Biographies of chairmen, managers &
other senior railway officers
The arrangement is alphabetical (surnames beginning):
| Ba | Br | Ca | Co | Da | E | F | Ga | Gr | Ha | Ho | I | J | K | L | M | Mi | N | O | P | Ra | Ru | Sa | Sm | T | U | W | Wo |
This is regarded mainly as a by-product page as the main slant on biography is towards steam locomotive engineers, although it must be never forgotten that several senior officers, including the General Manager and Civil Engineer had greater influence than the Locomotive Superintendent and that board members, who might also hold other directorships were capable of considerable influence
Aldington, Charles
Born 20 December 1862; died 15 October 1922 (Who Was Who) Briefly
General Manager, GWR from 1919, but had to resign due to ill health (it had
been undermined during WW1) in June 1921. Had been Superintendent of the
Line since 1910. McDermot History of
the Great Western Railway rev. Clinker.
Allen, William Philip [Bill]
Who Was Who notes that he was born on 11 November 1888 and died on
4 May 1958. Bonavia's British Rail: the first 25 years records that
staff matters, perhaps inevitably, were entrusted to an ex-trade-unionist.
W.P. ('Bill') Allen, former General Secretary of the Associated Society of
Locomotive Engineers and Firemen, who was short and cheerful, with a fine
old-fashioned waxed moustache. His approach was friendly and down-to-earth,
and he made the move from one side of the negotiating table to the other
appear quite effortless. He was not in the least inclined to try to payoff
old scores, and showed a warmer personality than his counterpart in the British
Transport Commission, John Benstead from the NUR,
even though he may have lacked Benstead's intellectual powers. His real success
was shown by the fact that he had no enemies on either side of the negotiating
table. A faintly malicious yet quite affectionate story was told about Bill
Allen, derived from his dislike of formality and his insistence upon using
Christian names. When he was momentarily unable to remember the name of someone
whom he might be clapping on the shoulder, he always fell back on 'Arthur',
so that a number of pseudo-Arthurs were always around in the dusty corridors
of No 222.
McKillop's The lighted
flame includes a wealth of information on Bill Allen:
"He is the born trade union leader. His is an unfailing humour and understanding
of humanity, and he is quite unaware of his natural qualities. It
was inevitable that he should gravitate to the ranks of the Associated. His
father, a prominent member of the Society, which he joined in 1886, was not
enthusiastic when young Bill Allen decided to join the railway service. I
expect Allen senior had visions of young Bill becoming' something better'
than an engine driver. Our future General Secretary joined the G.N.R. at
Homsey as a cleaner. A1 No. 60114
was named W.P. Allen.
Allport, Sir James Joseph
Born in Birmingham on 27 February 1811 and died in the Midland Grand
Hotel at St Pancras on 25 April 1892 (ODNB).
(Marshall gives incorrect date of death).
Ellis' Midland Railway noted
that the Midland's great general manager, James Allport, steered the company
through the troubled seas of nineteenth-century boom and slump, and had brought
it to its renaissance. He was a characteristic eminent Victorian of the best
type, astute and forceful, yet genial and kind, not unaware of his merit,
but regarding it with the same sort of satisfaction as he would have done
in considering others.
By 28 he was chief clerk to the Birmingham and Derby Junction, and shortly
after became general manager. He was made redundant on formation of the Midland
Railway, but George Hudson placed him in command of the Newcastle and Darlington
Junction, which he saw expand under his management into the York, Newcastle
and Berwick. In 1850 he went as general manager to the Manchester, Sheffield
and Lincolnshire Railway, and thence, in the same office, to the Midland
in October, 1853. In the spring of 1854, he joined the Midland Board, but
in 1857 he returned to office as general manager. From this he retired at
the beginning of 1880, returning to the Board to fill the vacancy left by
Edward Shipley Ellis, who had been chairman since 1873. A diplomatic move
of 1877, which did not bear fruit, was for the joint acquisition by the Midland
and the Great Northern of Allport's sometime command, the Manchester, Sheffield
and Lincolnshire Railway.
On retirement he was presented £10,000 by vote of the Midland proprietors.
In 1884 he was knighted for his services to cheap travellers. He lived to
see the fiftieth anniversary of the Railway Clearing House, of which he was
the father, and died, full of years, within sound of the Midland engine whistles.
Towards the close of his long and active career, Sir James Allport said:
"If there is one part of my public life on which I look back with more
satisfaction than on anything else, it is with reference to the boon we conferred
on third-class travellers. I have felt saddened to see third-class passengers
shunted on to a siding in cold and bitter weather-a train containing amongst
others many lightly-clad women and children-for the convenience of allowing
the more comfortable and warmly-clad passengers to pass them. I have even
known third-class trains to be shunted into a siding to allow express goods
to pass. When the rich man travels, or if he lies in bed all day, his capital
remains undiminished, and perhaps his income flows in all the same. But when
the poor man travels, he has not only to pay his fare, but to sink his capital,
for his time is his capital; and if he now consumes only five hours instead
of ten in making a journey, he has saved five hours of time for useful
labour-useful to himself, his family, and to society. And I think with even
more pleasure of the comfort in travelling we have been able to confer on
women and children. But it took twenty-five years to get it done."
Ellis British railway history (page 331) noted that he was known
as "the Bismark of Railway Politics" .
ODNB biography by William Carr revised by Robert
Brown. Also biography by Terry Gourvish in Dictionary of Business
Biography. Biography in
Vaughan's Railwaymen, politics
and money (Appendix 5: gives alternative death date)
Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's
encyclopedia
Anderson, Sir Alan Garrett
Born 1877. Died 1950. Director of LMS and Chairman of the Railway
Executive from 1941. Chairman of Anderson Green & Co. and of the Orient
Line. MP for the City of London 1935-40. Many business interests.
See Burgess: A tour of inspection...
LMS Journal, 2007 (18), 75..
Armytage, Sir George John
Born on 26 April 1842. Chairman of the Lancashire & Yorkshire
Railway from 1887 to 1918. Died 8 November 1918.
Marshall Lancashire
& Yorkshire Railway. V. 2 and Who Was Who
Ashfield (Lord): Albert Henry
Stanley
Born at New Normanton in Derbyshire, son of Henry Knattriess, on 8
August 1874. Father worked for Pullman and emigrated with his parents to
USA in 1880. Having entered transport management on the Detroit Street Railway
he became the General Manager of the Public Service Corporation of New Jersey
and was sent to London by the Yerkes Group to become General Manager of the
Underground Electric Railways in 1907. He was President of the Board of Trade
between 1916 and 1919 and became the first Chairman of the London Passenger
Transport Board in 1933. He was knighted in 1914 and made Baron Ashfield
of Southwell in 1920. He died on 4 November 1948.
Biography by Theo Barker in ODNB.
Also given prominence by Hendry.
See also Stephen Halliday's Fraud,
liquidation and ingratitude. Backtrack, 2008, 22, 437 for
portrait with daughter. John Helm regards the death of Lord Ashfield in the
year that the British Transport Commission was formed was a crucial loss
(Backtrack, 2010, 24,
654.).
Aslett, Alfred
Born in York on 3 July 1847 and died at Ulverston on 28 April 1928
(Peter Robinson, Backtrack, 2005,
19, 762). With frontispiece portrait. Son of a railwayman with
same name, who had been GNR Divisional Superintendent at York and Peterborough.
Brought up in those cities and education included that at Peterborogh Grammar
School. Subject joined GNR at Nottingham, and then moved in 1872 to GNR
Headquarters at King's Cross (Audit Office). He then joined the Eastern &
Midland Railway at King's Lynn as Chief Accountatnt. He became Secretary
and General Manager of the Cambrian Railways in 1891, before moving to the
Furness Railway in 1895 as its General Manager.
Rly. Mag. 1898, 3, 122-37..
Rush's Furness
Railway traces his final energetic career until he retired
from the FR in 1918 at the age of 71..
Baring, Everard
Born 5 December 1865. Educated Eton (presumably reasons for name selected
to start Schools class) and Sandhurst. Military career. Director National
Provincial Bank. Chairman Southern Railway from 1924 until his death on 7
May 1932.
Barrie, Derek Stiven Maxwelton
Barrie was like George Dow: a professional railwayman, a PR man, and
someone who could write. His main area of enthusiast interest was Wales
and he was to contribute one of the better volumes in the Regional History
series Born 8 August 1907 in Newport (Mon.); died 24 June 1989. Educated
Apsley House, Clifton and Tonbridge School. Career in London and provincial
journalism (Daily Graphic, Allied Newspapers, etc), reporter and
sub-editor, 192432. Joined LMS Railway in 1932; on return from war
service, rejoined LMS, 1946; PRO Railway Executive, 1948; Chief PRO British
Transport Commission, 1956; Assistant Secretary-General., BTC, 1958; Assistant
General Manager, York, 1961; Chairman., British Railways (Eastern) Board,
and General Manager, British Railways Eastern Region, 196870. Member.
Council, Institute. of Transport, 1968. Served with Royal Engineers,
194146; Hon. Colonel 74 Movement Control Regiment, RE and RCT,
196167; Major, Engr. and Rly Staff Corps (T & AVR), 1967, Lt-Col
196873. Bronze Star Medal (US), 1945. OStJ 1968 Author A Regional
History of the Railways of Great Britain, vol. 12, South Wales, 1980;
numerous railway historical books and monograph. OBE 1969 (MBE 1945). Mainly
Who Was Who.
Barrington-Ward, V. [Sir Michael]
Bonavia's British Rail: the
first 25 years notes that railway operating on the Railway Executive
was placed under V.M. Barrington-Ward, former Divisional General Manager
(Southern Area) of the LNER. B-W, as he was universally known, was tall,
with very blue eyes and a rather austere, clean-shaven face (Hughes LNER
contains a portrait). He was a member of a distinguished family, his brothers
including an editor of The Times and a famous surgeon. His early training
had been on the Midland Railway under that wayward genius (Sir) Cecil Paget
who, as General Superintendent, had, with J.H. Follows, introduced the pioneer
system of train control, later extended to the whole LMS. B-W had transferred
to the LNER where his fondness for Midland practices led him into a prolonged
tussle with C.M. Jenkin Jones, the supreme exponent of the alternative North
Eastern Railway control principles. B-W was famous for his taciturnity. He
seldom gave reasons for his decisions, but always commanded respect even
from those who disagreed with him. And if a decision was taken over his head
with which he disagreed, he would still loyally carry it out. His loyalty
to the Midland Railway was legendary; Jenkin Jones once wrote of B-W 'putting
on his Derby hat and, facing the North West, saying his morning prayers to
the gods of the Midland Pantheon. Rly Mag., 1927. 61, 414-15 (includes
portrait) notes that he was educated at Westminster School and Edinburgh
University where he obtained an engineering degree. During WW1 he became
a Lieut Colonel in the Railway Operating Division and received a DSO The
Times obituary (31 July 1972) notes that he died on 28 July 1972 and
was born on 17 July 1887 at Duloe. This obituary observes his bravery in
both World Wars and his uncompromising integrity and undeviating tenacity
of purpose"...
Bell, Robert
Assistant General Manager, LNER: according to
Bonavia (The four railways p. 71)
dour Scot who managed traffic apprenticeship scheme which ensured excellence
of LNER management
Benstead, John
Born 10 January 1897; died 24 January 1979. Educated Kings School,
Peterborough. Served in Royal Navy during WW1. General Secretary, National
Union of Railwaymen, 194347; President International Transport
Workers Federation, 1946; Member: Advisory Council for Scientific and
Industrial Research, 194348; Colonial and Economic Development Council,
194748; Royal Commission on Press, 1946; Deputy Lieutenent Cambridgeshire
(formerly Huntingdon and Peterborough), Member British Transport
Commission, 194761 eventually Deputy Chairman. Knighted 1953; CBE 1946.
Bonavia noted that when entrusted
with labour relations he was "a tough not to crack in every way". Remainder
Who Was Who.,
Bird, C.K.
Chief Regional Officer of the Eastern Region of British Railways.
He was a former LNER man whose intellectual qualities (he had been a Wrangler
at Cambridge) were outstanding. He had a quick wit and on occasion a biting
tongue: see also his mordant observations on Sir Brian
Robertson. The impression he gave was that the ordinary office tasks
of a manager scarcely extended his brain sufficiently and could bore him.
Sadly, the signs of poor health which were to lead to his death in 1958,
at the age of barely 60, were already beginning to appear.
Bonavia British Rail: the first
25 years. Terry Jenkins Sir
Ernest Lemon includes a couple of pictures which feature Bird and
observes that he served on the Railway Chairmen's Commission during
WW2.
Blee, David
Last Chief Goods Manager of the Great Western Railway: initial member
of the Railway Executive where Terry Gourvish
in British Railways, 1948-73: a business history. (1986) noted
that an intensive publicity drive was organised by David Blee with the aim
of cutting wagon turnround time and freeing idle stock. A wagon discharge
campaign, which started in November, cut the average daily 'leave-over' of
loaded wagons by a third, releasing about 35,000 wagons by the end of the
year; and average terminal-user time for all vehicles, loaded and empty,
was reduced from 2.13 days at the beginning of the campaign to 1.96 days
only four weeks later. These examples, by showing what could be done with
more determined management, suggest that the companies had failed to seize
earlier opportunities for lessening the effects of austerity restrictions.
He was sometime Manager of the unwieldy London Midland Region.
Bonavia's British Rail: the first
25 years noted that Blee was slim and clean-shaven, and that his
rise had been rapid the Great Western. "He was a man of great sincerity and
inner kindliness, but his ambition and a certain lack of humour made it difficult
for him to relax. He saw himself as a super-salesman of railways and liked
to relate how, when in his younger days, he had been Goods Agent at Slough,
he had been accustomed after office hours to walk down to the Great West
Road to watch the lorries passing and to consider each one an insult and
a personal challenge. [He} lacked the downright approach of some of his
colleagues, and was not an intellectual like C.K. Bird or Jenkin Jones of
the LNER or Wood of the LMS. It was perhaps not surprising that David Blee
built up his supporting team very largely from his old company. Great Western
influence in commercial matters was looked at with some doubts by those from
other companies, however, because that railway had adhered to the old-fashioned
system of leaving passenger commercial matters under a Superintendent of
the Line primarily concerned with operating.
Bolton, Sir Ian Frederick Cheney
Baronet, born on 29 January 1889, and sent down from Scotland to Eton.
Served in WW1. Chartered Accountant. Served during WW1 and on British Transport
Commission from 1947 to 1959. Chairman of the Scottish Area Board from 1956
to 1965. President of the Scottish Boy Scout Association. Lord Lieutenant
of Stirlingshire. Died 12 January 1982. See article by
A.J. Mullay in Backtrack, 2009,
23, 262 for his contribution to railway walks.
Bonsor, Sir [Henry] Cosmo Orme
Born at Great Bookham into a brewing family (Combe, Delafield &
Co.) on 2 September 1848. Educated at Eton. Involved in consolidation of
brewing industry. Chairman of the South Eastern & Chatham Managing Committee
and formerly Chairman of the South Eastern Railway from 1898. "During his
tenure of office the two railways, once the butt of music-hall jokes, became
models of technical advance, efficiency, and competent management, although
the price of rationalization was high, resulting in the addition of £9
million to the capital account between 1899 and 1912". Director of Bank of
England and MP. Died in Nice on 4 December 1929..
ODNB entry by Terry Gourvish.
Bradshaw, George
Marshall states that born in
Salford on 29 July 1801 and died in Christiania (now Oslo) from cholera on
9 September 1853. Rly. Mag
article (2, 243) gave brief
details of his business. He was a member of the Society of Friends and an
engraver. In 1820 he opened a business in Belfast, but returned to Manchester
in 1822 and engraved maps. He married on 15 May 1839 and had two sons. His
first Monthly Railway and Steam Navigation Guide was issued on 1 December
1841. Article mentions Robert Diggles Kay who worked with Bradshaw, but was
treated as merely an employee.
Bracegirdle (Backtrack, 8,
210) article about Bradshaw appears to consider that Kay failed to be
acknowledged, but one wonders how well researched this was as the place of
birth is imprecise (the Railway Magazine article ibid firmly
states Windsor Bridge, Salford. Bradshaw was apprenticed to Beale, an engraver
in Manchester and was noted for his illustrations to Duncan Smith's The
art of penmanship. Following work in Belfast he returned to Manchester
and established a publishing and printing business which eventually became
Henry Blacklock & Son. Robert Diggles Kay was the editor, and possibly
the creator, of the railway guide. Kay was sufficiently well-known to justify
memorial windows in the Weslyan chapel in Birkdale and a Methodist chapel
in Salford. The date of the first edition of the Guide was either 1838 or
1839. Bradshaw was a Quaker and early issues avoided using the names of months
based upon Roman deities, but these scruples were eventually thrown own.
The author notes some of the changes made to the title. By 1850 "Bradshaw"
had become a household word. Originally there was hostility from some of
the railway companies and Bradshaw circumvented this by becoming a railway
shareholder and by putting his case at company agms. In 1848 the abbreviations
mrn and aft replaced am and pm and these were not altered back to the more
general until the immediate post-WW2 period. There was a gap from No. 40
to Number 141 (March to April 1845) - presumably due to a typographic error,
but rather than admit to a mistake the series continued from 142. Station
names were subjected to fierce abbreviations: Cmbe, for instance. The Victorian
issues were characterized by small type and poor paper. The writer notes
some mentions to Bradshaw in fiction.
