traction Railway Gazette International DVV Media UK Retrieved 12 April 2017 NORTHERN IRELAND RAILWAYS Bo Bo No 102 Falcon Railway Preservation Society of Ireland Archived from the original on 20 August 2016 Literature edit Clarke B R Veitch C C 1986 The Eighteen Inch Gauge Royal Arsenal Railway at Woolwich Privately published by B R Clarke ISBN 0 948951 00 1 Neale A 1995 Hunslet Narrow Gauge Locomotives Plateway Press ISBN 1 871980 28 3 Second new Hunslet just 152 750 Railway Magazine Vol 153 no 1270 IPC Media February 2007 p 57 Rolt L T C 1964 A Hunslet Hundred one hundred years of locomotive building by the Hunslet Engine Company David amp Charles Townsley D H 1998 The Hunslet Engine Works Plateway Press ISBN 1 871980 38 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hunslet Engine Company Hunslet Engine Company website The Quarry Hunslet web site The Leeds Engine web site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hunslet Engine Company amp oldid 1202413401, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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