List of chief mechanical engineers of the Great Western Railway

Great Western Railway edit

Engineer to the Great Western Railway

Locomotive Superintendent

Chief Mechanical Engineer

Northern Division Locomotive Superintendent

British Railways (Western Region) edit

Mechanical and Electrical Engineer

  • Kenneth J Cook (1950–1951)
  • Robert A Smeddle (1951–?)

Constituent companies edit

Birkenhead Railway
  • John Dixon
  • T A Yarrow
  • Rendell
  • William Bragge
  • George Douglas (1851–1860)
Bristol and Exeter Railway
Cornwall Minerals Railway
  • Miles Constatine
Llanelly Railway
  • Joseph Hepburn
  • Robert Hepburn
Llynvi and Ogmore Railway
  • J Routledge
Monmouthshire Railway
  • W Craig (1849–1854)
  • R Laybourne (1854–1868)
  • H Appleby (1868–1875)
Rhymney Railway
  • Thomas Clements (1858–1862)
  • Matthew Mordue (1862–1863)
  • John Kendall (1863–1869)
  • John Canty (1869–1884)
  • Richard Jenkins (1884–1906)
  • Charles T. Hurry Riches (1906-1922)
Shrewsbury and Birmingham Railway
Shrewsbury and Chester Railway
  • A M Ross (Engineer)
  • Thomas Truss (Carriage Superintendent)
  • Edward Jeffreys
  • Joseph Armstrong (1853–1854)
South Devon Railway;
Taff Vale Railway
Vale of Neath Railway
  • Joshua Williams (1851–1865) (General Manager)
West Cornwall Railway
  • Skater
  • H Appleby
  • Joseph Wright (South Devon Railway Locomotive Superintendent)
West Midland Railway
Newport, Abergavenny and Hereford Railway
Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway
  • David Joy (1852–1856)
  • Frederic Haward (1856–1857)
  • Edward Wilson (1857–1860)

References edit

  • Allen, Cecil J (1948). British Railway Locomotives. Ian Allan.
  • MacDermot, E T (1927). History of the Great Western Railway, volume I 1833–1863. London: Great Western Railway.
  • MacDermot, E T (1931). History of the Great Western Railway, volume II 1863–1921. London: Great Western Railway.
  • The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway, Part 3: Absorbed Engines 1854–1921. The Railway Correspondence and Travel Society. 1956.
  • Swindon Steam 1921–1951. Ian Allan. 1974.