ODNB entry by G.C. Boase revised Philip
S. Bagwell.
Peter J. Rodgers (Backtrack,
2007, 21, 253) cites: Lee, Charles, E. The Centenary of
Bradshaw. Railway Gazette, 1940.(Ottley 7943).
John Rylands Library in Manchester has an extensive collection of the
Guides.
Buckley, J.F.
Chairman Cambrian Railways: 1886-1900
(Rly Mag., 1900, 7,
190)
Burgess, Henry G.
See Whitehouse and St John Thomas'
LMS 150 page 38 for brief pen portait of Rt. Hon.
H.G. Burgess; also M.C. Reed's
The London & North Western Railway: a history.
He had been successively the LNWR representative in Scotland,
then in Ireland where he was the Director of Transportation in the latter
part of WW1. He became the second General Manager of the LMS where he was
known to senior staff as "The Right Honourable Gentleman" due to being a
privy councillor and Senator of the Irish Free
State.
Bury, Oliver Robert Hawke
Born 3 November 1861. Son of barrister; educated Westminster.
Great uncle first Manager of GNR in 1847. From 1 January 1879 he was articles
as a pupil to W. Adams of the LSWR. In 1881 he went to Hunter & English
where he worked on a floating crane and on the construction of a distillery
(Marshall). Having been Assistant Engineer
on the Coleford Railway in October 1884 he was approinted resident engineer
of the Great Western Railway of Brazil under Alison Janson, also becoming
locomotive superintendent in 1885. In 1892 he was appointed Chief Engineer
and Manager of the Great Western Railway of Brazil, in 1894 he moved to a
similar position on the Entre Rios Railway in Argentina and then to the Buenos
Aires & Rosario Railway. He became General Manager of the GNR in England
on 1 July 1902. In 1912 he resigned and joined the Board of the GNR and became
a Director of the LNER until his resignation in December 1945 shortly before
his death in London on 21 March 1946. He retained widespread business interests
including many in South America. Considering his background it is not difficult
to see why the senior managers of the LNER had to be of the calibre of Gresley
and Wedgewood to be able to survive.
Railway Magazine 1908, 22, 441.
Bushrod, F.
Bushrod [Deputy Operating Superintendent, Southern Railway and ex-LSWR]
was one of the dwindling generation of officials who believed in doing things
in style; we put up at the best hotels, and for our tour a large and comfortable
car with a liveried chauffeur was engaged for the day. On our return to London
by a semi.fast making several stops, the position of the reserved compartment
on the train was notified from one stop to the next so that the stationmaster
and his chief inspector, all spruced up, would be on the spot as the train
drew up to make obeisance and give an account of their stewardship during
the stop, just as if Bushrod were a potentate-quite amusing! Later in January
we investigated shunting on the Somerset & Dorset line at Templecombe.
Holcroft. Locomotive
adventure.
Butterworth, Sir Alexander Kaye
Born Henbury Court, Gloucestershire on 4 December 1854; died
London 23 January 1946 (confirmed Times obituary). Educated Marlborough
College and London University; graduated LLB 1877. Barrister of Inner Temple
1878-83. Entered solicitor's dept, GWR, 1883, Was active in Railway Rates
Inquiry 1889-90. Clerk to Bedfordshire County Coundl 1890-1. 1891 appointed
solicitor to NER until 2. Msarch 1906 when he succeeded George S Gibb as
general manager NER. Under his administration the NER brought into use the
Riverside Quay at Hull for the joint NER/LYR steamer service to Zeebrugge,
in 1907; new excursion platforms at Scarborough, 1908. He negotiated the
NER interests in the South Yorkshire Joint Railway, the AxhoIme Joint Railway
and the High Level Wear Bridge, Sunderland, 1909; the Shildon-Newport
electrification and the NER/HBR Joint Dock at Hull, 1914. In 1913 he was
chairman of the General Managers' Conference of the Railway Clearing House.
He was knighted 1 January 1914. Member of Railway Executive Committee, and
of the Railway Advisory Committee associated with the Ministry of Transport.
Served on the Civil Service Arbitration Board 1917-20, 1921-2. His last task
before retirement in 1921 was the NER/HBR amalgamation. In 1884 he married
Julia Wigan who died in 1911 and their only child, the composer George
Butterworth, born 1885, was killed in WWl in 1916. According to Blakemore's
review of Bill Fawcett's The North Eastern Railway's two palaces of
business (Backtrack, 2008,
22, 189) opted to work in that railway's London office.
Geoffrey Hughes shows how Butterworth
was excluded from the management of the LNER in favour of
R.L. Wedgwood who became the General Manager of the
group. Times obituary notes that he appeared at Wimbledon in the early
days of the tennis championship; also notes his fairness and sympathy in
dealing with questions of employment. Ottley lists three books which he authored:
A treatise on the law relating to rates and traffic on railways and
canals. London: 1889 (O 3554); The practice of the Railway and Canal
Commission (O 3555) and The law relating to maximum rates and charges
on railways. London: 1897 (O 3571)
Calthrop, Guy
Born March 1870. Joined LNWR as a Cadet in 1886, under Mr Neal,
Superintendent of the Line. In 1898 he became Chief Outdoor Assistant to
the Superintendent of the Line and in 1901 he became Personal Assistant to
Sir Frederick Harrison. In 1902 he left the LNWR to become the General
Superintendent of the Caledonian Railway and in October 1908 he was promoted
to the position of General Manager (see
Railway Magazine 1908, 22, 368), but two years later he
left to become the General Manager of the Buenos Ayres and Pacific Railway
and in 1913 he was offered the post of General Manager of the LNWR, but Sir
Frank Ree did not provide a smooth transition for Calthrop, and it was only
following Ree's death in February 1914 that Calthrop was able to take up
his appoinment, just on the outbreak of WW1. For much of WW1 he was seconded
to the Board of Trade and died from influenza at the early age of 48 on 23
February 1919. Thus the LNWR and the LMS had lost a brilliant manager.
Reed. MC. London & North Western Railway. 1996.
Cameron, Thomas Forbes
Cameron was educated in Edinburgh, but began his railway career as
a traffic apprentice on the North Eastern Railway in 1912. He returned to
Scotland in 1943 as Acting Divisional General Manager in 1943. With some
reluctance on the part of the BTC, which would have prefered
Robert Inglis; nevertheless, Cameron became
Chief Regional Officer of the Scottish Region at a salary of £3,750,
well in escess of that of the CROs of either the Eastern or North Eastern
Regions (Mullay: Scottish
Region). Bonavia (British
Rail: the first 25 years) noted that his LMS counterpart had been
due for retirement: TFC was certainly one of the ablest men in the railway
service though this did not always appear in his rather lugubrious assessment
of situations. His achievement in welding together the ex-LMS and ex-LNER
components in the new Region testified to his capacity, though some amusement
was caused by his insistence upon continuing to occupy a flat in the North
British Hotel, Edinburgh, and travelling daily (by car) to his new Regional
Headquarters in Glasgow.
Campbell, Lt-Col Hon. Henry Walter
Born 23 March 1835; died 17 December 1910. Director LSWR. Served with
distinction in Crimean War, 185455.
Castleman, Charles
Solicitor from Wimborne, who according to
Ellis's South Western Raiilway
was rich helped to promote the Southampton & Dorchester Railway which
followed a wayward route which came to be known as Castleman's Snake or
Castleman's Corkscrew. He briefly became Chairman of the LSWR,
Churchill, Viscount (Victor Albert Francis
Charles Spencer)
Born on 23 October 1864 and died 3 January 1934. Extremely aristocratic
Eton-schooled, Guardsman became Chairman of the GWR in 1908, and remained
so until his death. Biographical details from Who was who (electronic
version). Portrait in Nock's Great
Western in the twenieth century. Churchill also chaired a couple
of shipping companies. His function was presumably decorative.
Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's
encyclopedia
Claughton, Gilbert Henry
Born 21 February 1856, son of the Bishop of St. Albans. Educated Eton.
Apprenticed at Beyer Peacock. Studied at King's College, London. Mother was
related to Earl of Dudley and Claughton became chief mineral agent for the
Dudley Estates. He was mayor of Dudley and a director of the United Counties
Bank, as well as of the LNWR. He became Chairman of the LNWR in 1911. Reed
noted that he had a quiet humour and includes a portrait of him with senior
drivers at Crewe. Suggests that early death (27 June 1921) was due to the
arduous demands of WW1. Mostly Reed, but
also Who Was Who.
Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's
encyclopedia
Clinton, Lord
Charles Forbes-Trelusis, 21st Baron Clinton resided at Heaton Sackville
near Petrockstowe. Owned large estates and was Chairman of the Forestry
Commission as well as a Director of the Southern Railway.
See Burgess: A tour of inspection...
LMS Journal, 2007 (18), 75.
Cobbold, John Chevalier
Member of greatly respected Suffolk family: involved in formation
of Eastern Union Railway from Ipswich to Colchester, especially the Act of
19 July 1844 and was also behind the Ipswich to Bury line and its amalgamation
with the EUR. (Allen, C.J. The Great Eastern Railway. Also driving
force behind Tendering Hundred Railway
(Railways South East, 2,
183).
Colville, Charles John, 1st Viscount of
Culross
Born 23 Novemeber 1818. Died 1 July 1903. Educated Harrow. (Who
was who) According to Lord Colville's report to his directors [of the
GNR] at Kings Cross, Moon presided over a. small gathering consisting of
Sir Daniel Gooch (Great Western), Lord Colville (G.N.R.) and the Chairmen
of the Caledonian, L.S.W.R., L.Y.R. and Midland Railways. Moon opened by
referring to the Great Eastern's request [for through carriages to Birmingham],
'which has led me to consider the brake question seriously'. He thought 'the
time would soon come when the Board of Trade would go to Parliament to compel
the adoption of an automatic brake'.
Lord Colville continued Engineers should meet to discuss the possibilities of this coupling. Webb claimed that most Locomotive Engineers were in favour of the vacuum brake pure and simple, but all the Chairmen at the meeting were of the opinion that it would be impossible to prevent the principle being made automatic. We finally decided that the Locomotive Engineers of the several Companies should meet to discuss the feasibility of adopting a universal continuous brake. Brown Great Northern locomotive engineers V.1. On page 210 Brown makes the tantalizing statement that Colville as a member of the Locomotive Committee had "shown great intereset in Stirling's work."
Conacher, Charles L.
General Manager Isle of Wight Central Railway.
Rly Mag., 2, 401. Son
of John Conacher below: see Rous-Marten
Rly Mag., 2,
567.
Conacher, John
Railway Magazine
Illustrated Interview, 2, 289
states that career began on Scottish Central Railway. He then moved to Cambrian
Railways where he was, in turn, Accountant, Secretary and General Manager,
from whence he moved to NBR as General Manager on 11 August 1891 at a salary
of £2500 per annum. His sojourn on the NBR was far from happy as he
was forced to resign through Board manoeuvres worthy of Macbeth, where one
of the main players was Wemyss who actually built a
railway to serve his coal mines in competition with that of which he was
supposedly Chairman. Other great railway managers, such as Sir Henry
Oakley were shocked at the mistreatment of Conacher and some returned their
free passes to him for his personal use to show their distaste for the corrupt
NBR Board. See John Thomas
(North British Railway, Vol. 2). Having served the new electricity
supply industry, Conacher returned to railway management on the Cambrian
Railways.
Cook, Thomas
Born on 22 November 1808 at 9 Quick Close, Melbourne, Derbyshire.Thomas
Cook organized a special train (excursion) from Leicester to Loughborough
to run on 5 July 1841 for those wishing to attend a temperance meeting. In
1842 an excursion to Edinburgh was organized. His son, John Mason (born in
Market Harborough on 13 January 1834; died on 6 March 1899, at Mount Felix,
his residence in Walton-on-Thames) joined his father in the business which
grew rapidly during the Great Exhibition of 1851. The Parish Exhibtion of
1855 encouraged foreign travel: over 100,000 travelled with Thomas Cook.
In 1865 his son became a Partner in the business. Offices were established
in Fleet Street, London. In 1865 America was visited to encourage travel
to Europe including the British Isles. Tours to the Holy Land and to Egypt
were started in 1869. Died at Thorncroft, Knighton, Leicester, on 18 July
1892. Piers Brendon ODNB. Statue outside
Leicester station see Backtrack,
2011, 25, 740 Railway Magazine
1898, 3, 40-8.
Cotton, Edward John
Cotton was born in Rochester (Kent) on 1 June 1829. He joined the
GWR in the Traffic Department at Paddington in October 1845 and moved to
the Railway Clearing House as a clerk in 1847. In 1853 he became the Manager
of the Waterford & Kilkenny Railway and in October 1857 he beacme Manager
of the Belfast & Ballymena Railway. In 1866 he was paid £1000 per
annum, the highest salary in Ireland, by which time the railway had become
the Belfast & Northern Counties Railway. In 1869 this was increased still
further to £1200 per annum. Cotton retained an interest in the Railway
Clearing House and in the Irish Railway Clearing House. He was Chairman of
the Irish Railway Managers' Conference from 1864 until his death on 14 June
1899. He was appointed by the government as general investigator for the
Congested District Board for Connaught and was responsible for the construction
of the Balfour Lines. He was well-known in Ulster literary circles as an
interpreter of Shakespeare. He features as a character in Delina Delaney
by Mrs Amanda McKittrick as The Father of Steam Enterprise.
Currie Northern Counties Vol.
1.
Cowie, James
Joined the B&NCR in 1869 as an apprentice in the Manager's Office.
In 1885 he became Cotton's Princioal Assistant, but lacked Cotton's sparkle.
Currie Northern Counties Vol.
1.
Cox, Edwin Charles
Born 3 January 1868. Son of a South Eastern Railway railwayman: joined
railway in 1883. Became Superintendent of the Line of SECR in 1911. Greatly
assisted in successful operation of WW1 traffic. Chief Operating Superintendent
of Southern Railway where he chaired electrification steering committee.
Traffic Manager Southern Railway 1930-36. Lt. Col. in Engineer and Railway
Staff Corps. Founder member of Institute of Transport. Died 9 December
1958.. See SR 150 and Who
Was Who. See also Jeffrey Wells: 'Actively
Engaged in Public Service', Backtrack, 2008, 22, 360 (includes
portrait).
Crawshay, Richard
Born in Normanton, Yorkshire, in 1739. Family tradition indicates
that a bitter quarrel with his father led to Richard leaving for London when
aged sixteen.. He apprenticed himself to a Thames Street ironware merchant
named Bicklewith. Crawshay's career was an exercise in self-improvement in
the classic Smilesian mould, being the subject of an encomium in Samuel Smiles's
Lives of the Engineers (18612). By 1763 Crawshay was in sole
possession of Bicklewith's business. wharfs and warehouses, before settling
at George Yard, Upper Thames Street, which was to be the London base of the
Crawshay family firm until 1864. By the 1780s Crawshay was probably London's
leading iron merchant. However, his pre-eminence in the capital was not enough.
He was attracted to becoming an ironmaster in his own right: in 1786 Anthony
Bacon, master of the Cyfarthfa ironworks at Merthyr Tudful, died. Crawshay
had been in partnership with him as a supplier of guns to the Board of Ordnance
during the American War of Independence. The guns had been cast at Cyfarthfa
and he leased Cyfarthfa from Bacon's estate and devoted an increasing amount
of his time to the development of the works. By 1793 Crawshay claimed to
have laid out £50,000 on new plant at Cyfarthfa. He did so with effect.
A survey of pig iron production in 1796 identified Cyfarthfa as by far the
largest ironworks in Britain, casting 7204 tons when average output per works
was a mere 1562 tons. The expansion of smelting was more than matched by
a massive growth in forge capacity at Cyfarthfa. Indeed, it was in the field
of iron refining that Crawshay made his most signal contribution to the British
iron trade. He was the sponsor of the iron puddling technique
of Henry Cort, pioneered as a commercially viable process at his works in
the late 1780s and which revolutionized the production of malleable bar iron
in Britain. Cyfarthfa attracted industrialists and technologists from across
the world. Crawshay died on 27 June 1810 and was buried at Llandaff Cathedral,
attended by vast crowds from Merthyr. ODNB
biography by Chris Evans
Crawshay, William
Born in 1764: ironmaster and merchant, the only son, of Richard Crawshay.
Little known of Crawshay's early life and education, only that he joined
his father's business as a young man. It was the beginning of a tempestuous
career. Like his father, William Crawshay was a masterful character and he
found it difficult to work under his father and this led to repeated
estrangements. Increasingly, William Crawshay was entrusted with running
the firm's merchant house in London, while his father remained at Cyfarthfa.
A fresh quarrel in 1809 led to the old man's revising his will. William Crawshay
was replaced as his father's executor and residuary legatee by
Benjamin Hall. and would have been left without a share
in the ironworks, but for a belated reconciliation through which he acquired
a three-eighths share in the Cyfarthfa works. For much of the next decade
Crawshay strove to reverse this humiliation and make himself the undisputed
master of Cyfarthfa. The Cyfarthfa ironworks was the largest in Britain,
producing 24,200 tons of pig iron from eight blast furnaces in 1823, yet
the functioning of the Crawshay firm was far from smooth. William Crawshay,
the Iron King, died on 11 August 1834 at his suburban mansion at Stoke Newington,
Middlesex. ODNB biography by Chris Evans
Dalziel, Davison
Born in London on 17 October 1854; died 18 April 1928. Came from
Northumbrian family, hence Lord Wooler. Newspaper proprietor and financier
(The Standard and Evening Standard). Became a journalist in New South Wales
on the Sydney Echo and in the USA. Introduced taxis to London..Chairman of
Pullman Car Co. from 1915. President of Board and General Manger of International
Sleeping Car Co. from 1919. Owned Thomas Cook. MP for Lambeth 1910-1927.
