In the past five articles I’ve been talking
about manufacturers and experimenters with mechanically driven road transport
in Greenwich in the 19th century. The majority of these vehicles were
steam powered and most seem to have replicated private coaches and carriages with
some experiments with making public service vehicles. Last week looked at early 20th
century attempts to build commercial vehicles and public service vehicles at
what had been Penn’s works in Blackheath Road.
This week I need to return to the 19th century and look at a
firm which, rather surprisingly, was making engines for public service vehicles
at quite an early date.
We all know Merryweather’s as a manufacturer of
fire engines. However their fire pumps
were carried on horse-drawn vehicles until the 1890s while from the 1870s they
made steam powered trams. Their first tram
engine was actually made in Clapham before they moved to Greenwich in
1876.
In 1872 a Croydon-based engineer, John Grantham,
had designed a steam tram: it was a four-wheel double deck car with a two
cylinder engine. The prototype was built by the Oldbury Railway Carriage and Wagonn Company while the steam
engine which powered it was supplied by Merryweather & Sons. After some
problems, including modifications to the engine, it went to the Wantage Tramway
which took passengers between the town and the station
Merryweather’s
moved to Greenwich in 1876. Many
people will remember their works in Greenwich High Road and today new buildings
stand in what is now called Merryweather Place. It had a long Art Deco frontage
but despite strong protests about its demolition and a lot of very hard work by
local peopletry and save this, and get older parts of the factory listed, because
it had been rebuilt following Second World War bombing it could not be listed
and saved.
Having moved to
Greenwich in 1856 Merryweather’s continued to make trams - I assume they made
the bodywork as well as the engine although that is a bit unclear. Most of these vehicles were sold abroad. Between 1875 and 1892 the factory
produced about 174 steam tram engines, of which only 41 were used in Britain
–they included 46 for Paris, 6 for Kassel Germany, 15 for Barcelona, 15 for the
Netherlands, 11 for New Zealand and 15 for Rangoon.
One of the problems for using steam trams in
England were the rules and regulations and the need to apply for and get permission
from the Board of Trade. There was also
what we now call ‘the Red Flag Act’ - where steam vehicles on public roads were
limited to very low speeds and had to have a man walking from with a red flag.
This had originally been passed after complaints from the Turnpike road authorities
and others who had to maintain roads, about the damage done by heavy steam
vehicles.
A Parliamentary Select Committee was set up to
try and look at how public service vehicles could be used on ‘common roads’. As
part of this enquiry the Committee visited a
tramway on which a steam locomotive had been running. This was the North
Metropolitan Tramway Company's system between Stratford and Leytonstone, and
the machine shown was ‘the well-known Merryweather steam tram engine .... many
of which type have been working the regular traffic on lines in Paris for
several months past, and with the most satisfactory results’. Mr. J. C.
Merryweather and Mr. H. Merryweather
were present to see ‘The run most successfully performed, though the
capacity of the engine was severely tested’. The committee were told about Merryweather’s
contracts for ‘tramways at Barcelona and Cassel, which latter line is under the
special patronage of His Imperial Highness the Crown Prince of Germany’.
In the same year that the enquiry took place Merryweather’s
sold one tram to the National Rifle Association in Wimbledon. This was take
participants to the site of the shooting competitions on specially laid track
which would be removed at the end of the competition
It would be interesting to know how these vehicles
- assuming they were exporting the entire vehicle and not just the engine -went
from Greenwich High Road to Brazil, or wherever. Obviously they went by ship but leaving from a wharf on Deptford Creek seems unlikely
as a ship which was going to cross the seas to South America would not
really been able to get that high up the
Creek. So there must have been some transshipment process where such vehicles could
be loaded onto ocean going ships.
There is said to be only one Merryweather tram
stlll in existence. It dates from 1881
and and is in a transport museum in Utrecht. https://www.spoorwegmuseum.nl/en/ontdek/de-collectie/our-trains/rstm-2/
n
Merryweather’s continued to make horse-drawn
fire engines until the 1890s. Reports of
late 19th-century fires in the press have a great feeling of excitement
as appliances from fire stations around the area come galloping up with heroic
firemen waiting to jump off and start pumping water. These days we have no idea
who our firemen are or who command them
In those days each local fire chief was well known and each one was a hero.
The head of the London Fire Brigade was a major figure. The Fire Brigade Chief James Braidwood was killed
in the 1861 fire in Tooley Street at London Bridge and thus became a national
hero. There is a plaque to him on the corner of Battle Bridge Lane and Tooley
Street. He was replaced by the romantic
figure of Eyre Massey Shaw who - as I mentioned in my book on the Creek - is
mentioned in the Gilbert and Sullivan opera, Iolanthe, and took a bow on the first
night when he there was with a lady who was not his wife. …. and one day I will write about
firefighter, the Duke of Sutherland.
In 1899,
Merryweather produced the world's first ‘self-propelled steam fire engine’, the
'Fire King'; which was for Port Louis on Mauritius. By 1907 twenty-one Fire
Kings were in operational use around the country, including one with the London
Fire Brigade. A modified Fire King was stationed at Whitefriars Fire Station in
the City of London - it could go at a speed of 20-30 mph but was unable to
negotiate a significant gradient without stopping to build up a head of steam
The first motorised fire engine in London was a Merryweather appliance
delivered to the Finchley Fire Brigade in 1904. It was commemorated in April
1974 by the issue of a 3.5 pence Royal Mail postage stamp. The actual vehicle
is preserved in the Science Museum store at Wroughton in Wiltshire. It
was fitted with a Hatfield petrol pump, which was the first fire
pump powered by a petrol engine and capable of delivering 250 gallons per minute.
I am not
sure if the fire float Massey Shaw counts as a vehicle in terms of this article
- which is about road transport in the 19th century. Massey Shaw was
constructed by boatbuilders in the 1930s and she has even engines. However she is associated with Merryweather
for her pumps which have thrown river water up to great heights in a decorative
way whenever her crew wanted to celebrate something. She had an important role with a long history
of attending fires in the River Thames
both in wartime and peace. She is well known for her her role in the Dunkirk
landings and led the flottils of small boats back up the
Thames to the London Fire Brigade jetty.
One oddity at Merrywearhes was their
manufacture of what has been called the 'first car’. In 1888 they built the Butler
Petrol Cycle - a three-wheeled petrol vehicle. Edward Butler had been investigating
a number of similar projects and had worked for a number of local firms – but
not for Merryweather. In 1887 he had
patented a petrol driven tricycle and placed an order
with Merryweather to manufacture a prototype, which they duly did. Tests on it were not particularly successful
and it appeared that its use would have contravened the ‘red flag’ acts. Butler went on to other researches with other
firms and manufacturers. I have a long
and detailed article about Butler by L.R.Higgins, which I understand is
deposited in the Bexley archives.
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