Over the past couple of weeks I’ve written articles
about various steam road vehicles which passed through or originated in
Greenwich and the surrounding area. Some
of these were for individual transport and others were for a number of people
and both were based on the sort of horse-drawn vehicle which was available at
the time. There were some attempts at
setting up a public transport service based on these vehicles. Although some of the ‘carriages’ could
undertake considerable distances they all had problems which made then impractical
for daily use - including water and coal
supplies and suitable road surfaces. In
addition there was some hostility from bodies which maintained roads because it
was perceived they caused damage. It is thus difficult to find any which were
made after the 1860s and most schemes had ended before1850. So there is a big gap in time until we get to
the next Greenwich based powered vehicle manufacturer.
There were a couple of big firms in Greenwich
which produced powered road vehicles in the late 19th century and
early 20th century and some experimental works. This week I want to look at what was eventually
an unsuccessful attempt to produce viable road vehicles in the last few years
of what had been a major manufacturing company.
I have written before about Penn’s engineering
works on Blackheath Road. They were on the site which is now generally called
‘Wickes’. The first John Penn had opened
the works in 1799 to make agricultural equipment. His son was to turn the works into a premier manufacturer
of marine steam engines and similar equipment with a worldwide reputation for
excellence. By the 1890s however the
firm had begun to lose money, although orders were still coming in. In 1899 they were amalgamated / taken over by
Thames Ironworks.
Thames Ironworks was also a major engineering
company which was now losing ground to companies in the North and Scotland
which could produce the same ships at lower prices because of lower wages. Like’s Penn’s it had had an international
reputation for excellence. It was based at the mouth of Bow Creek - directly
opposite what is now the site of the Millennium Village.
Since the 1870s Thames Ironworks had been in
the hands of Hills family. Every book
which I have written in the past 16 years has included a chapter on Frank Hills
- commonly known as ‘the Deptford chemist’ but with an important works in East Greenwich
and much else. He chaired Thames
Ironworks from 1870 but had died in 1892.
It was a family misfortune that Frank’s two eldest sons died shortly
after and his third son, Arnold, became Chair of Thames Ironworks until the
company collapsed in 1912. Arnold is
well-known as the founder of West Ham Football club he was in many ways an unlikely
figure to be found as a major industrialist.
He was a temperance and vegetarianism advocate who believed in ‘fellowship
schemes’ between management and workers. Thus he was the exact opposite of his unscrupulous
father.
Traditional work on both steam engines and
warships was now limited and would soon be no longer relevant. What contracts there were now going to the
Tyne or Clyde where wages were lower.
However at Blackheath Road engines continued to be made, and warships were
still ordered. But it was clear that in order to survive the company needed to
diversify.
Initially some of the
Greenwich site was used for a new boiler works for the French Belleville company;
there was also a steam driven electricity generator which led to much
restructuring of the plant. West Kent Argus reported that the ‘new shops for
engine and Belleville boiler work were probably the best of their kind in the
United Kingdom’. William Penn, the last member of the family to
run the company resigned in 1901. Other companies throughout the country were
beginning to manufacture road transport vehicles and Thames management must
have seen this as a possible solution to the decline in the traditional
manufactures.
A lorry was designed
and a prototype made. This was said to be ‘identical in all
respects with the vehicle which ran in the recent Commercial Vehicle Trials of
the R.A.C’. It had a four-cylinder engine, and there was an exceptionally large
radiator, which... has given the whole vehicle a rather heavy appearance. There
was also a 15-cwt.petrol powered van ‘a serviceable-looking machine, fitted
with a canvas tilt’.
These were
shown at the Olympia Motor Exhibition in 1905. Soon after a new factory was
built for what was to be called Thames Engineering Works. It was at the lower
end of the Greenwich site and equipped with modern machine tools. The engines for
these vehicles were built in Greenwich while thr bodywork was done elsewhere and
Thames also set up a West End agency to handle sales. They continued to exhibit
at successive Olympia motor shows what was called the ‘Thames Range’
A young apprentice
employed at the works in this period was Barnes Wallis the future inventor of
the Dambusters’ bouncing bomb. He remembered working on an early London taxi
cab which was ‘suitable for London traffic, and conforming to the
Metropolitan Police requirements ‘and ‘would do quite well for private service
or better class hiring work’.
Wallis also remembered working
on what he described as the first ever racing car built in England. I don’t
know if this claim to be first such car is true and can find no reference in histories
of motor racing. However, in 1907, a
newspaper report says that ‘W. T. Clifford-Earp, driving a six cylinder Thames car annexed four world
records’ … ‘the
50-mile, mid 100-mile and one and two-hour records, and also established
a record for 150 miles’. In 1909 another report says ‘a new world record’ was set for G.Palmer’s cord
tyres by C. M. Smith on a 6 cylinder Thames
car at Brooklands ...the most severe test to which motor tyres have ever been
submitted.’
Meanwhile in Folkestone,
of all places, in 1905 a Mr. Cann was in need of better vehicles for his London and South Coast Motor Service route between Hythe
and Folkestone. ‘He placed an order with
Thames Ironworks, Shipbuilding and Engineering Company, for their experimental motor coach built to seat 20
passengers’. Apparently he liked the
large driving wheel, and the six cylinder engine. A new model was delivered in 1906,
but there were some initial problems but nevertheless Cann went ahead and ordered
five more coaches and even more were added later. Apparently the use of these vehicles continued
on the south coast and coaches in service are seen in photographs credited to the
1920s.
They also provided public service special vehicles. In 1905 members of the Lewisham Borough Council saw a demonstration of a means of destroying waste by a machine called The Clem, which completely pulverized thr refuse. There are also reports of vehicles for sprinkling water on streets and no doubt there were other such specialist equipment produced.
Many
years ago I was given some drawings of various elegant motor cars by the late
Patrick Hills – Arnold Hills' grandson. He
was very proud of these and said that they were the cars made by his
grandfather’s company. In newspaper reports of Thames Engineering I have only
ever found reference to commercial vehicles, lorries buses and some specialist
vehicles for local authorities. I don’t really
know if these motor cars were ever made.
In 1912 Thames Ironworks, the parent company went into
receivership following a stand-off with Winston Churchill, then First
Lord of the Admiralty over the placing of orders in London where wages were
high. There was a great demonstration in
Trafalgar Square by 10,000 East Enders protesting at so many skilled shipyard workers being put
out of work by the Company’s failure. I’m sure that there were great aspirations at Thames
Engineering to produce efficient and saleable vehicles but what brought Thames
Ironworks down was the failure of the shipbuilding business and the determination
of government to place orders away from the Thames. The failure of the motors
business was just collateral damage
Strangely there are reports that in 1913 a double-decker coach constructed which resembled a stagecoach
without the horse. This strange vehicle is exhibited in a Dutch Museum, and has
been widely illustrated. https://www.louwmanmuseum.nl/en/car/thames-47-hp-motor-stage-coach/
In May 1913 the Blackheath Road site was put up
a sale by auction and was sold to Messrs. Defries, the lighting
specialists. However it is said ‘nothing came of the
project’ and, sadly there are soon reports of problems of a financial and
probity nature.
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