ODNB entry by A.E. Watkin revised by Chandrika
Paul.
Darbyshire, G.L.
Darbyshire had been the last (acting) President of the LMS and became
the Chief Regional Officer of the London Midland Region. His expertise lay
mainly in labour and establishment matters, where the LMS had a larger and
perhaps more bureaucratic organisation than any other of the four main lines.
His term was not long, since he retired in February 1951. As a CRO he supported
his colleagues well, but at this time Euston needed a stronger hand at the
helm as noted in Bonavia's British
Rail: the first 25 years.
Davies, Ashton
Born in 1874. Joined LYR telegraph department in 1890. Attended lectures
on railway economics at Manchester University and obtained a scholarship.
Involved in train control. Lectured at school of signalling. General
Superintendent Northern Division LMS. Chief Comercial Manager 1932-8. Vice
President from 1938-1944. Awarded CVO in 1939. Marshall noted that he was
an "approchable, cheerful and friendly man." Died 1 February 1958.
Marshall Lancashire & Yorkshire
Railway. V. 2 and Who Was
Who. Terry Jenkins Sir Ernest
Lemon paints a different picture of a man determined to retain and
acquire additional powers.
Davies, David
Born at Llandinam, Montgomeryshire on 18 Decemeber 1818. Came from
a Calvinist Methodist background. Worked as a sawyer, but became involved
in railway building mainly for the constituent companies of the Cambrian
Railways in association with Thomas Savin. He was a
contractor to the Pembroke & Tenby and Manchester & Milford Railways,
but got into coal mining before the collapse of railway activity following
the Mania. Following his involvement in Ocean Collieries he became the leading
figure in the development of the Barry Railway. He died in Llandinam on 20
July 1890 (Marshall).. See Ivor
Thomas: The Sawyer: a biography of David Davies of Llandinam (Carmarthen
,1988) and Herbert Williams Davies the Ocean: railway king and coal
tycoon. Cardiff, 1991. He gave financial backing to
James Metcalfe, inventor of the exhaust steam
injector: hence Davies &
Metcalfe. After his death his son Edward
took his place.:
Metcalfe, Richard.
Davies & Metcalfe Ltd: railway engineers to the
world. 1999. "Davies was a rugged, frugal, self-made
capitalist, a relentless business competitor, who remained close to his chapel
roots. Severely puritanical and sabbatarian in outlook, he also had a great
fund of homely anecdotes about village mores, in both Welsh and English.
He was a public-spirited philanthropist, and was perhaps the most influential
Welshman of his time". Kenneth O. Morgan
(ODNB).
Covick, Owen. R.W. Perks and the Barry
Railway Company, Part 1: to early-1887. J. Rly Canal Hist. Soc., 2008,
36, 71-83 Kenneth O Morgan biography
in ODNB who notes that only son Edward died in 1898.
Denison dynasty
Not in
Marshall: problem is the diversity of names: Beckett and
Grimthorpe (baronetcy). Michael Harris contributed an excellent biographical
sketch in the Oxford Companion
at Denison, Edmund Beckett (1836-1905). He was the parliamentary counsel
for the Great Northern Railway in its fight to establish itself. His father
Edmund Denison was the company's first Chairman and he was born at Gledlow
Halll near Leeds on 29 January 1787 and died in Doncaster on 24 May 1874
(and is in the ODNB with an entry
by Iain McLean). Presumably this brusque Yorkshire family must delight in
baffling searchers in the ODNB.
Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's
encyclopedia.
Denniss, Charles Sherwood
Born in 1860, son of Goods Manager, North Eastern Railway Hull. Denniss
joined the NER at Hull under his father. He served on both the NER and GWR
until he became Superintendent of the Central Division of the NER in 1892
until becoming General Manager, Cambrian Railways in 1895. Died on 8 December
1917 (Who Was Who)..
portrait: C.C. Green's Cambrian
Railways p. 58
See G.A. Sekon. Rly Mag
3 313-28. Further comment on Denniss's character in correspondence
relating to Welshampton accident: see J. Rly Canal Hist. Soc., 2011
(211) letters from Peter Johnson
and R. Maund
Dent, [Sir] Francis
Born 31 December 1866, son of Admiral C.B.C. Dent. Joined LNWR in
1884. By 1901 he had become District Traffic Manager. Joined SECR as Chief
Goods Manager in 1907 and was General Manager from 1911-20. Died 4 June
1955..
Deuchars, David
John Thomas (North British
vol.2) considers that Deuchars was a key figure in the
Aberdeen races. From being an outdoor assistant earning £550 per annum
he was promoted in November 1893 to be Superintendent of the Line earning
£1000 and this was increased to £1250 in February 1896 and £1500
in February 1898.
Docker, Frank Dudley
Born 26 August 1862 in Smethwick, died near Amersham on 8 July 1944.
Helped to reorganize the British heavy electrical industry and served as
a director of two of the railways which exploited electric traction: the
Metropolitan Railway and the LBSCR, and subsequently the Southern Railway.
Who Was Who and R.A.S. Hennessey
Dudley Docker Backtrack, 2008, 22, 164.
ODNB entry Richard Davenport-Hines.
Douglas, John Montieth
Accountant and one term member of the NBR Board
(John Thomas): his
financial investigations at Cowlairs Works led to the resignation of
Thomas Wheatley and his brother.
Drummond, Brigadier-General Sir Hugh Henry
John
Born at Clovelly Court in Devon on 29 November 1859; died 1 August
1924. First Chairman of Southern Railway (had been a Director of LSWR since
1900 and Deputy Chairman from 1904). Had background in banking: Director
of National Provincial and Union Bank of England; Deputy Chairman, Alliance
Assurance; Ended WW1 with rank of Honourary Brigadier General. Created a
baronet in 1922. Member, Royal Bodyguard of Scotland. Who Was
Who
Edmondson, Thomas
Born 30 June 1792 in Lancaster and died in Manchester on 22 June 1851.
Originator of the card railway ticket. Trained as a cabinet maker, but became
a clerk at Milton on Newcastle & Carlisle Railway where he invented card
ticket, but employer not interested so he took his idea to the Manchester
& Leeds Railway which adopted his idea. The tickets are still used on
most "preserved railways", such as the North Norfolk Railway.
Basics from Marshall. See also entry
by Michael Farr in Oxford Companion.
also in ODNB entry by G.J. Holyoake,
revised by Philip S. Bagwell
Elliot, John
Born John Elliot Blumenfeld in London on 6 May 1898. Educated Marlborogh
College and Royal Military College Sandhurst, but opted for a career in
journalism. Like Dow and Barrie, Elliot became a railway manager following
work in public relations, although Sir Herbert Walker had recruited him as
an aide. Bonavia: Railways
South East, 1993, 3, 182 states that he was
unusual for railway management by being part Jewish and having been a journalist.
He eventually became Chief Regional Officer of the London Midland Region.
Chairman of London Transport 1953-67. Chairman of Thomas Cook 1953-67. Died
in London on 18 September 1988. Author of autobiography: On and
off the rails. ODNB entry by C.S.
Nicholls. Obituary notice by Julian Morel
(Rly Wld, 1988, 49,
729) noted his support for the Pullman services and improvements in services
to France.
Fay, [Sir Samuel] Sam
Born Southampton 30 December 1856. Educated Blenheim House School
Fareham. Entered LSWR as a clerk in 1872. Was Chief Clerk at Waterloo by
1884. In spring 1892 he became General Manager of the M&SWJR and General
Manager of the GCR from March 1902. Director General of War Transport duing
WW1. Died Romsey 30 May 1953. See
Marshall. ODNB entry by George
Dow revised by Ralph Harrington. which notes that Fay had a "magnetic
personality".
The Managership of the Great Central
Railway. Rly Mag., 1902, 10, 23-5.
Biography by Jack Simmons: Dictionary of Business
Biography
Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's
encyclopedia
Fielden, Edward Brocklehurst
Born 10 June 1857 (Wikipedia 2011); died 31 March 1942 (Who Was Who).
Chairman Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway from 1919. Conservative MP Middleton
Div. of Lancashire, 190006, Exchange Division, Manchester, 192435.
One of two Deputy Chairman on LMS.
Fiennes, Gerard (Gerry) Francis
Full name Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes. Born 7 June 1906. Died 25 May
1985. Educated Winchester and Oxford. (Who was Who) Joined LNER in
1928 as a traffic apprentice and rose to Board level on British Railways:
Chairman Western Region, then Eastern Region. His I tried to run a
railway is a classic. David St. John Thomas encountered his wiodow Jean
in Journey through
Britain. (page 489)..
I tried to run a railway. London: Ian Allan,
1967.
Recollections of some lesser LNER locomotives.
in Hughes, Geoffrey.
A Gresley anthology. Didcot: Wild Swan/Gresley Society, 1994.
pp. 67-70.
As perceived by the Assistant Yard Master at Whitemoor in 1931. The
O2s were the most powerful locomotives, but these were limited southwards
to working to Temple Mills. There were difficulties in getting enough work
out of these locomotives, although the speed was greatly increased when March
Town was playing at home. The J39 class was regarded excellent, although
prone to rolling. Eventually K3 class locomotives were acquired for the Norwich
to Whitemoor workings.
Follows, John Henry
Follows was born in 1869 and was educated at Risley Grammar School.
He joined the Midland Railway in 1890. He was Superintendent of Freight Trains
from 1911-1912; Divisional Superintendent from 1912 to 1914; Superintendent
of Operations from 1914 to 1917; Acting General Superintendent from 1917
to 1919; General Superintendent in 1919 and was a Vice President on the LMS
between 1927 and 1932, He died on 13 December 1938. (Who Was
Who).Hamilton Ellis (The Midland
Railway) noted that "Centralised traffic control became the monument
of J.H. Follows. For a long time there was on the Midland and on the LMS
a lesser and rather quaint monument, the saloon carriage in which he made
his travelling headquarters when out on the road, converted, as previously
stated, from one of the Heysham rail motors. Follows was of rather an ascetic
type, immaculate and perhaps a puritan. His saloon contained a grim white
enamelled bath, served by a severely solitary cold tap. Nearly all the windows,
right along the carriage, were of obscured glass. Whether this was to help
him to concentrate, or to prevent lesser persons from being too awed by the
daunting sight of the great man at work, has never been explained. Control
not only made for smooth working and punctuality under normal conditions,
it saved many difficult situations when things went wrong.". Several references
to him in Terry Jenkins' Sir Ernest
Lemon.
Forbes, Henry
An Ulsterman with revolver at hand. Began his career on the GNR(I):
sent to Stranolar to reorganize narrow-gauge CDJR. Introduced halts, railcars
based on buses and kept the railway running. General Manager from? Died 7
November 1943 (or possibly 1941). Need to check in Patterson
(info pro tem from
Hendry). Succeeded by Bernard Curran.
Forbes, James Staats
Born in Aberdeen on 7 March 1823. Educated as an engineer
at Woolwich and from 1840 under Brunel. Joined GWR as booking clerk at
Paddington, and was goods superintendent at Gloucester between 1855 and 1857.
Became General Manager of the Dutch Rhenish Railway, and took up same position
on LCDR from April 1861, and Chairman from 1874 (having joined board in 1871)
where he was involved in bitter competition with SER under
Watkin. Resigned from this post in 1886, but remained
a director until 1897. At time of
Railway Magazine Illustrated
Interview, 2, 481 he was also Chairman of Edison & Swan Electric
Light Co., President of the National Telephone Co and a Director of Lion
Fire Insurance. Director of Metropolitan District, Chairman of the North
Metropolitan & DN&SR, and on Board of Hull, Barnsley & West Riding
Co. Notable art collector. Died in 5 April 1904..
Excellent ODNB entry by Charles Welch, rev.
Ralph Harrington, also T.R. Gourvish in Dictionary of Business
Biography
Forbes, William
Appointed General Manager of the LBSCR in 1899 when he was aged 42.
Father, who died in 1888, had been a District Superintendent on GNR. Nephew
of famous James Staats Forbes. William Forbes joined the LCDR in 1873 and
was appointed Continental Manager in 1886 and Traffic Manager in 1888. Appointed
Assistant General Manager following operating agreement with SER.
Rly. Mag.., 1899, 5,
17.
Geddes, [Sir] Eric Campbell
D.H. Aldcroft contributed a concise biography to the
Oxford Companion. He was born in Agra,
India, on 26 September1875 being the son of a Scottish civil engineer and
died in 1937.He was educated at Merchistion Castle School in Edinburgh and
at Oxford Military College where he played rugby. After adventures on the
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad and in India he joined the North Eastern Railway
in about 1904 and rose to become its General Manager in 1914. He was co-opted
into Government service during WW1 and rose to the rank of Major General
under Haig and was responsible for all aspects of traffic flow. He eventually
became Minister of Transport. He was awarded the KCB in 1917. He was the
architect of the 1923 Grouping through the 1921 Railways Act. In 1922 he
joined Dunlop Rubber and became its Chairman. He also became Chairman of
Imperial Airways. He was also responsible for the policy of economic retribution
against Germany and for ensuring that essential supplies and services were
maintained during the 1926 General Strike. It is clear that his severance
with the NER and his subsequent activity caused great disquiet from the Board
of the LNER. He died at his Sussex home on 22 June 1937. Keith Grieves covers
all aspeccts of this colourful life in the
Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography. Wragg also does a
good job and notes the 'Geddes Axe'.
Gibb, [Sir] George Stegmann
Born in Aberdeen on 30 April 1850 and died in Wimbledon on 14 December
1925. (Marshall). Educated Aberdeen Grammar
School and London University. Joined GWR as a solicitor in 1877. Following
some work in private practice he became solicitor to the NER and was appointed
General Manager of the North Eastern Railway in 1891 and joined the Board
of that Company in 1906. Nock succinctly
observed that George Gibb was a dynamic and truly great railwayman whose
invigorating leadership brought a big programme of improvements including
accelerations, new works and internal reforms. On 3 January 1906 he was appointed
Deputy Chairman and Managing Director of the Underground Electric Railway
Co. He was knighted in 1904. Unusually, the Illustrated Interview in the
Railway Magazine (1, 491)
gives no personal biographical information.
Gillingwater, H.R.
Superintendent of the line on the Mid-Suffolk Light Railway.
Formerly with LDECR. Locomotive
Mag., 1907, 13, 84.
Glyn, Gorge Carr
Born on 27 March 1797. Educated Westminster School. Entered family
banking business Glyn Mills & Co. Joined Board of London & Birmingham
Railway. Became Chairman, the Chairman of LNWR until resignation in 1852.
Created Baron Wolveron on 14 Decemebr 1869. Died London 24 July 1873. Michael
Reed ODNB. Founder of Railway Clearing
House see Rutherford, Backtrack,
2009, 23, 689.
Glyn, Sir Ralph
1885-1960. MP for Clackmannan & East Stirlingshire, 1918-22, then
Abingdon 1924-53. Director of LMS. See
Burgess: A tour of inspection... LMS Journal, 2007 (18), 75..
Gooday, John Frances Sykes
Gooday was General Manager of the GER from 1899 to 1910. According
to Allen he was a "forcible character".
He had joined the railway at 16 as a junior clerk on a salary of five shillings
per week in 1863: this was in the Leeds office of the GER. By 1877 he had
become Assistant Continental Manager, and in 1880, Continental Manager. In
1899 he became General Manager of the LB&SCR
(see Illustrated Interview of Sarle, Rly
Mag, 2, 1), but returned to the GER as GM in the same year
in succession to Sir William Birt. Gooday was closely involved in the the
GCR/GER/GNR amalgamation proposal which was rejected by Parliament. He joined
the Board in 1910. He was succeeded by Hyde. Died 18
January 1915 (Who was Who)..
Gore Browne, Eric
Born 2 October 1885. Died 28 May 1964. Educated Malvern and Oxford.
Banker. Controller of Rubber 1943-44. (Who was Who) Last Chairman
of the Southern Railway. Strongly antagonistic to nationalization: "once
eggs are scrambled. I defy any cook to unscramble them":
Hendry notes his stance, but adds nothing
further. Sean Day-Lewis Bulleid: last giant
of steam (page 129) called him a keen-eyed banker.
Grand, Keith Walter Chamberlsin
Born 3 July 1900.. Died 17 September 1983. Educated at Rugby. (Who
was Who) Bonavia's British Rail
the first 25 years gives but a glimpse of the Western Region's first
Chief Regional Officer. He noted that he had been the Great Western's
representative in New York (1928-9) where he developed a cosmopolitan outlook
and a broad grasp of railway commercial activity. Cox
(Locomotive panorama V. 2) stated that the dieseel hydraulic
locomotives were a part of Grand's determination to retain a separate identity
for the Western.
Granet, William Guy (Manager)
He was born on 13 October 1867 and educated at Rugby and Balliol College.
