Stoke railway works

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Stoke railway works was set up in 1864 by the North Staffordshire Railway in the town of Stoke-on-Trent in the county of Staffordshire, England.

The railway's first engines were supplied by a variety of outside manufacturers: Robert Stephenson and Company, Vulcan Foundry, Hudswell Clarke, Kitson & Co., Neilson & Co, as well as Sharpe Bros. & Co. who supplied six, including "Dragon" which opened the line in 1848. These were of the class known as "Little Sharpes".

By 1864, the railway owned 64 locomotives. In 1868 the works was ready to build new machines, producing three 0-6-0 tank locomotives similar to a Hudswell Clarke design.

Between 1879 and 1901, thirty more 0-6-0 tanks were built to a design by J.C.Park, of which fourteen lasted until British Railways ownership, the last being taken out of service in 1958 some seventy years old.

New building finished when the LMS took over, and it closed in 1927, with the work transferring to Crewe.

The site and some of the old building now makes up Hyde Park Industrial Estate

[edit] References

  • Larkin, Edgar J; Larkin, John G (1988). The Railway Workshops of Great Britain 1823-1986. Macmillan Press. ISBN 978-0333394311.