Oliver Bulleid

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Oliver Vaughan Snell Bulleid (19 September 1882 - 25 April 1970) was a British railway and mechanical engineer best known as the Chief Mechanical Engineer (CME) of the Southern Railway between 1937 and the 1948 nationalisation, developing many well-known locomotives.

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[edit] Early life and Great Northern Railway

He was born in Invercargill, New Zealand to William Bulleid and his wife Marian Pugh, both British immigrants. On the death of his father, Bulleid returned to Llanfyllin, Wales in 1889 with his mother, where the family home had been. At 18, after a technical education at Accrington, he joined the Great Northern Railway (GNR) at Doncaster as an apprentice under H. A. Ivatt, the CME. After a four-year apprenticeship he became the assistant to the Locomotive Running Superintendent, and a year later the Doncaster Works manager. In 1908 he left to work in Paris with the French division of Westinghouse Electric Corporation as a Test Engineer, soon promoted to Assistant Works Manager and Chief Draughtsman. Later that year he married Marjorie Ivatt, Ivatt's youngest daughter.

A brief period working for the Board of Trade followed from 1910, arranging exhibitions in Brussels and Paris, and in 1912 he rejoined the GNR as Personal Assistant to Nigel Gresley, the new CME. Gresley was only six years Bulleid's senior.

World War I intervened; Bulleid joined the British Army and was assigned to the rail transport arm, rising to the rank of Major. After the war Bulleid returned to the GNR as the Manager of the Wagon and Carriage Works.

[edit] London and North Eastern Railway

The Grouping in 1923 of Britain's financially troubled railways saw the GNR subsumed into the new London and North Eastern Railway (LNER), and Gresley was appointed the CME. He brought Bulleid back to Doncaster to be his assistant. During this period Gresley produced the majority of his famous locomotives and innovations, and Bulleid had a hand in many of them, including the P1 2-8-2, the U1 2-8-0+0-8-2 Garratt freight locomotive, the P2 2-8-2 express locomotive and the A4 4-6-2 express locomotive.

[edit] Southern Railway and British Railways

Preserved unrebuilt West Country Class 21C213 Blackmoor Vale.
Preserved unrebuilt West Country Class 21C213 Blackmoor Vale.

In 1937 Bulleid accepted the post of CME of the Southern Railway (SR). At first his work mostly involved improving existing types, but in 1938 he gained approval to build the Merchant Navy class of modern 4-6-2 "Pacifics", inspired by Gresley's but with all the most modern equipment, with chain-driven valve gear and a partially welded boiler and firebox rather than traditional riveted designs. The first, 21C1 Channel Packet, was built in 1941, and 29 followed, the last being 35030 Elder Dempster Lines. The West Country and Battle of Britain classes of slightly smaller Pacifics for more lightly built lines followed in 1945, of which 110 were built; 21C101 Exeter was the first. His other major steam locomotive design, the Q1 "Austerity" 0-6-0 freight engine, appeared in 1942. Most of Bulleid's locomotives for the Southern Railway had Bulleid-Firth-Brown wheels.

Bulleid also played a major role in the electrification of the Southern Railway, including infrastructure, electric multiple units, and electric locomotives. Towards the end of his tenure at SR he was responsible for the design and construction of Britain's only double-deck passenger trains, the two members of the 4DD class.

His final steam locomotive design for the SR was the unconventional Leader, appearing in 1949, after nationalisation. This had the boiler, coal and water supplies and everything else encased in a smooth double-ended body reminiscent of a diesel locomotive. The drive was through two six-wheel bogies, each with three cylinders. The axles on each bogie were connected by chains. The Leader was innovative but unsuccessful.

Bulleid worked briefly as CME of British Railways Southern Region.

[edit] Córas Iompair Éireann

In February 1950 Bulleid was appointed CME of Córas Iompair Éireann (CIÉ), the nationalised transport authority of the Republic of Ireland, having been a consulting engineer to CIÉ since 1949. At CIÉ he led the first major dieselisation programme, which involved the procurement of a fleet of diesel multiple units from AEC of Southall, 94 diesel locomotives (60 CIE 001 Class and 34 CIE 201 Class) from Metropolitan Vickers and 12 diesel locomotives from Sulzer. This began a transformation of railway traction in Ireland, although the diesel locomotives proved unreliable until most were re-engined.

Bulleid developed two prototype peat-burning locomotives for CIÉ, one a converted coal-fired traditional steam locomotive and the other new and fully enclosed, along the lines of the Leader design. CIÉ did not adopt peat-fired traction for widespread use.

[edit] Retirement

Bulleid retired from CIÉ in 1958, moving to Belstone in Devon, then Exmouth. He was awarded an honorary doctorate by Bath University in 1967. Shortly after he moved to Malta, where he died in 1970 aged 87.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Persondata
NAME Bulleid, Oliver Vaughan Snell
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION British railway engineer
DATE OF BIRTH September 19, 1882
PLACE OF BIRTH Invercargill, New Zealand
DATE OF DEATH April 25, 1970
PLACE OF DEATH Malta