He became a barrister in 1893 (Lincoln's Inn) and married the daughter of
Lord Selby, Speaker of the House of Commons in 1892. He became Secretary
of the Railway Companies Association in 1900 and Assistant to the General
Manager of the MR in 1905 and its General Manager in 1906. His interests
included traffic control and industrial relations (he was secretary to the
Employers' Committee during the general railway strike of 1907. He joined
the Board of the Midland Railway in 1918 and became its Chairman in 1922.
He died on 11 October 1943..
"That wily old lawyer Sir William Guy Granet, sometime Dictator of
the Midland" (in the words of the late Hamilton Ellis) would have
outmanoeuvred Machiavelli himself. Nock wrote "Step by step, inexorably he
virtually dictated the terms of the amalgamation and, although he did not
become either chairman or deputy chairman of the new company, he dominated
the proceedings of the board... The result was that the Midland precepts
of management were adopted... Seventeen years earlier Granet had completely
overthrown the traditional form of railway organisation which had prevailed
on the Midland as firmly as on all the other large railways of Great Britain
and now it was the turn of the other constituents of the LMS to experience
what the Midland had passed through from 1906 onward."
Rutherford notes
that Granet was undoubtedly one of those who wished to reduce the status,
power (and salaries) of the idiosyncratic Victorian locomotive superintendents.
He may well have arrived at that view (or received it from others and promulgated
it further) whilst he was Secretary of the Railway Companies' Association
early in the new century. Certainly once he [Granet] became General Manager
of the Midland Railway, R.M. Deeley's attempts
to introduce appropriate modern locomotive powereight-coupled engines
for freight and four-cylinder de Glehn compound 4-6-0s for 'crack' expresses
got nowhere and Deeley left in 1909. He was replaced by
Henry Fowler, a man of wide interests but not the
design of locomotives, although he was interested in details such as the
application of superheating or the metallurgy of boiler stays. The concept
of 'the dead hand of Derby' in locomotive matters can be. traced back to
these events.
Granet was once asked what type of man made the ideal leader and he
replied "The benevolent despot". He got his man in the person of
Lord Stamp (a director of ICI) who took
up the post of President in January 1926.
H. G. Burgess, the last General Manager, retired in March 1927 and
Granet himself resigned in October and moved to the City.
Biography by Henry Parris Dictionary of Business Biography.
ODNB biography by Harold Hartley; revised
by Mark Pottle.
Grey, Sir Edward
Born in London on 25 Appril 1862. Educated at Winchester College and
Balliol College Oxford. Traditional biography in
ODNB by Keith Robbins. More interesting
biography in letter by Alan Donaldson
in Rly Arch., 2008 (21), 26. He was Foreign Secretary in Asquith's
Liberal administration of 1906 and is best known for his alleged statement
that "the lights are going out all over Europe. We shall not see them lit
again in our lifetime" as Europe slid into WW1. He was a Director of the
NER and Chairman from 1906 until his appointment as Foreign Secretary. The
family estate enjoyed its own station at Fallodon in Northumberland, and
he was clearly a great lover of trains as well as of natural history. He
was a devout Anglican and worshiped at Embleton parish church. He died on
7 September 1933. He was created a Viscount in 1916..
Grierson, James
Born in 1830 was made General Manager of the GWR in 1866. Died on
7 October 1887: "He had been an able, tactful and popular Manager. He had
drawn up a "long and deatiled report" on the final conversion of the broad
gauge. He appears to have championed the carriage of third class passengers
on express trains. McDermot History
of the Great Western Railway rev. Clinker.
Guest, (Sir Josiah) John
Born in Dowlais on 2 February 1785, the eldest child of Thomas Guest,
manager and part owner of Dowlais ironworks. John followed his father into
the business in 1807. Due to the rise of the railway industry the Ironworks
became the largest in the world and Guest attempted to keep up todate with
the latest techniques. He became the first chairman of the Taff Vale Railway
Company which was noted for its huge profitability gained through the haulage
of coal for export. In 1846 Canford Manor in Dorset was acquired. He died
on 26 November 1852. The name survived in Guest, Keen & Nettlefolds (GKN).
Angela V. John in ODNB..
Hall, Benjamin
There were three generations of Benjamin Hall who influenced the
construction of canals and their associated tramroads in Monmouthshire. These
were Dr Benjamin Hall (born 3 June 1742, died 25 October 1817), Chancellor
of the Diocese of Llandaff and father of Benjamin Hall, born in Llandaff
on 29 October 1778 and died on 19 August 1817. He married Charlotte, daughter
of Richard Crawshay of Cyfartha on 16 December 1801 and came into the possession
of the Abercarn Estate in 1808. He in turn was the father of Benjamin Hall
born on 8 December 1802 and died on 27 April 1867. He was created a Baronet
on 12 August 1838 and eventually Lord Lieutenant of Monmouthshire in 1861
Big Ben (Palace of Westminster) is named after him and he rejoices in an
ODNB biography by G.F.R. Barker, revised by H.C.G. Matthew.
See Archive, 2007 (55)
26.
Hambro, Charles Jocelyn
Born 3 October 1897 in London. Merchant banker: partner in C.J. Hambro
& Son: the family originated in Denmark. Educated at Eton and Sandhurst.
Served WW1 in Coldstream Guards where he won Military Cross on Western Front.
In WW2 he served with Special Operations Executive and was involved in sabotage
of heavy water plant in Norway. He was knighted for this activity. He had
been a Director of the GWR since 1928, was Deputy Chairman from 1934 and
Chairman between 1940 and 1945. He died on 28 August 1963.
ODNB biography by M.R.D. Foot which only
contains one discordant note by claiming the GWR was "the most successful
of the four great British Railway companies".
Hardy, George
Manager of the Londonderry Railway. He had worked for the Marquis
of Londonderry for forty five years, and remained in his employ when the
railway was taken over by the NER in 1908.
See Rly Mag., 1901, 8,
70.
Harrison, [Sir] Frederick
Born 1844. Died 31 December 1914 (Who was Who). General Manager,
London and North Western Railway and the subject of an early
Railway Magazine Illustrated
Interview. 1, 193-206. Argued that "The General Manager of a big
railway must be a practical man who has been "through the mill" to use a
familiar phrase, and you will find that we have all begun at the bottom of
the ladder". He entered the LNWR in 1864 when aged 20 as a clerk at Shrewsbury
under Sir George Findlay who took him to Euston when he became General Goods
Manager later in the same year. For three years he was in Liverpool as Assistant
District Superintendent, followed by one year at Chester in a similar capacity,
and was Assistant Superintendent of the Line and Chief Goods Manager at Euston
before becoming General Manager.
Hartley, Sir Harold Brewer
Hartley deserves better than being listed as the instrument used to
draw Stanier away from the Great Western to the LMS. Sir Harold was a scientist
of considerable stature and his recruitment onto the LMS may be seen as one
of Stamp's great positive decisions; obviously, the
recruitment of Stanier was another. Basic information obtained from [long]
biography by E.J. Bowen (revised by K.D. Watson) in
Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography: born 3 September 1878; died 9 September 1972. Educated
Balliol: physical chemist. Biographer notes that "As a judge of character
Hartley was quick to distinguish the efficient from the inefficient". Author
of Studies in the history of chemistry (1971). It is noteworthy that
Hartley was the original biographer of Ernest
Lemon in the ODNB. He was also the original ODNB biographer of several
other people, notably Guy Granet, several scientists and a musician killed
during WW1.
Bond noted "an Oxford Don from Balliol and
a Fellow of the Royal Society who, as a Brigadier-General, had been Director
of Chemical Warfare during the Great War. Sir Harold, who in later years
I came to know well, was a man of abounding energy, whose wisdom, experience,
and an indomitable spirit which refused to be daunted by a crippling physical
disability, enabled him to exert a powerful influence over affairs of national
importance in science and the engineering profession right up to the time
of his death at the advanced age of 94 years.".
See also LMS Journal, 17, 37
on Scientific Research Department (article includes fine portrait)
A.J. Pearson Man of the rail
(page 46): He was first and foremost very much a Balliol man. At
the railway, which he joined when he was over fifty, he got through a tremendous
amount of work, and his outside interests ranged widely. But he was always
moderate, and his career with the railway was steady and industrious. He
was a charming host; and he admired Stamp greatly.
Langridge: (p. 135) note possibly
says more about Langriage than his subject: "Stamp's choice was, of course,
Sir Harold Hartley; Oxford Don, late Chemical Warfare Chief, FRS. The appointer
of Kenneth Clark as Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum a truly catholic
set of interests but not an engineer. Naturally, a Don would have
to have to do with that blessed word 'Research'"
Papers (relevant to steamindex)
William Arthur Stanier, 1876-1965. Biogr. Mem. Fellows R. Soc.,
1966, 12, 489-502. illus. (port). bibliog.
Henderson, Alexander
Henderson was born on 28 September 1850, the second child of George
and Eliza Henderson. He tended to become involved in business interests with
his younger brothers Henry (Harry) and Brodie. When 17 he entered the City
firm of Deloittes who were Accountants to the GWR. He moved to the stockbroker
firmm of Eyton, Greenwood & Eyton and became a member of the Stock Exchange
when 22. In 1874 he married Jane Davis who bore him 7 children, including
6 sons. He, and his brothers developed business interests in Latin America,
especially successful of which were those in the Buenos Aires & Great
Southern Railway where the Government guaranteed a 7% dividend.
In 1888 he became a director of the Manchester Ship Canal, and
subsequently helped to bail out Barings Bank. Thus he came to the attention
of the MSLR Board which he was invited to join. He formed a syndicate with
£4m capital to underwrite the London extension. Amongst his achievements
with the GCR was the brilliant acquisition of Sam Fay from the LSWR, probably
Robinson as Locomotive Superintendent, and Dixon Davies as Solicitor. He
entered politics as Liberal-Unionist MP for West Staffordshire (between 1906
and 1913, and then briefly as MP for St George's Hanover Square until raised
to the peerage, as Lord Faringdon, in 1916 he had been knighted in
1902. He was involved in acquiring the LD&ECR and in developing Immingham
Docks. He was involved in merger proposals with the GNR, and later GER, but
these were thrown out by Parliament. He resisted negotiating with the trade
unions. At the grouping the GCR Board presented him with a portrait by Sir
William Orpen which is kept at Buscot. He died in 1934 whilst still Deputy
Chairman of the LNER. Significantly, he was given special responsibility
for financial matters by the LNER's Board.
When 40 he purchased Buscot, Faringdon, for £80,000 where he
maintained his
collections
of fine books and paintings, especially those by the pre-Raphaelites:
Burcot is now a National Trust property.
See Backtrack, 2001, 15,
707.
Backtrack, 2002, 16,
174. letter by Bloxsom
Backtrack, 1996, 10, 266
He is not listed in the Oxford Companion, nor is he given adequate
coverage in the gloss about the Great Central by Andrew Dow, but Martin Daunton
in his Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography does it make it very clear that the Great Central Railway
was only a minor element in his vast financial interests, many of which were
in South America.
Hodgson, Richard
Richard Hodgson (1812-1877) of Carham Hall, Coldstream, was
Chairman of the North British Railway until 1866. He was responsible for
introducing ruthless business methods in association with the General Manager,
Thomas Rowbotham, and the possibly unfortunate William Hurst, Locomotive
Superintendent. This led to a major financial scandal whereby the Scottish
Wagon Company provided the NBR with rolling stock on a deferred payment basis
(unfortunately, Hodgson and his associates had substantial holdings in the
Wagon Co.). There is a suggestion that Hodgson may have also used a policy
of railway promotion and acquistion to provide the NBR with financial momentum
of the Hudson sort. The quest for lines in Northumberland, notably the Border
Counties Railway led to the NBR acquiring its own access to Newcastle, but
at the cost of permitting the NER running its trains into Edinburgh.
In part Dawn Smith.
Holland-Martin, Robert
Born on 10 October 1872, died 27 January 1944: edcated at Eton and
Trinity College, Oxford. Became a Director of Martin's Bank in 1897 and was
Chairman from from 1925 to 1939. He was a director of the Agricultural Mortgage
Corporation and the Gas Light & Coke Co. He became a Director of the
London & South Western Railway in 1910, and continued to serve on the
Board of the Southern Railway, becoming Deputy Chairman in 1932 and Chairman
from 1935 until his death in 1944. (Reg
Davies LMS Journal, (21), 28. Family seat Overbury Court, Tewkesbury.
Sired several more famous children.
H.A.V. Bulleid called him "genial"
and argued that he was eager to update the Southern's steam locomotives and
passenger rolling stock. He died in 1944. Portrait (in extraordinary company
which included Stanier and Willie Wood) on plate 43 of Bulleid on Bulleid.
Sean Day-Lewis Bulleid: last giant of
steam (pp. 129-30) called him gentle and much-loved.
Homfray, Samuel
Ironmaster who was born on 16 February 1762 and died on 18 May 1822
and who arranged for Trevithick's locomotive to be run on his tramway. See
Lawrence Ince biography of Homfray family in
Oxford Dictionary of National
biography.
Hopkins, Charles
Bonavia (British Rail: the
first 25 years) noted that "the surprise appointment was in the North
Eastern Region", where Charles Hopkins became the youngest CRO. He was one
of the LNER's 'bright young men', his last post there being Assistant General
Manager (Traffic and Statistics). The creation of a North Eastern Region
had hung in the balance, the original idea being that all of the LNER in
England would form one Region.
Howey, John Edwards Presgrave
Born on 17 November 1883 at Melford Grange near Woodbridge, Suffolk.
Died 8 September 1963. Creator, and for many years owner and operator of
the Romney Hythe & Dymchurch
Railway. To implement his ideas he was involved with
Bassett Lowke,
Henry Greenly and
Gresley. Wealth based on ownership of real
estate in centre of Melbourne, Australia. Educated at Eton and was a premium
apprentice at Vickers. See Snell's One
man's railway.
Hudson, George
Born near York on 10 March 1800 and died in London on 14 December
1871. Subject of entry in Oxford Dictionary
of National Biography by Michael Reed.
Lambert,
R.S. The railway king, 1800-1971: a study of George
Hudson and the business morals of his times. 1934.
Beaumont, Robert. The Railway King - a biography of George
Hudson.
Review by Michael Rutherford noted "In the end, Beaumont seeks to
persuade us that Hudson's achievements outweigh his business practice
failings..."
Hill, Keith. On track to Westminster.
. Backtrack, 2003, 17, 523-6.
Writer eventually who became BR Board's Parliamentary Communications
Manager describes relationship between Members of Parliament and their interests
in railways. including adventures of George Hudson (portrait), MP for York
and much else besides for that City, are briefly outlined:
this section was the subject of fairly
sharp criticism from Christopher V. Awdry (letter page 715) on the
relationship between Hudson and his great uncle Matthew Bottrill who funded
some of Hudson's early schemes, but there was no insobriety in this relationship.
.
Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's
encyclopedia
Huish, [Captain] Mark
Born in Nottingham on 9 March 1808. Died at Bonchurch on Isle of Wight
on 18 January 1867 (Gourvish ODNB). He
had joined the East India Company and on return from India in 1839 he became
Secretary & General Manager of the Glasgow, Paisley & Greenock Railway.
In 1841 he became Secretary & General Manager of the Grand Junction Railway.
From 1846 to 1858 he was General Manager of the LNWR, but resigned over policy
matters and was replaced by Cawkell,
when he retired to Bonchurch. Braine:
The railway Moon.. Rutherford
(Backtrack, 2009, 23, 462) quotes Gourvish: "[Huish's]
strong personality and close acquaintance with the intricacies of traffic
management enabled him... to exert a powerful influence over the councils
of his employers, and there were many instances of his dictating to the Board
and its several committees. The 'Euston Confederacy' a series of traffic
agreements aimed at securing traffic from competitors, was very much his
creation, and a startling answer to the difficulties facing the established
lines as a result of Parliament's sanction of duplicate
projects."
Paper
Railway accidents. Min. Proc
Instn civ. Engrs., 1851/2, 11, 434 (Paper 854).
1000 locomotive failures on LNWR involving 587 locomotives were
examined
See Oxford Companion short
biography by Terry Gourvish and full
biography based upon PhD Thesis.
Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's
encyclopedia
Humphreys-Owen, A.C.
Chairman Cambrian Railways:1900-
(Rly Mag., 1900, 7,
190)
Hurcomb, Cyril William
Born in Oxford on 18 February 1883. Died in Horsham on 7 August 1973?.
Educated at Oxford University and career civil servant. Director General
of Ministry of War Transport and made Chairman of British Transport Commission.
His relationship with the Railway Executive was fraught with problems as
related by Bonavia: The nationalisation
of British transport. Entry in Oxford
Companion by TG presumably Terry Gourvish
Max Nicholson contributed an ODNB biography,
from which the following has been extracted (it should be noted that Nicholson
regards Hurcomb's involvement with the BTC as a glitch in an otherwise brilliant
career.
Hurcomb's pallid complexion and worn appearance belied his toughness and stamina, just as his austere mien disguised his receptiveness as a listener and his great consideration for others. These, combined with his clarity of mind and tenacity of purpose, made him an outstanding negotiator. His manner was never ingratiating, but his arguments were fair and persuasive, winning respect if not always affection. Without being an expert on any subject he learned enough of a number to be taken seriously by experts, and to complement their expertise with his own wisdom
The letter which I [Bonavia] had drafted from Hurcomb to Missenden dated 13 April 1948 contained the following sentences:
It seems to me that the question of the future form of traction whether it is to be steam, electricity, Diesel-electric, Diesel-mechanical, or gas turbine is probably the most important long-term problem facing the railways to-day, and it is of course closely linked with the future price ratios and availability of the different fuels. . . .
