Smethwick Engine
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The Smethwick Engine is a steam engine made by Boulton and Watt; brought into service in May 1779.
Originally, it was one of two engines used to pump water back up to the 491 ft summit level of the Birmingham Canal Navigation Company's canal at Smethwick, not far from the Soho Foundry where it was made. The other engine, also built by Boulton and Watt, was at the other end of the summit level at Spon Lane.
The engines were needed because local water sources were insufficient to supply water to operate the six locks either side of the canal's original summit. The locks could have been avoided if a tunnel had been built, but the ground was too unstable for James Brindley to build a tunnel using the techniques available at the time. In the 1780s, a cutting was constructed by John Smeaton, enabling three of the six locks on each side to be removed.
In the 1820s, Thomas Telford constructed a new canal parallel to the old in a deeper cutting, at the 453 ft Birmingham Level, creating the largest man-made earthworks in the world at the time. It was spanned by the Galton Bridge. The engine was still needed, despite both these developments, and Thomas Telford constructed the Engine Arm Aqueduct carrying one canal over another so that coal could still be transported along a branch canal to feed the Smethwick Engine.
In 1892, a replacement engine was built in a new pumping house next to Brasshouse Lane, as the original Smethwick Engine was considered uneconomic to repair. This new pumping house is now part of the nearby Galton Valley canal museum. The Smethwick Engine was then removed to a British Waterways depot where it remained until acquired by Birmingham City Council. It is now at the Thinktank science museum at Millennium Point in Birmingham and is the oldest working engine in the world.
Its original site and foundations can still be seen on Bridge Street North in Smethwick, just north of the junction with Rolfe Street.