Hudswell Clarke
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hudswell Clarke (HCCL) was an engineering and locomotive building company in Leeds, England founded in 1860. The locomotive part of the business is now part of the Hunslet Engine Company. Locomotive-building was always only one part of a diverse product inventory that included underground diesel-powered mining locomotives, hydraulic pit-props and related mining equipment.
Contents |
[edit] Hudswell Clarke Locos
- 0-6-0 Tank No. S100
- 0-6-0 Saddle Tank No. 431
- 1931 Neptune and 1932 Triton, narrow gauge steam outline diesels on Scarborough North Bay Railway
- Diesel locomotives for the Sierra Leone Government Railway, supplied between 1954 and 1961.
[edit] Military engineering
During WW2 the company diversified into armaments, as did so many other engineering companies. In the post-war period Hudswell, Clarke and Co Ltd (its full title, and note the comma) was closely involved in many secret programmes, including the British nuclear weapon programme. The airframe for the first British nuclear bomb, Blue Danube was manufactured by Hudswell Clarke at its Roundhay Road, Leeds, plant where this writer was employed as a design engineer. The airframe for Red Beard, the second generation tactical nuclear bomb, followed with that for Violet Club, the Interim Megaton Weapon; and there were many other projects. All the bombs detonated at the Christmas Island H-bomb tests were contained in airframes designed and built by Hudswell Clarke. The company were also major contributors to other military projects, eg. the Centurion main battle tank conversion into an armoured bridgelayer, that served with the British Army for many years. The contraction of defence manufacturing in the mid-1960s contributed to the sale and demise of the company.
[edit] External links
[edit] References
Various public domain files declassified by the UK Ministry of Defence, Ministry of Supply (and successors), RAE Farnborough, now archived in the Public Record Office, London.