A large main line electrification scheme [ex-LNER Manchester-Sheffield-Wath] is in progress. The Executive also have in hand proposals for prolonged technical trials of both Diesel-mechanical and gas turbine main line locomotives. But as regards Diesel-electric traction, there seems to be a disparity. We are still experimenting as though there were no large fund of technical knowledge and experience upon which to draw, and as though our engineers had not been studying the characteristics (as I assume they have been doing) of this form of traction for the past twenty years. Whilst American practice admittedly requires to be interpreted in the light of the smaller loads, shorter average length of haul, and more restricted loading gauge in this country, there should be no major technical questions which are quite unfamiliar.
Where our experience is lacking, is in the true level of maintenance and operating costs under British conditions, and the effects upon operating methods of turning over a complete group of services to diesel-electric traction. And only a large-scale experiment can give us the answer to these questions.
For this reason I was disappointed to read in Slim's letter of 23rd March that so limited an experiment as that now in hand in the London Midland Region is all that the Executive apparently contemplate at the moment.
You will remember that in the summer of 1947 the L.N.E.R. announced that they had prepared a scheme for the dieselisation of the Anglo-Scottish East Coast services, involving the construction of 25 single units in replacement of 32 "Pacific" type express passenger engines. Maintenance facilities were to be provided at London and Edinburgh, entirely separate from the steam locomotive facilities.
The Commission would, I think, like to know whether it is the fact that this scheme has now been shelved and whether the Executive have come to conclusions which differ radically from those which were formed by the L.N .E.R. Board last year. I cannot help feeling, however, that until a major scheme of the kind has been put into operation, we shall not have sufficient actual experience of the capabilities and costs of Diesel-electric traction in relation to steam and other forms of traction.
When eventually the Executive replied, in the following December, it was merely to inform the Commission that a Committee on Types of Motive Power had been set up.
Hyde, Walter Henry
Hyde followed the succesful Gooday as General
Manager of the GER, but was forced to retire in 1914 aged only 50 due to
the takeover of the LTSR by the Midland Railway.
Inglis, Colin
Chief Research Officer, British Transport Commission. Appointed in
1952 whilst Martin Herbert was in charge of British Railways' Research
Department
Inglis, James Charles
Born in Aberdeen on 9 September 1851
(Marshall) and educated in the Grammar
School and at Aberdeen University where he took prizes in natural science
and mathematics. Following University, in 1870 he entered the shops of Messrs.
Norman, Copland and Co., engineers and millwrights, Glasgow, where he stayed
for two years. On the advice of the late Mr. Alexander Kirk, M.I.C.E., of
Glasgow, he left Messrs. Norman's and became a pupil for three years to the
late Mr. James Abernethy. During this pupilage Inglis was involved in dock
and harbour work, and this included work on the Alexandra Railways and Docks
at Newport. In 1875 he joined the South Devon Railway, under P.J. Margary,
M.I.C.E., then Chief Engineer of that line and of the Cornwall Railway. Inglis's
early employment at Plymouth was on the construction of the deep water quays
and works at Millbay, and subsequently on the heavy doublings and work then
in progress on the South Devon and Cornwall Railways.
On the absorption of the Sonth Devon Railway in 1878 by the Great
Western Railway, Inglis joined the staff of the larger system, but soon left
to enter private practice as a civil engineer at Plymouth, in which capacity
he held various posts and performed varied engineering works. He was also
involved in large works, such as the Princetown Railway, the Bodmin Branch
Railway, the Boscarne extension, the reconstruction of the great South Devon
viaducts at Cornwood, Ivybridge and beyond, Marley Tunnel, etc. This varied
experience was soon to tell, and in June, 1892, the Great Western Railway
directors invited him to rejoin the Company as Assistant-Engineer at Paddington.
In October, 1892, or only four months after his arrival at Paddington, Mr.
Inglis was appointed Chief Engineer.
From the above recital it will be seen that Mr. Inglis had for a
lengthened period dealt with heavy issues and varied problems, an excellent
trainingin conjunction with his intimate knowledge of the Great Western
Railway's systemfor the responsible post of General Manager of the
Great Western Railway. He was a Lient. Colonel in the Railway Staff Corps,
was Vice-President of the Institution of Civil Engineers, and a prominent
member of the Engineering Standards Committee. Died Rottingdean on 19 December
1911 (Marshall)
One must ponder on the relationship between Inglis, a very great civil
engineer and manager, and Churchward, the great
mechanical engineer. He was succeeded as General Manager by
Frank Potter..
The Engineers Department. Rly
Mag., 1, 519.
As General Manager: Rly Mag.,
1903, 13, 156 includes portrait on p. 152
As General Manager: Rly Mag., 1908,
22, 89
Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's
encyclopedia
Jack Simmons: Oxford Companion
p.222
Inglis, [Dr] John
Proprietor of A. & J. Inglis, shipbuilders and engineers on the
Clyde. Studied at Glasgow University. John Inglis was Chairman of the NBR
locomotive committee and had encouraged the development of the Atlantics.
Thomas (North British) notes this connection, but says no more about Inglis
other than to note that the NBR only acquired Inglis vessels for its steamer
services. Keen yachtsman and designer of yachts..
Jackson, Willaim Fulton
Born Glasgow on 12 November 1855. Appointed General Manager North
British Railway in 1899; previously Rating Agent. Gave evidence for the Scottish
railway companies to the Royal Commission on Rating and Valuation.
Illustrated interview, Rly Mag.,
1901, 8, 300.
Killin, Robert
Born 14 October 1870. Died 26 December 1943. Educated Scots School,
Rutherglen. Joined the Caledonian Railway in 1892; by 1897 was night
stationmaster at Carlisle. By 1910 was superintendent of the Western Division
of the Caledonian Railway and by 1916 was superindent of the line, becoming
in General Superintendent of the Northern Division after the formation of
the LMS. Responsible in 1928 for an investigation into the state of the Clogher
Valley Railway and a 37pp Report published by HMSO.
Patterson: Clogher Valley
Railway. Chairman Stelar Oil Co., Glasgow, 1936; Chairman Ailsa
Shipbuilding Co., 1940.
Laing, Samuel
Jack Simmons (Oxford Companion)
biographical sketch notes that one of Five Kings on Railway
Board chaired by Dalhousie. Later he twice served as Chairman of the London
Brighton & South Coast Railway (1848-55 and 1867-94). "He successfully
sorted out tangles, calmed tempers, and restored confidence'.
ODNB entry by Thomas Seccombe revised by Philip
S. Bagwell was born in Edinburgh on 12 December 1812; was educated at
Houghton-le-Spring grammar school and St John's College, Cambridge where
he became a Fellow. He also qualified as a barrister. He died at Sydenham
Hill on 6 August 1897..
Lambert, Henry
General Manager of the GWR from 1887 (when aged 54) until his resignation
in July 1896 following a long illnes. Managed the final conversion from the
broad gauge. Prior to his appointment as General Manger he had been Chief
Goods Manager from March 1879, and prior to that had worked for Pickford
& Co. from 1847 before becoming Goods Superintendent at Paddington in
May 1865. . McDermot History of the
Great Western Railway rev. Clinker
Lawrence, Charles Napier
Born 27 May 1855; died 17 December 1927. Became Lord Kingsgate. (Wikipedia
2011). Last Chairman of LNWR: first Chairman of LMS.. A son of Lord Lawrence
of the Punjab. Served on LNWR Board from 1884. Had interests in insurance
and in South American railways: he was Chairman of Antofagasta & Bolivia
Railway. M.C. Reed
McCarthy, Patrick
Manager of Listowell & Ballybunion Railway: information from
Hennessey, R.A.S. One track to
the future. Backtrack, 2005, 19, 437-41; and references
therein
Maclure, Sir William
Director of Cambrian Railways (involved in unfair dismissal of official
on that railway) and on Great Central Railway where
son, W.G.P. was locomotive running superintendent.
Jackson J.G. Robinson.
McColl, Hugh
Nock (Great locomotives of
the Southern Railway) (page 94) refers to Hugh McColl, Chief
Clark at Ashford as a dour and Indomitable character, who had been brought
to Ashford from Kilmarnock by James Stirling,. According to Mock he mellowed
under Maunsell.
McKenna, David
Born 18 February 1911, Died 29 January 2003. Educated at Eton and
Cambridge. (Who was Who).Bonavia thought highly of him
(Railways South East, 1993,
3, 182). He was General Manager of the Southern Region between
1963 and 1968. He had come to the Region from London Transport where he had
been Chief Commercial and Public Relations Officer. He had a distinguished
WW2 record and held the OBE. He was the son of a former Chancellor of the
Exchequer and enjoyed independent means. Wonderful appreciation of Graff-Baker
in Seymour Biscoe Tritton Lecture.
Papers
Management of design. (Sir Seymour Biscoe Tritton lecture).
J. Instn Loco Engrs., 1966,
56, 318-29,
Martin, Herbert
In charge of Research Department on LMS and then in similar capacity
for British Railways until his retirement if 1961. Clashed with Colin Inglis,
Chief Research Officer of British Transport Commission.
Matheson, [Sir] Alexander
Born at Attadale in Wester Ross on 16 January 1805.Educated at the
University of Edinburgh and then went to the Far East, initially in Calcutta
and then in Canton where he formed Jardine, Matheson and was involved in
the opium trade. He retuned to Britain in 1842 and became MP for the Inverness
burghs in 1847. He was Chairman of the Inverness & Aberdeen Junction
Railway; then Highland Railway (until 1884). He was responsible for the Woosung
Road Co., the first (brief) railway in China. He was created a baronet in
1882 and died in London on 26 July 1886. ODNB
entry by Richard J. Grace and see
Backtrack, 2010, 24, 204..
Matheson, Donald Alexander
Born in Perthshire in 1860. Educated at Perth Academy and Watt College,
Edinburgh. Last General Manager and Consulting Engineer of the Caledonian
Railway: appointed 1 October 1910 until 1922, then General Manager of London
Midland and Scottish Railway in Scotland, 192326. and retired 31 December
1926 (SLS Caledonian Railway
centenary). Trained as a Civil Engineer and worked for LNWR. Brought
in as Resident Engineer to the Glasgow Central Railway which was creating
a great financial drain for the Caledonian Railway
(Nock: Caledonian Railway)
died 10 December 1935 (Who Was Who). Member of Engineering
Standards Committee; Past Vice-President of the Institution of Engineers
and Shipbuilders in Scotland; Lt-Col Engineer and Railway Staff Corps; Member
of the Government Railway Executive Committee during WW1; Chairman of the
General Managers Conference of the Associated Railway Companies of
Great Britain, 1917. Director of the Glasgow Chamber of Commerce and of several
charitable institutions; has designed and constructed many railway engineering
works of magnitude. Also Mullay's
London's Scottish railways
Matthews, Sir Ronald
Born 25 June 1885. Died 1 July 1959. Educated at Eton. (Who Was
Who). Sir Ronald Matthews lived in Doncaster, and was also Chairman of
the Sheffield firm of Turton Brothers and Matthews, and had been Master Cutler.
Both Gresley and Thompson were his house guests, and evidently close, as
Prudence, one of the Matthews daughters, recalls them as 'Uncle Tim' and
'Uncle Ned'. On paper. Thompson should have been the automatic choice to
succeed Gresley. but according to Stewart Cox, Sir Ronald made approaches
to his opposite number on the Southern, to see if Bulleid could be enticed
back, and the LMS, to enquire after the availability of Roland Bond, whom
he had interviewed in connection with Bond's appointment to superintend the
joint LNER/LMS locomotive testing station. However, Bulleid was engaged in
the production of his new 'Merchant Navy' Pacifics, and Bond had just been
put in charge of the workshops at Crewe, so neither could be spared.
Consequently, here being no other obvious candidates for the post, without
further delay, Matthews appointed Edward Thompson as CME of the LNER, the
decision being confirmed at the Board Meeting on 24th April, 1941, just 19
days after Gresley's passing. Hughes: Sir
Nigel Gresley. Terry Jenkins
Sir Ernest Lemon notes how Lemon served on committees of the Railway
Companies' Association, on which Matthews was Chairman, during WW2 to explore
the prospects for Post-War reconstruction.
Millar, Robert
Appointed Interim General Manager in 1901
(Rly Mag., 1901, 8, 254
with portrait). Born in Stirling in 1850. In 1879 he had been sent to
Belfast to be the Caledonian Railway's representative in Ireland. Died, at
early age of 58, when general manager of the Caledonian Ry., at Glasgow on
Friday, 18 September 1908. Mr. Millar entered the service of the company
in 1873 as a goods clerk, and by sheer merit reached the highest office open
to him in 1901. He was highly respected and extremely popular both in his
business capacity and his social relations.
Locomotive Mag., 1908,
14, 170.
Milne, [Sir] James
Born in Dublin, 4 May 1883. Father was a Scottish Presbyterian minister.
Educated High School Dublin, Campbell College, Belfast, Victoria University
Manchester and pupil of Churchward at Swindon. MICE. Then moved to GWR
Headquarters where he was concerned with statistics. He became director of
statistics at new Ministry of Transport in 1919, but returned to GWR in 1922
as AGM and became GM in 1929. He was knighted in 1932. During WW2 he was
deputy-chairman of the Railway Executive Committee and Nock notes that his
great qualities were shown to great advantage during the flying bomb attacks
on London during WW2.. He was opposed to Nationalization, but offered
chairmanship of Railway Executive, but declined it. In 1948 he reported to
the Irish Minister for Industry and Commerce in
Report on Transport in Ireland.
The motive power aspects of this report are considered by
Clements and McMahon in The
locomotives of the GSR especially on pp. 334-5. Earlier Milne had
contributed significant parts of multi-authored works on the administration
of railways: see Ottley 1744,3475 and 3704. Died on 1 April 1958 (Who
was who).
Geoffrey Channon in Dictionary of Business
Biography
Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's
encyclopedia
Missenden, Sir Eustace James
Born 3 March 1886 (Who Was Who): son of a station master and
early school leaver (which according to
Bonavia Railways South East 1993,
3, 182) gave him a chip on his shoulder. Joined SECR in 1899.
Not in ODNB, but in Oxford Companion
(entry written by Michael Bonavia). Bonavia also contributed some sharp
observations in British Rail: the
first 25 years noting that Missensen accepted [the Chairmanship of
the Railway Executive], though with the private intention of retiring before
too long... he was a very competent railwayman, experienced more on the operating
than the commercial side, and very loyal to the practices of the Southern
Railway. He was a good organiser and knew how to delegate; he looked after
the interests of those subordinates who had served him well. He firmly declined
to work over-long hours and was careful, perhaps even fussy, over his health.
He lacked both the warm, extrovert personality of his precedessor at Waterloo,
Gilbert Szlumper, and the intellectual and managerial distinction of Sir
Herbert Walker (to whom he had given great admiration); he did not move easily
in Government circles, being suspicious of both politicians and civil servants.
He found himself out of his element in trying to coordinate a team of Executive
Members who were in no way responsible to him in the way that railway
departmental officers had been responsible to a General Manager. The method
by which the team had been chosen had been a sort of musical chairs, designed
to ensure that each former company obtained a fair crack of the whip. The
Southern having provided the Chairman, the others were entitled to share
the remaining posts, apart from that of Deputy Chairman. Perhaps it should
be remembered that he sent a delegation to North America to study diesel
traction and their report of 20 September 1946 recommended limiting
electrification to high density routes and using diesel electric locomotives
and possibly railcars for the other routes: the delegation consisted of
J.L. Harrington, S.A. Fitch.
M.S. Hatchell and
S.B. Warder
(Bulleid: Bulleid of the
Southern). Died 30 January
1973..Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's
encyclopedia
Mitchell, Robert Proctor
Collaborated with Bassett-Lowke, latterly through Narrow Guage Railways
Ltd, in the creation of miniature pleasure railways, but also in the running
of the 15 inch version of the Ravenglass & Eskdale Railway. Davies's
The Ravenglass & Eskdale Railway has little information
about Mitchell except to note his involvement in pleasure lines at Rhyl and
Southport and that he came from a wealthy ship-owning family and was probably
experienced in maintaining engines.
Moffat, William
General Manager of the GNSR since 1880. Formerly with NER in Newcastle
area, including the management of Tyne Dock.
Rly Mag.,
1899, 5, 289. Portrait
Moorsom, Constantine Richard
Born Portsmouth 22 September 1792. Died London 26 May 1861 following
an operation on an old wound freceived at the Battle of Copenhagen..
Brother of William Scarth Moorsom:
Marshall included both to avoid confusion.
Constantine was educated at the Royal Naval College, Portsmouth from 1807-9.
He wsa Joint Secretary of the Birmingham & Gloucester Railway from 1833
where his brother was Engineer. He rose to be Chairman shortly before the
line was taken over by the Midland Railway. He also served the London &
Birmingham Railway as Secretary. Later he became a director of the LNWR and
chairman from Ocober 1852. See Reed. and
Peter Braine: The railway
Moon who takes the perceptive quotation from an obituary in Herepath
that "the gallant Admiral sat generally quiet and unobrusive, seldom taking
part in the discussions, but when he did it was always to uphold the plans
of the board, with a little too much of the quarter deck. many thought, in
his manner"..
Morgan, John
Joined LCDR as Accountant 35 years ago. Assisted Lord Cairns and Lord
Salisbury in their investigation of finances of LCDR in 1869.
See Rly Mag., 2,
481.
Neele, G.P.
Author of reminiscences
of his career on the LNWR which culminated in his being
Superintendent of the Line and responsible for the Company's links with the
Railway Clearing House and for Royal train journeys. One of
Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's
encyclopedia 93 "personalities".
Newnes, Sir George
Driving force behind Lynton & Barnstaple Railway.
See Rly Mag., 2, 457.
Born in Matlock on 13 March 1851. He was educated at Silcoates School, Yorkshire,
Shireland Hall, Birmingham, and for two terms at the City of London School.
At sixteen he was apprenticed to a wholesale haberdasher in the City,
subsequently travelling in haberdashery and managing a shop in
Manchester. In 1881 moved into popular journalsim with the weekly
Tit-Bits. This grew and Newnes became a major newpaper proprietor
.
Newton, Sir Charles
Born 6 June 1882; died 23 May 1973. Knighted 1943. Joined GWR in 1897;
Assistant to Comptroller Great Eastern Railway 1916; Chief Accountant, GER
1922; Chief Accountant, LNER 1928; Divisional General Manager (Southern Area)
1936; Chief General Manager LNER, 193947, Director 1947; Holder of
Brunel Medal London School of Economics, University of London; Publication:
Railway Accounts, 1930 (Ottley 3488). Who Was Who.;
Newton, Sir (Charles) Wilfrid
Born 11 December 1928. Educated Orange Preparatory School, Johannesburg
and Highlands North High School, Johannesburg and University of Witwatersrand.
CBE 1988, Knighted 1993. Chairman and Chief Executive, London Regional Transport,
198994; Chairman, London Underground Ltd, 198994 following Chairman
and Chief Executive, Mass Transit Railway Corporation, Hong Kong, 198389
and career in financial management. Who's Who.;
Newton, George Bolland
Born Dulwich in 1838. Educated Charterhouse. Had hoped to enter university
and become barister, but had to join North London Railway as a lad. He became
Secretary in 1875 and General Manager in 1877. Lieut. Colonel in Engineer
and Railway Staff Corps. Chairman N&SWJR. Auditor RCH. Associate Instn
Civ. Engrs. Management of Railway Benovelent Institution. St John Ambulance
Association. Hobbies included horses and dogs.
Oakley, Sir Henry
Born November 1823. Clerk at Somerset House; then Assistant at House
of Commons; then from 1849 clerk in GNR Secretay's office; Assistant Secretary;
Accountant; Secretary from 1858 and General Manager from 1870. Knighhted
in 1891 and joined Board in 1897. With late William Grinling had uncovered
the Redpath fraud. Illustrated Interview:
Rly Mag., 2, 193. Nock,
O.S. Railway enthusuast's encyclopedia
Wragg Historical
disctionary
O'Brien, William
Irishman. Captain O'Brien was Secretary of the Great North of England
Railway from 1841 to 1845. He then served as Secretary of The Wiltshire,
Somerset & Weymouth Railway before returning north as Secretary of York,
Newcastle & Berwick and became the first General Manager of the North
Eastern Railway. He resigned in September 1871 (verified York Herald)
and died in London on 6 September 1873. According to
Dawn Smith was born in Co. Clare
in 1808. . C.J. Allen The North
Eastern Railway.
Paget, [George] Ernest
Born on 10 November 1841. Educated at Harrow. Enjoyed himself in Royal
Horse Guards and became Chairman of the Midland Railway.
Father of Cecil Paget. Died on 30 December
1923.
Patrick, William .
Born Strathaven in 1853. Educated Hamilton Academy and St John's Grammar
School in Hamilton. Worked in Hamilton Gasworks and when aged 15 joined the
General Manager's office of the Caledonian Railway. Worked as a Parliamentary
clerk. In 1889 became Assistant Traffic Superintendent; then Assistant General
Manager in 1891 and General Manager from 1 February 1900. Lieutenant-Colonel
in the Engineer & Railway Staff Corps.
Railway portrait gallery. Mr William
Patrick. Rly Mag., 1900, 7, 385 + portrait on fp. Died
12 January 1901 (SLS Caledonian Railway
centenary). .
Pease, Edward
Quaker industrialist from Darlington (born 31 May 1767 and died there
on 31 July 1858) who brought George Stephenson to the Stockton & Darlington
Railway and assisted with the establishment of Robert Stephenson & Co.
Maurice W. Kirby has contributed biographies to the
Oxford Companion to British railway
history and to the Oxford Dictionary
of National Biography as well as the book: The origins of railway
enterprise: the Stockton and Darlington Railway, 1821-1863. Cambridge
University Press, 1993. Paese entry in
John Marshall.
Pease, Joseph
Born Darlington on 22 June 1799. Educated at Tatham's Academy, Leeds,
and Josiah Forster's Academy, London. He aided his father, Edward (above)
in the projection of the Stockton and Darlington Railway, in 1819 and 1820
by preparing the company's first prospectus. He emerged as an influential
voice in the management of the railway in 1828, when he took the lead in
projecting an extension of the line from Stockton to the hamlet of Middlesbrough
further down the Tees estuary. Pease was a leading shareholder in Robert
Stephenson & Co., of Newcastle. Died on 8 February 1872 and buried in
the Quaker burial-ground in Darlington. ODNB
entry by A.F. Pollard, revised by Charlotte Fell-Smith and M.W. Kirby.
Paese entry in John Marshall. Statue
in High Street, Darlington see
Backtrack, 2011, 25, 740
Perks, [Sir] Robert William
Born in London on 24 April 1849 and died there on 30 November 1934.
Educated at King's College London and worked as a lawyer who specialised
in the law relating to railways. He assisted Messrs. T.A. and C. Walker,
contractors, and was involved in Barry Docks and the Manchester Ship Canal.
He was Chairman of the Metropolitan District Railway during 1902-06 (the
period of electrification) and had been solicitor to the Metropolitan Railway
before then. He was a distinguished Methodist and was closely involved with
the construction of Central Hall, Westminster.
ODNB biography by O.A. Rattenbury revised by
Clive D. Field. See also Stephen
Halliday's Fraud, liquidation and ingratitude. Backtrack, 2008,
22, 437. Covick, Owen.
R.W. Perks and the Barry Railway Company, Part 1: to early-1887. J. Rly
Canal Hist. Soc., 2008, 36, 71-83 and following parts.
Pick, Frank
Born Spalding, Lincs., on 23 November 1878. Educated St Peter's School,
York. Articled to solicitor, took his LLB (London) in 1902, with first-class
honours; entered the North Eastern Railway eventually joining staff of the
general manager, Sir George Gibb. In 1906 Gibb took over
the management of the Metropolitan District and London Underground Electric
Railways and took Pick with him. In the following year Gibb retired from
his direct managerial responsibility and Pick was transferred to the staff
of his successor, A.H. Stanley, later Lord Ashfield.
Pick was closely associated with Stanley in the management of the underground
railways and from 1912, the London General Omnibus Company. As traffic
development officer (1909) and commercial manager (1912) he was responsible,
in particular, for building up the system of bus routes in London and also
for advertising. In 1917 Pick was appointed by his chief, then president
of the Board of Trade in Lloyd George's wartime government, to take charge
of the household fuel and lighting branch of the coal-mines control department,
under Guy Calthrop. Returning to the underground group of companies after
WW1, Pick became a joint assistant managing director in 1921 and three years
later assumed full administrative control under Ashfield. He became joint
managing director in 1928 and, when the London Passenger Transport Board
was formed in 1933 with Ashfield as chairman, Pick became vice-chairman and
chief executive officer.
It was the combination of Pick and Ashfield, rather than the individual
work of either, that led to the remarkable development of public passenger
transport in London: the two men were essentially complementary. Ashfield
was at his best in dealing with politicians, shareholders, and the public.
Pick was a very shy man, but a great administrator, responsible for the
day-to-day efficiency of a system which technically was generally acknowledged
to be without equal anywhere in the world. He had a very quick mind and an
exceptional grasp of operating and engineering principles and techniques.
There was no part of the transport undertaking of which he did not have a
thorough understanding; and the power of decision came easily to him. Through
his interest in the visual arts he encouraged good design in everyday things.
He commissioned Edward Johnston to design an alphabet for display purposes
(1916), and London Transport lettering on direction signs and posters became
celebrated for its clarity. Pick raised the standard of poster design by
seeking artists of quality, including Fred Taylor and McKnight Kauffer. Station
design, ranging from the overall architecture to small details, was subject
to Pick's personal scrutiny to ensure good design and fitness for purpose.
The many examples of excellent contemporary architecture in the buildings
erected by London Transport in Pick's time are lasting monuments to his ideals.
Pick retired from the London Passenger Transport Board in 1940 and was for
a short, unhappy time director-general of the Ministry of Information. In
1941 he undertook special duties for the minister of transport in connection
with the development of traffic on canals and inland waterways. He died in
Golders Green on 7 November 1941.
ODNB: John Elliot, revised Michael Robbins
Barman, C. The man who
built London Transport: a biography of Frank Pick. Newton Abbot: David
& Charles, 1979.
Plews, Henry
General Manager, Great Northern Railway (Ireland). Started railway
career at Manchester London Road on LNWR in Goods Manager's Office. Moved
to Euston to work in Rates Department. Divisional Manager for Shropshire
& Herefordshire District and then moved to the Irish North Western Railway.
In May 1890 became Secretary of the GNR(I) and was appointed General Manager
in April 1896. Illustrated Interview.
Rly Mag., 5, 385-400.
Pole, Sir Felix
Born in Little Bedwyn on 1 February 1877, Felix John Clewett Pole
was the son of a schoolmaster. He became a telegraph lad on the GWR at Swindon
on 12 October 1891. Under James Charles Inglis he became in charge of publicity
and public relations. In 1912 he became responsible for staff and labour
and Chief Clerk in June 1913. He became General Manager of the GWR
in June 1921 and resigned in 1929 when his relationship with the Chairman,
Viscount Churchill, became strained. He became Chairman of Associated Electrical
Industries in 1928. During later life he became blind and died in Reading
on 15 January 1956. Geoffrey Channon Dictionary of Business Biography
also excellent entry in Oxford
Dictionary of National Biography.
Felix J.C. Pole: his book. 1954.
Ottley 5990: not available through inter-library lending system
Pole stated that "a railway does not know what each coach or each train on each direction carries." [Helm Backtrack 11 216..
See short feature on kindness of man: Great Western Railway Journal (34), 110.
Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's encyclopedia
Pollitt, Sir William
Born Ashton-under-Lyne on 24 February 1842. Educated privately. Joined
MS&LR on 29 June 1857. Made Chief Accountatnt on 27 August 1869, and
Assistant General Manager on 1 January 1886. He became a JP and Colonel in
the Engineer and Volunteer Staff Corps. He was Chairman of the Wrexham Mold
& Connah's Quay Railway, and was a Director of the CLC and several small
railways.
The Managership of the Great Central
Railway. Rly Mag., 1902, 10, 23-5.
Andrew Dow wrote a concise biography in the
Oxford Companion (page 384)
Obituary Locomotive Mag.,
1908, 14, 187.
Pope, Frank Aubrey
Born 3 August 1893. Died 15 January 1962. Educated at The Leys School
(Who was who) entry which makes clear that Pope enjoyed a rich career:
being called upon to offer expertise in India in 1932-3 and again in 1933-4.
(he had served in Nigeria between 1925 and 1930). He was Director of Railways
to the BEF in France in the early stages of WW2.
Hendry states that Pope was trained on
the LNWR; succeeded Speir on the NCC in 1941. In 1943
he was rewarded by becoming Chief Commercial Manager of the LMS, and became
Vice President 1946. He became the Chairman of the UTA in 1948 where he
introduced diesel railcars rebuilt from steam rolling stock. He was also
responsible for closing the narrow gauge former NCC lines. In 1951 he joined
the British Transport Commission, where he failed to become its Chairman,
but remained with the BTC until 1958.
Bonavia (British Rail: the first
25 years) tells of how he had been appointed Secretary to a Committee
of which Pope was the Chairman Frank Pope, who had in fact been Hurcomb's
nominee for the RE Chairmanship, but rejected by the Minister, initiated
a greater insistence upon Commission participation in railway matters. His
approach was based upon personal relationships rather than the written word;
his views were strongly held but he was not very articulate on paper. Friendly
(and preferably convivial) contacts were his chosen method of getting points
across. Bonavia was appointed Secretary to a Committee of which Pope was
Chairman. He sent for Bonavia and said: 'We are going to run this show as
follows. At the first meeting, you will arrange a damned good lunch and we
shall all get to know each other. At the second meeting, you will produce
a draft of our final report. The rest of our meetings will be spent in getting
your draft right'. One of Pope's interests - which was shared by Sir Reginald
Wilson, the forceful Comptroller of the Commission - was the cost of the
train services still maintained on minor lines and branches. The Executive
had set up two committees to review unremunerative lines and, where appropriate,
make recommendations for closure. But in the absence of any determined policy
on the part of the Executive as a whole, progress was slow. In fact, over
the six years of the Executive's existence the route-mileage only fell from
19,639 to 19,222, or by 2.1 per cent. In Northern Ireland, Pope had introduced
diesel railcar services extensively and he was convinced that they were the
answer to the problem of rural train services. He pressed the Executive to
exploit their possibilities and the RE set up in August 1951 a rather oddly-named
Light Weight Trains Committee, which reported with commendable speed in March
1952. E.S. Cox (J. Instn Loco. Engrs.,
1962, 52, 105): Notwithstanding the very big part which the Author
had played in the development of the vehicles, he would not mind it being
said that no description of their production and development would be complete
without a mention of the name of Frank Pope. It was well known that for many
years between the wars 37 cars of the kind described languished on the Great
Western Railway without further development either in the Region or in British
Railways, and it was only after the war, in Northern Ireland, that Frank
Pope, although not an engineer, did, in collaboration with his engineers
and the manufacturers, take the development to a worth while state, and it
was he as much as anyone who was instrumental, when he joined the Commission,
in initiating the Railcar Committee which started the whole job, and from
his position in the Commission Frank Pope kept a close watch on the development
through all its stages. The biography
of Ermest Lemon (by Terry Jenkins) notes that Ernest Lemon and Frank
Pope had known each other since their youths (but Lemon was considerably
older): at Darvel and on holiday at Machrie Bay on the Isle of Arran.
Langridge Under ten CMEs 2
page 163 states that Pope was a close associate of Cleaver, the manager
(KPJ: managing director?) of AEC.
Portal, Wyndham Raymond
Last Chairman of the Great Western Railway: opponent of nationalisation,
but according to ODNB biography (J.V. Sheffield
revised by Robert Brown) was recognized by Attlee to have been great
influence on attempting to alleviate poverty. Born into family of banknote
paper manufacturers (Portals) at Overton in Hampshire on 9 April 1885. Educated
Eton and Christ Church, Oxford. Director GWR: Chairman from 1945, by which
time he had been created a Vscount. Died 6 May 1949.
Portal, Sir Wyndham Spencer
Born 22 July 1822; died 14 September 1905. Educated at Harrow and
Royal Military College, Sandhurst. Military career. Director of LSWR from
1861; Deputy Chairman, 1875; Chairman, 189299. Owned Laverstoke Bank
Note Paper Mills. Created a baronet in 1901. Who Was Who.
Porter, George Richardson
Born in London in 1792. Educated at Merchant Taylor's. Traded in sugar
and wine. Joined Board of Trade statistical department and eventually took
charge of railway department. He was one of the Five Kings under the chairmanship
of Dalhousie. He was a founder member of the Statistical Society. He died
on 3 September 1852 in Tunbridge Wells. Henry
Parris entry in ODNB.
Potter, Frank
General Manager of GWR in succession to James Inglis who died in December
1911. Born in 1856. Joined GWR in 1869 as a lad in the Goods Department at
Paddington. In 1904 he became chief assistant to Inglis
in 1904. On Inglis' death Potter succeeeded, but he in turn died in St
Ives on 23 July 1919: "worn out by the strain and anxieties of the last four
years" (of WW1). He in turn was succeeded by Charles
Aldington. McDermot History of
the Great Western Railway rev. Clinker
Ramsden, James
Originally employed by the Furness Railway as its
Locomotive Superintendent eventually became
General Manager.
Richards, R.M.T.
Traffic Manager, Southern Railway. Encountered in
Kevin Robertson's Leader: the full
story being credited with being the accidental instrument leading
towards the Leader class: he wished for a modern tank engine to replace the
M7 class used for empty stock movements into and out of Waterloo. The M7
class soldiered on until replaced by BR standard types!
Robertson, [General Sir] Brian Hubert
Born Simla, India, 22 July 1896. His father was Field Marshal Sir
William Robertson, the first ranker to reach Field Marshal. Educated Charterhouse
School and Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. Commissioned Royal Engineers
in 1914. During WW1 served in France winning the MC, three mentions in dispatches
and DSO. In 1935 became managing director of Dunlop, South Africa. During
WW2 he was recalled as a reserve officer in the South African forces. He
became a successful military administrator, and following the War he was
the military administrator responsible for restoring the economic, social,
and political life of West Germany for five years at a time which included
the blockade of Berlin. In 1950 Robertson became commander-in-chief middle
east land forces, but in 1953 he became chairman of the British Transport
Commission. Here he was under insistent but diverse political pressures.
In 1961 he was created Baron Robertson of Oakridge. He did not suffer fools
gladly and he could be daunting; but those who penetrated this carapace found
affection, kindness, and a sense of fun, particularly apparent with the young,
with whom he liked to relax in strenuous outdoor sports. He was a natural
leader, and an able linguist and public speaker, endowed with a brilliant
analytical brain He had a strong Christian faith, and a deep sense
of loyalty to his country. Robertson died on 29 April 1974 at Far Oakridge,
Gloucestershire. Charles Richardson (ODNB).
There is an excellent biography (Robert Humm's assessment) A Most Dipomatic
General by David Williamson (Brasseys 1996). This has a long chapter
on his spell at the BTC.
Bonavia (British Rail: the first 25 years) succinctly summarised Sir Brian Robertson arrival to preside over the assortment of businesses, some vast in scale, which the Transport Act of 1953 had put directly under the Commission, the first reaction of the staff was that now a real leader had appeared. Sir Brian was a man of commanding presence and great integrity, expecting and receiving respect. Some mistook his icy manner (based upon shyness) for arrogance. C.K. Bird, when General Manager of the Eastern Region, once observed to some of his officers: 'The Chairman is the most fairminded and impartial man I have ever met. He hates us all equally'. CKB's mordant wit had led him into misjudgment. Sir Brian expected complete loyalty from those who worked with him; he did not necessarily look for intellectual brilliance. The nearest thing to a twinkle in the Chairman's eye that some of us ever saw was when, describing in military 'briefing' style the new organisation at headquarters, he remarked: 'And Sir Reginald Wilson will now become a Commission Member pure if not simple'.
Robertson, Thomas
Died on 17 June 1906 aged 70. Born at Auchtergaven, Perthshire. Special
Government Commissioner for Railways, Indian Empire. Formerly Superintendent
of the Highland Railway 1875-90, General Manager of the Great Northern Railway
(Ireland) 1890-6 and Chairman Board of Public Works, Ireland 1896-1901. Brief
obituary Locomotive Mag., 1906,
12, 125, which notes that he had visited the United States and
Canada travelling over 75,000 miles in connection with his mission to India
where he advocated the establishmnet of a Railway Board. (remainder Who
Was Who).
Roebuck, William Richardson
Acquired the Treffry estate in 1870 "having
arrived in Cornwall from London in 1870 with a large fortune"
(Rly Arch., 2009 (22) 4 et
seq. Set about converting Treffry's system of tramways into the Cornwall
Minerals Railway. Established headquarters at St Blazey with roundhouse to
service six-coupled back-to-back locomotives, some of which were to eventually
work on the Lynn & Fakenham Railway. Many of the works were constructed
by Sir Morton Peto, and the collapse of the
mineral industry led to the financial ruin of Peto.
Royden, Sir Thomas
Born in Liverpool on 22 May 1871 into a family of shipowners. Educated
at Winchester and Magdalen College, Oxford. He was a director of many companies
including Cunard. In 1941 he succeeded Stamp as Chairman of the LMS. Died
at Alresford on 6 November 1950. ODNB entry
by F.A. Bates revised by Adrian Jarvis. Several mentions of him in
Terry Jenkins Sir Ernest
Lemon.
Royle, Thomas
Wright
See Whitehouse and St John Thomas' LMS 150 page 37
for photographic and pen portaits of Royle who had joined
the L&YR, became Chief Operating Officer of the LMS in 1938, and a Vice
President in 1944. He briefly became Deputy Chief Regional Officer of the
LMR, but retired in 1948. Co-patentee
of ash ejector fitted to Jubilee class locomotive. Mentioned in
Terry Jenkins Sir Ernest
Lemon..
Rusholme, Lord (Robert Alexander Palmer)
Born on 29 November 1890; died 18 August 1977. Educated St. Mary's
School, Heaton Mersey. Senior official within Co-operative Union and created
a peer by the Post-WW2 Labour Government. Member of the British Transport
Commission from 1947 to 1959 and of the London Midland Region Area Board
from 1955 to 1960. Bonavia (The
first 25 years) called him a helpful Mancunian, practical and affable
by nature, but with no special knowledge of transport.
Sackville, Lord (Arthur Cecil)
Arthur Cecil; born in 1848, brother of then Prime Minster; whilst
at Cambridge had travelled with footplate crews and guards of GER trains;
worked in shops at Stratford. Assistant Traffic Manager, GER; Carriage Dept
of GNR at Doncaster, and lastly General Manager, Metropolitan District Railway.
Rly Mag., 2, 282
(obituary)
Salisbury, Marquis of
Chairman of the Great Eastern from 1868-1871: took the railway out
of Chancery and the Company was able to pay a small dividernd on its ordinary
shares. Publicly stated that the Liverpool Street extension was "one of the
greatest mistakes ever committed in connection with a railway." Also
co-arbitrator, with Lord Cairns on finances of LCDR (award 24 February 1871).
Allen, C.J.: The Great Eastern
Railway
Scott Damant: Rly Mag.,
1, 571
Sarle, [Sir] Allen
Sarle was born at Westness, Rousay, Orkney, of Cornish parentage in
1828. He was educated at Selkirk Grammar School and the High School in Edinburgh.
He was a junior clerk in the office of an Edinburgh stockbroker. In 1848
he moved to the London office of the Shropshire Union Railway Company and
when this amalgamated with the LNWR he moved to the Audit Office of the London
& Brighton Railway. In 1854 he became the Accountant and in 1867 the
Secretary and in 1885 the Secretary/General Manager. The function was divided
again in 1898. He was knighted in 1896. In 1867 there was a financial crisis
on the LBSCR and all the executive officers, other tha Sarle, were forced
to resign. Samuel Laing MP and a new Board were appointed and they developed
the company to become highly profitable. He would appear to be an excellent
candidate for a full biography.
Saunders, Charles Alexander
Ellis (p. 66)
describes him as "one of the greatest secretaries in railway
history". The position (Secretary and General Superintendent of the Great
Western Railway) amounted to that of general manager, but without jurisdiction
over the engineer. Saunders was older than Brunel, had been a Civil Servant
on the mercantile side in Mauritius, and was at first Secretary to the London
Committee. He retired in September 1863 and died in the following September
(22-09-1864). An amazing omission from ODNB.
Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's
encyclopedia.
Saunders, Frederick
Born 24 December 1820. Appointed as Assistant Secretary to the South
Wales Railway in 1844, becoming Chief Secretary in 1849. When his uncle,
Charles Saunders retired as Secretary to the Great Western in 1863, Frederick
filled his place and when he resigned from this post in June 1886, he was
made a Director of the company. Succeeding Gooch in 1889, he retired in June
1895 although he remained a member of the Board until his death at Reading
on 1 January 1901. Great Western Railway Trust website
Savin, Thomas
Born Llwynymaen in 1826 and died in Oswestry on 23 July 1889:
Marshall. The promotion of the Oswestry
& Newtown Railway was a joint affair between the local land owners, the
better-off tradesmen, and the contractors. In the case of all the early Cambrian
lines the party of the third part was Thomas Savin, at this time in partnership
with David Davies. Not only did they actively promote
the railways, but they became involved with the financing of them, and for
a time operated them on lease. Kidner: Cambrian Railways. Not in ODNB
but mentioned in Kenneth O. Morgan excellent entry for David Davies..
Scotter, Sir Charles
Ellis (South Western Railway)
called him "progressive". became General Manager of the LSWR in
March 1885 and remained in that post until he became Chairman of the Board
between 1904 and 1910 when he died on 13 December. He was born in Kingston
upon Hull on 22 October 1835 (Railway
Magazine 1, 385 Illustrated Interview) (Who Was Who
adds full date) and joined the railway as a junior clerk in the MSLR's Hull
goods depot; by 1860 he had become the Passenger Superintendent of the MSLR,
and in 1872 he became the Company's Assistant General Manager, and in 1873
the General Manager. In 1885 he became the General Manager of the LSWR. He
was largely responsible for the LSWR acquiring Southampton Docks, of developing
the privilege ticket system and of encouraging traffic to Bournemouth. He
was a Lt Col in the Railway Engineer and Volunteer Staff Corps and a Chevalier
of the Legion of Honour.
Selbie, Robert Hope
General Manager, Metropolitan Railway. Son of Rev. R.W. Selbie of
Salford. Born 1868. Educated Manchester Grammar School and Owens College
of Victoria University, Manchester. Joined L&YR where he rose to position
of Assistant to Traffic Manager. Became Secretary to Metropolitan Railway
in June 1903. See Rly Mag.,
1908, 23, 336 (includes port)
Sims, William Unwin
Chairman Great Western. Death by suicide late 1839.
Ellis
Slim, General Sir William Joseph
Born in Bishopstone, near Bristol on 6 August 1891. Educated at St
Philip's Catholic School in Edgbaston and King Edward's School in Birmingham.
Joined Royal Warwickshire Regiment in 1914: served in Gallipoli Camapaign
where was wounded and awarded MC. Professional soldier in India between the
Wars. Brilliant Burma Campaign during WW2. Briefly Deputy Chairman of the
Railway Executive before becoming Chief of Imperial General Staff and then
Governor General of Australia. Died 14 December 1970. Funeral St George's
Chapel, Windsor. Author of Defeat into Victory (1956) and Unofficial History
(1959). Raymond Callahan ODNB
entry.
Speakman, Lionel
Educated at Cheltenham College. Entered service with LNWR, 1896; District
Goods Manager at Liverpool from 1902, Wo1verhampton from 1911, Birmingham
from January 1914. Outdoor Goods Manager, Northern Division (at Liverpool),
LNWR from May 1914. General Manager, Furness Railway from 15th April 1918.
Retired from railway May 1923. (Peter
Robinson, Backtrack, 2005, 19, 763).
Speir, Malcolm Scott
Currie (Northern Counties Railway,
v 2) states that Speir was born on 6 February 1887 into an old Scottish
family and was educated at Radley. He joined the Midland Railway at Derby
and was sent to America in 1909/10 to study railway management there. On
return he joined the Caledonian Railway. He was awarded the Military Cross
during WW1 and according to Currie was a tall, spare, dynamic man. Rutherford
notes that he used the title Major following the WW1. Between 1931 and 1941
Speir was General Manager of the Northern Counties Committee in Northern
Ireland. On 31 March 1941 he returned to Scotland as Chief Officer of the
LMS in Scotland on a salary of £3,500 per annum whern J. Ballantyne
retired.. (LMS Journal, 2008
(22), 80). His period in Ulster was associated with a dynamic approach
during a difficult economic period: this included the introduction of colour
light signalling and high speed operation on single lines. Currie notes that
the 2-6-0 type was due to him and these were used on the North Atlantic
Express between Belfast and Portrush.
Scott notes that Speir eased
out Hugh Steart and records that Speir was a workaholic.. No. 90 was named
Duke of Abercorn after it had hauled the Governor General's train
to open the Greenisland loop started by his predecessor Pepper. Nock in
Out the line notes that he was
full of energy and a great Christian gentleman. On the NCC he was succeeded
by what must have been regarded as strangely named Frank
Pope..
Speyer. Sir Edgar
Born New York on 7 September 1862: German Jewish origins. Moved to
London in 1887. Financed railways, including London Underground. Naturalized
British in 1892. During WW1 accused of pro-German activities and fled to
USA. His British nationality was revoked in 1921. Died in Berlin on 16 February
1932. Built large house on cliffs at Overstrand in Norfolk, still extant
as hotel, where accused of signalling to German submarines.
ODNB biography by Theo Barker.
See also Stephen Halliday's Fraud, liquidation
and ingratitude. Backtrack, 2008, 22, 437. KPJ wonders
if the Overstrand loop was constructed to provide smooth transit from London
to Overstrand for Speyer and his friends.
Stafford, John Herman
Joined L&YR in 1849 in Secretary's Office, became Secretary in
1875 and General Manager in1890. See Rly Mag.,
2, 97. Retirement: Rly
Mag., 1899, 4, 510.
Stalbridge, Lord
Richard de Aquila Grosvenor, fourth son of the Marquis of Westminster,
was born on 28 January 1837. He was educated at Westminster School and Cambridge.
He was MP (Liberal) for Flintshire and was created a Privy Councillor in
1872. He succeeded Moon as Chairman o fhte LNWR, and in turn handed over
to Claughton in 1911, having retired in the February. He died on 18 May 1912
in London. See M.C. Reed who stated that
Stalbridge was "no stranger to the footplate" Biddle wrote entry in
Oxford Companion which noted that Stalbridge
was strong advocate for Channel Tunnel. ODNB entry A.C. Bell revised C.G.
Matthew...
Steel, Charles
Born 1847; died 4 November 1925. General Manager, GNR 18981902;
formerly Manager of Highland Railway, 1897-8.. Who Was Who..
Stirling, John of
Kippendavie
Born in 1811 (Ellis North
British Railway) who beacame Laird of Kippendavie when aged five.
Chairman of the Scottish North Eastern Railway and subsequently of the North
British Railway in 1866 which according to Ellis he rejuvenated. Died in
1882.. John Thomas (North
British) claimed that the Railway Times (full source not given)
stated that Kippendavie's approach to the Caledonian Railway was like a "dog
returning to its vomit". He was eager for the two companies to amalgamate
and achieved the approval of both Boards for this in November 1871, but this
was thwarted by John Montieth Douglas, an accountant and shareholder, who
showed that the finances relating to the Caledonian Railway given to the
NBR Board members had not been approved by the CR. Remarkably not in Oxford
Dictionary of English National Biography..
Sutherland, Duke of (third)
George Granville William Leveson-Gower
(Marshall files him unnder italicised
portion) was born on 18 December 1828 probably at Trentham (becoming the
Marquis of Stafford). P.J.G. Ransom's Narrow
gauge steam paints a sympathetic picture of the Duke's
contributions to railway history whereas Eric Richards
(ODNB) portrays him as a playboy who lived
off his ancestors' infamous Highland clearances.
P.J.G. Ransom's The Mont Cenis Fell Railway
shows the deep financial involvement in this short-lived venture
(the tunnel killed off the narrow gauge line over the pass) and on page 53
shows how Stroudley designed a Fell type locomotive
for the Duke. The Duke died at the aptly-named Dunrobin Castle on 22 September
1892. He was a Director of the LNWR and of the Highland Railway. He appears
to have been a Pupil of J.E. McConnell at Wolverton where he learned how
to drive a locomotive: he subsequently drove many famous people to Dunrobin
Castle. Eric Richards ODNB biography notes
some of railway foibles (denies the Highland Railway its identity through
failure to use inititial capitals. See
also Alan A. Jackson article in J. Rly Canal Hist. Soc., 2003, 34,
370 which shows that Duke was probably subject of gentle parody by
Gilbert and Sullivan.
Tatlow, Joseph
Born Good Friday 1859 in Sheffield. Son of a Midland Railway employee,
Joseph joined the Midland in 1867 at Derby, In 1872 he joined the Caledonian
Railway at St. Rollox in the office of the Stores Superintendent. Towards
the end of December 1874 a chance meeting with a a clerk on the Glasgow and
South-Western Railway led to the information that Mr. Johnstone, general
manager, was retiring and Mr. Wainwright was to succeed him. The new general
manager, required a principal clerk and there was, it seemed, no one in the
place quite suitable. He must be good at correspondence, and expert at shorthand.
Wainwright was English, and had come from the Midland. He applied and was
appointment, at a salary of £120 pounds a year. At the age of 34 he
became General Manager of |Belfast & County Down Railway. Director of
Midland Great Western Railway. Served on Royal Commission. Retired to Dalkey.
He died in 1929. Author of Fifty years of railway life in England, Scotland
and Ireland. 1920. (Ottley 1653)
Taylor, G.R.T.
Chairman of the Locomotive Committee, LMS Board.
Bond.
Thompson family of Brampton
James Thompson became Lord Carlisle's agent in 1819 for his collieries
near Brampton (the Lord was solely interested in his mines as a minor source
of income). Members of family later leased collieries and railway from Lord
Carlisle near Brampton: Charles Lacy Thompson lived
1857 to 1920. Brother James lived 1859 to 1899. Father Thomas Charles
Thompson, Stephen Harry
Land-owner: director of York & North Midland Railway. Chairman
of North Eastern Railway from 1855 until his death in 1874. Quietly dismissed
William O'Brien, General Manager in 1871. Dawn
Smith.
Thompson, James
General Manager, Caledonian Railway. Entered as a lad in 1848. By
1856 he was the chief clerk in the Goods Manager's office in Glasgow. In
1865 he was promoted to be a district officer in Edinburgh. In 1866 he returned
to Glasgow as Manager of the Western & Southern Districts. In 1870 he
advanced to be General Goods Manager and in 1882 he became General Manager.
He justified the heavy capital cost of the Glasgow Central Railway. Resigned
31 January 1900 (SLS Caledonian Railway
centenary). See Railway
Magazine Illustrated Interview. 1, 289.
Thornton, [Sir] Henry Worth
Thornton was born in Logansport in Indiana on 6 November 1871 and
died in New York on 14 March 1933
(Marshall).
Allen (in both his histories of the GER
and the LNER) is strong on this fascinating personality, and the significance
of a major might-have-been if Thotnton had been offered the post of Chief
General Manager on the LNER. Allen actually worked directly for Thornton
in producing statistics in graphical form for him during his general managership
of the Great Eastern. His appoinment at the age of 41 must be regarded as
one of Lord Claude Hamilton's great achievements. The Great Eastern Board
had clearly been shocked by the Midland's acquistion of the Tilbury line
and sought more dynamic management in the shape of an American, who had been
General Superintendent of the Long Island Rail Road. He was strong on technical,
traffic and adminstrative qualifications, and his experience of electrification
might be useful. He was appointed in May 1914. He was a big and burly figure
with a fresh-complexioned face and was accessible to staff. He instigated
higher levels of remuneration for the senior staff and this was to create
problems following the Grouping. He was a great believer in the creation
of specific committees to address particular problems: there was a timetable
committee, for instance. In 1917, following the retirement of Horace Wilmer,
Thornton additionally took over the role of Chief Engineer, but in March
1919 he relinquished this role when John Miller, who had also served on the
Long Island Rail Road, took over the Chief Engineer's duties.
It is tempting to postulate what might have become of the Great Eastern under Thornton if there had been no World War and no amalgamation in 1923. The LNER, under its coal and steel orientated Board, considered suburban development an alien occupation. In consequence, suburban development in Essex and Hertfordshire remained less advanced than in the Metropolitan's Chilterns and Sir Herbert Walker's Southern. Earlier electric trains to the fringes of the Epping Forest and to the Blackwater and Clacton might have balanced development elsewhere: Harlow might have been a middle class suburb, rather than a new town. The Buntingford branch might still be with us and Hertford might have become another Guildford. The obituary in J. Instn Loco. Engrs., 1933, 23, 600 states that Thornton died on his birthday, but this at variance with the data in Who Was Who and in Marshall. Nock, O.S. Railway enthusuast's encyclopedia.
Treffry, Joseph Thomas
Baptised Joseph Thomas Austen at St Andrew's Church, Plymouth, on
1 May 1782, and died at Place, near Fowey (where he had been Squire) on 1
May 1782.. ODNB biography by Jack Simmons
(revised Edmund Newell). Driving force behind what was to become the Cornwall
Minerals Railway under William Richardson Roebuck
to connect his mines with ports at Fowey and Newquay. Began with a canal
which connected Par Harbour with Pontsmill which connected with a railway
which involved a 1 in 10 incline worked by a water wheel to acsend the Luxulyan
Valley which it then crossed on a viaduct. The exit from Newquay Harbour
was even more steeply graded (1 in 4½) and included a tunnel followed
by the Trenance Viaduct. . MacDermot
History of the Great Western.
Turner, George Henry
Was born in Bridgewater, Somerset in 1836 and joined the railway in
1849. In 1853 he became a goods clerk on the MR at Bristol; he rose to become
Chief Clerk in Birmingham; Chief Goods Agent in Nottingham in 1875; the Chief
Goods Canvasser at Derby in 1878; the Goods Manager for the GSWR in 1880,
but returned to the same post on the MR in 1882. In 1891 he became Assistant
General Manager and in the following year General Manager. He was a JP in
the County of Derby and Colonel in the Engineer & Railway Volunteer Corps.
Railway Magazine Illustrated Interview
1, 97.
Vivian, Hugh (Captain)
Chairman of GWR Locomotive Committee and of Beyer Peacock.
Walker, [Sir] Herbert Anscombe
Born London 15 May 1868; died London 29 September 1949. Educated North
London Collegiate School and Bruges. Joined LNWR. In 1893 made District
Superintendent, North Wales Division in 1893; in 1902 he became District
Superintendent Euston, when he visited the USA to study American practice.
In 1912 he became the General Manager of the LSWR where he instigated the
programme of electrification. He received a knighthood in 1915. After a
frustrating year of indecision on the part of the Southern Railway's Board
he was appointed General Manager of the Southern Railway where he encouraged
the electrification programme. In this respect he was a major influence on
steam locomotive develooment, or the lack of it, on the Southern. He retired
in 1937. He was a strong advocate of the Channel Tunnel.
Marshall.
Oxford Companion (by Michael
Bonavia), an ODNB good entry by Colin
Watson who noted Walker was physically well made, having stamina and
a commanding presence. He looked what he was, a man who knew his job and
meant to do it and had a remarkable memory. and
C.F. Klapper's Sir Herbert Walker's Southern
Railway. 1972. Nock, O.S. Railway
enthusuast's encyclopedia
Walker, Sir Robert
Born 18 March 1890: educated Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge.
herditary owner of Sand Hutton Estate (North East of York): built a 15 inch
railway, much of the equipment from which went to the Ravenglass & Eskdale
Railway. Following WW1 converted this system to 18 inch gauge to serve large
agricultural estate. Used four Hunslet 0-4-0WT locomotives from WW1 government
meat depot at Deptford (WN 1207/1916 and 1289-91/1917. Director of Derwent
Valley Light Railway. Died 11 February 1930. See
W.J.K. Davies' Light
railways.
Watkin, [Sir] Edward
Born in Salford on 26 September 1819 and died in Northenden
(Manchester) on 13 April 1901
(Marshall). Great opponent of
James Staats Forbes when they were respective Chairmen
of SER and LCDR. Meddled in locomotive affairs by the appointment of his
son as Locomotive Superintendent of the
South Eastern Railway. Builder of railway empires: creator of the Great Central
Railway. Chairman of the Manchester, Sheffield & Lincolnshire Railway,
the South Eastern Railway and the Metropolitan Railway. Sought to construct
Channel Tunnel and the Wembley Tower. See also
S.A. Griffin. Edward Watkin - an
appreciation. Backtrack, 1998, 12, 659-61.which states
that two of Watkins "unqualified successes" were the sale of the Trent Valley
Railway and the formation of the Cheshire Lines Committee. The former was
incorporated in 1845 to by-pass Birmingham and a consortium was organized
to purchase the railway which in turn led to the formation of the LNWR in
1846. The latter was created by the MSLR and the GNR in 1862 and the Midland
joined in 1866. The usual tale of Watkin's dream of a Manchester to Paris
railway aided by his Chairmanship of the MSLR, SER and Metropolitan Railway
is told, as is its progress being thwarted by Forbes of the LCDR and MDR.
Watkin's last great venture was in West Lancashire where he attempted to
reach Blackpool, partly by extending the Cheshire Lines Extension Railway
(to Southport) over the West Lancashire Railway and partly by the North West
Central Railway from the GNR Keighley branch to Penwortham Junction outside
Preston via Colne. See letters in volume 13 (page 109) by
Kidner, (illus on page 661 is of Metropolitan
District Railway not as stated and SER did not run Pullman cars -
they owned American-type cars purchased in 1891).Braine
(Relationship between Moon and Watkin (plus attributions of statements
challenged), and especially of sale of Trent Valley Railway), and
Hodgins [Forbes and Channel Tunnel, sale of
Trent Valley Railway, and lines to Blackpool. (Writer was working on biography
of Watkin)].and reply to these by author on page
221. illus.: Photograph; Sir Edward Watkin; also Dow's Great Central
and David Hodgkins The second railway
king: the life and times of Sir Edward Watkin 1891-1901. Cardiff:
Merton Priory Press, 2002.
http://www.watkins.net.au/
. It is appropriate to note that the Railway Magazine called Watkin the "Railway
Czar" in his obituary Death of the railway king [Sir Edward William Watkin].
Rly Mag. 1901, 8, 411-16.
illus. (port). Nock, O.S. Railway
enthusuast's encyclopedia
Watson, Sir Arthur
Born in Manchester on 18 September 1873. Died 13 April 1954. Educated
Manchester Grammar School and Victoria University, Manchester. Trained as
Civil Engineer and rose to be Chief Assistant Engineer to LYR 190510;
then became Superintendent of the Line, 191018; Chairman of the
Superintendents Conference at the Railway Clearing House, London,
191518; Assistant General Manager, 191819; General Manager,
191920; General Manager London and North-Western Railway, 192123;
First General Manager of the LMS, 192324. Member of the Permanent
Commission of the International Railway Association, 1922. Founder Member
of Institute of Transport. Latterly much involved in hospital management.
Marshall Lancashire & Yorkshire
Railway. V. 2 and Who Was Who.
Wemyss, Randolph Erskine
Ruthless coal baron who with the aid of Wieland
and Grierson took control of the NBR. In 1897 he constructed a new railway
to connect his mines with Methil Dock in competition with the NBR and engineered
the resignation of Conacher for "dishonest practice".
John Thomas North British
vol 2.
Whyte, James J.W.
Joined the Londonderry & Lough Swilly Railway in 1910: Manager
from 1931 to 1967: latterly a bus company.
Hendry:
Patterson would be better
Wieland, George
Company Secretary to NBR. Formerly employed by LNWR (not mentioned
Reed). When he resigned due to ill-health he was given a place on the Board
and with Randolph Erskine Wemyss and Grierson formed a cabal which took control
of NBR and got rid of Conacher. Wieland died in 1905.
Thomas North British Railway
V.2.
Wilkinson, Joseph Loftus
Born in Buckinghamshire in 1845. Educated in Reading. Joined GWR as
boy clerk in 1852. Promoted as telegraph clerk, goods clerk to stationmaster
and then worked as a manager for nineteen years in the goods department.
In 1887 he beacme the goods manager of the Buenos Aires & Pacific Railway
but returned to the GWR as Goods Manager in 1887. In 1895 he became Acting
General Manager and General Manager in 1896. He regretted the departure of
the broad gauge and envisaged London to Birmingham being accomplished in
one hour. He observed the fast twin screw ships used on the Channel Islands
run, the fast Cornishman non-stop to Exeter and taking only seven
hours (and four minutes to Truro) "we firmly believe in speed"; and the new
cut-off lines via Westbury, High Wycombe (leading to a circular suburban
service via Uxbridge) and to Milford. See
Rly Mag., 1, 1. and another
feature in same volume on page 508..
McDermot History of the Great Western
Railway rev. Clinker
Willmott, Russell
Russell Willmott, engineer and manager of the SMJR was appointed secretary
and General Manager of the Isle of Wight Central Ry. in 1912, but still had
charge of the locomotive and permanent way departments of the
SMJR. Locomotive Mag., 1912,
18, 3..
Wilmot, Harold
Born 14 August 1895, died 12 May 1966. Chairman, 194965, and
Managing Director, 193860, of Beyer, Peacock & Co. Ltd, and its
subsidiary companies including Beyer Peacock (Hymek) Ltd (195865).
C.B.E., whose death occurred on 12th May 1966, had been Chairman and Managing
Director of the Beyer Peacock Group since 1949. Served in the Army in the
First World War after which he served his apprenticeship with Charles McNeil
& Co., Ltd., Glasgow. He joined Beyer Peacock & Co. in 1924 as cost
accountant and after holding several positions, rose to general manager in
1934 and managing director four years later. In 1949, the year he was elected
chairman of the company, he received his C.B.E. Mr. Wilmot had travelled
widely on behalf of his company and of the Locomotive and Allied Manufacturers'
Association, of which he was president at various times. He was also a president
of the Institute of Cost and Works Accountants from 1943 to 1946 and chairman
of the North Western Management Research Group. In 1959 he was awarded the
Bowie Medal of the British Institute of Management of which he had been chairman
from 1956 to 1958. Mr. Wilmot had been a life Fellow of the Royal Society
of Arts and he served for several years on the Council of the Federation
of British Industries. He had been a Member of the Institution of Locomotive
Engineers since 1939 (obituary: Journal 1966, 56, 114..
Wilson, Isaac
Member of Stockton & Darlington Railway's Management Committee.
Co-founder of Gilkes &
Wilson, locomotive repairer and manufacturer in Middlesbrough.
See Pearce p. 103.
Wintour, E.R.
General Manager Weston & Clevedon Light Railway; formerly similar
position on Severn & Wye Railway at Lydney.
See Rly Mag., 1901, 8,
524.
Wood, William Valentine
Born on 14 February 1883. Died 26 August 1959. Educated Methodist
College, Belfast (Who was Who). Sir
William Valentine Wood (taken from LMS 150 and possibly written
by D.S.M. Barrie) ('Willie Wood' to colleagues on the railway, 'Val'
to family and close friends) had never anticipated becoming president. When
Stamp was killed on that dreadful night of 16 April 1941, Wood was shattered.
He broke the news to the Railway Executive Committee with an emotion very
strange to his quiet nature. He must have felt daunted by the need to follow
such an outstanding figure.
Wood was smallish, clean-shaven, with strong glasses that gave him a slightly owlish expression, though he had a quiet, rather quizzical smile. You never saw him or hardly ever without a cigarette in his mouth. This combined with a very low voice, rapid speech and a strong Ulster brogue to make communication rather difficult, unless you knew him well and could guess in which way his quicksilver mind was working.
He had started on the Midland's NCC as an accountant, at which work
he was supreme. But he was also interested, and rapidly became knowledgeable,
in almost every aspect of railway work. He once told of a slight collision
in which an NCC locomotive had been involved 'actually', he said with
that delightful twinkle, 'I was driving the engine'.
In the 1914-18 war he was involved in Government work and when Sir
Eric Geddes' Ministry of Transport was created in 1919 he became its first
director of finance. There he began a long friendship with Sir Cyril Hurcomb,
later the first chairman of the British Transport Commission, who had the
highest regard for him. He returned to the railway to rise through the
accountancy side of the LMS and eventually became vice president (finance
and services). Here he made a wonderful two-man team with
Stamp, dealing with all the economic and financial aspects
of the railway. He wrote 90 per cent of the short
volume Railways, officially a joint work with
Stamp.
His speed at juggling with numbers was legendary. Quote almost any
figure to him and he would whip out an old-fashioned calculating machine
from the top drawer of his desk and rapidly convert it into something else
a price per ton of engine weight, a weight per mile of fishplates
.
His points in discussion could be difficult to ascertain because of
his speed and inaudibility but on paper he was formidable. Every one
on the LMS respected Willie Wood those who knew him personally were
deeply attached to him. He should have retired at nationalisation, instead
of accepting Hurcomb's pressing invitation to soldier on: his last five years
were an anti-climax after a long and happy life on the
railway..Hendry presents a sharp verbal portrait
noting that he was "an analyst rather than an ideas man". His name appears
frequently in the index of Terry
Jenkins Sir Ernest Lemon, but there does not appear to have been
much interaction between Wood and Lemon.
A.J. Pearson: Sir William Wood
was trained on the Northern Counties Committee in Ireland, where he became
accountant. The N.C.C. was originally the Belfast & Northern Counties
Railway and was taken over by the Midland in 1903. Wood was of medium height,
well set, wore heavily-leased glasses, was very shy, spoke with a strong
Irish accent, and had a first-class creative brain. After the first world
war he was accountant to the Ministry of Transport, and from 1924 he had
been assistant accountant-general at Euston, and succeeded John Quirey as
vice-president for finance and service in 1929. He was in my view the best
English railway general manager to come out of Ireland. When Wood was first
knighted before the second world war, we had a discussion about the christian
name he should use. His names were William Valentine (the latter because
he was born on Valentine's Day and was known as Val.
Wright, Frederick Matthew
Born 26 June 1916; died 29 June 1990. General Manager, British Railways,
Western Region and Member of British Railways (Western) Board, 197276.
Educated Rutherford College, Newcastle upon Tyne. Joined LNER, 1933. Served
with Royal Engineers during WW2. Eastern Region: Commercial Superintendent,
Great Northern Line, 1961; Divisional Manager, Doncaster, 1964; Assistant
General Manager, York, 1968; Member, BR (Eastern) Board, 1969; Deputy General
Manager, York, 1970. Who Was Who
Wright, Whitaker
His biographer (Richard Davenport-Hines)
in the ODNB calls him a speculator, but fraudster might be more accurate.
He was born in the United Kingdom on 9 February 1845, but moved to the USA
in 1866 where he became involved in mining ventures. He returned to Britain
in 1889 where he was associated with the London & Globe Finance Corporation
which funded the Waterloo & Baker Street Railway. His fraudulent activities
eventually led to his prosecution at the hands of the Solicitor General,
Edward Carson, and his sentence to penal servitude, but he died at the end
of the court case by swallowing a cyanide capsule on 26 January 1904 when
he was found to have a loaded revolver in his pocket
See also Stephen Halliday's Fraud, liquidation
and ingratitude. Backtrack, 2008, 22, 437..
Yerkes, Charles Tyson
Born in Philadelphia, USA, on 28 June 1837 and died in New York on
29 December 1905. Name rhymes wityh "turkeys". He was a financial speculator
who had made a fortune on the stock exchange by the age of 30, but was
subsequently sent to prison for embezzlement, but this did not deter his
progress for long as he subsequently became involved in investing in transport
for Chicago including the Loop elevated railway. When the going became too
hot there he moved to London in the 1890s and joined with
Edgar Speyer and Robert William
Perks to invest in the London Undergroud system, notably by electrifying
the District line and by financing the completion of the tube lines.
ODNB biography by Theo Barker.
See also Stephen Halliday's Fraud, liquidation
and ingratitude. Backtrack, 2008, 22, 437. and
Tim Sherwood's Charles Tyson Yerkes: the
traction king of London. 2008.
Updated: 2012-01-16