Bury Bar Frame Locomotive
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The Bury Bar Frame locomotive was an early type of steam locomotive, developed at the
Liverpool Liverpool is a city and metropolitan borough in Merseyside, England. With a population of in 2019, it is the 10th largest English district by population and its metropolitan area is the fifth largest in the United Kingdom, with a populat ...
works of
Edward Bury and Company Bury, Curtis and Kennedy was a steam locomotive manufacturer in Liverpool, England. Edward Bury established the works in 1826, under the name Edward Bury and Company. He employed James Kennedy as foreman; Kennedy later became a partner. About ...
, later named
Bury, Curtis, and Kennedy Bury, Curtis and Kennedy was a steam locomotive manufacturer in Liverpool, England. Edward Bury established the works in 1826, under the name Edward Bury and Company. He employed James Kennedy as foreman; Kennedy later became a partner. About ...
in 1842. By the 1830s, the railway locomotive had evolved into three basic types - those developed by
Robert Stephenson Robert Stephenson FRS HFRSE FRSA DCL (16 October 1803 – 12 October 1859) was an English civil engineer and designer of locomotives. The only son of George Stephenson, the "Father of Railways", he built on the achievements of his father ...
,
Timothy Hackworth Timothy Hackworth (22 December 1786 – 7 July 1850) was an English steam locomotive engineer who lived in Shildon, County Durham, England and was the first locomotive superintendent of the Stockton and Darlington Railway. Youth and early wor ...
and Edward Bury.


History

Edward Bury set himself up as an iron founder in Liverpool in the 1820s and manufactured various metal goods including marine steam engines as well as railway locomotives. Bury's first locomotive was the 1830 ''Dreadnought'', an which was targeted at the 1829 Rainhill Trials, but construction was completed too late. The basis of the Bury Bar Frame locomotive type emerged in 1830 as Bury's second locomotive ''Liverpool'', and while it had some issues it also had advantages compared to contemporary Stephenson locomotives. It is understood that most of the engineering was done by Bury's partner Kennedy, with Bury focusing more on the business side. Bury was unable to make inroads into George Stephenson's supply of locomotives to the
Liverpool and Manchester Railway The Liverpool and Manchester Railway (L&MR) was the first inter-city railway in the world. It opened on 15 September 1830 between the Lancashire towns of Liverpool and Manchester in England. It was also the first railway to rely exclusively ...
, managing to supply only one, No. 28 ''Liver''. On other railways the Bury Bar Frame become noted for workmanship, economy, and reliability with Bury becoming Stephenson's major competitor. In the 1830s Bury exported 28 engines to the United States, only slightly less than Stephenson's 35. The
London and Birmingham Railway The London and Birmingham Railway (L&BR) was a railway company in the United Kingdom, in operation from 1833 to 1846, when it became part of the London and North Western Railway (L&NWR). The railway line which the company opened in 1838, betw ...
(L&BR) directors wished to avoid giving a monopoly on locomotive supply to the Stephensons, and this actually resulted in Bury being appointed as locomotive superintendent and supplier to the L&BR railway with 110 of 180 being supplied by Bury, the remaining 70 by other contractors, though all were of the Bury Bar Type. Other railways beside the L&BR adopted one or both of the Bury Bar Frame standard types of for goods locomotives and for passengers. These included the Eastern Counties Railway,
Manchester, Bolton and Bury Railway The Manchester and Bolton Railway was a railway in the historic county of Lancashire, England, connecting Salford to Bolton. It was built by the proprietors of the Manchester, Bolton and Bury Canal Navigation and Railway Company who had in 183 ...
,
Midland Counties Railway The Midland Counties' Railway (MCR) was a railway company in the United Kingdom which existed between 1839 and 1844, connecting Nottingham, Leicester and Derby with Rugby, Warwickshire, Rugby and thence, via the London and Birmingham Railway, t ...
, Lancaster and Preston Junction Railway, and
North Union Railway The North Union Railway was an early British railway company, operating in Lancashire. It was created in 1834, continuing independently until 1889. Formation The North Union Railway (NUR) was created by an Act of Parliament on 22 May 1834 whic ...
. In England, distances were shorter and traffic density was rising, so the trackwork was gradually improving. During the 1840s Stephenson had increased the power in his
long boiler locomotive The Long Boiler locomotive was the object of a patent by Robert Stephenson and the name became synonymous with the pattern. Its defining feature is that the firebox is placed ''behind'' the rearmost driving axle. This gives a long boiler barrel, ...
, while in 1847 David Joy introduced the Jenny Lind design. Bury kept to using the four wheel arrangements but developments by other manufacturers forced the firm to supply six wheel designs of , , and from 1847 until the firm's demise in 1851, with 415 locomotives having been built altogether.


Overseas


United States

The locomotive ''Liverpool'', which did not prosper in England, was heavily rebuilt and sold to the
Petersburg Railroad The Petersburg Railroad ran from Petersburg, Virginia, south to Garysburg, North Carolina, from which it ran to Weldon via trackage rights over the Seaboard and Roanoke Railroad (later eliminated with a new alignment). History Founding In 183 ...
in 1832. The rebuild, which converted the locomotive to gauge with cylinders and smaller wheels, began operation on the Petersburg Railroad on 13 April 1833, and proved sufficiently successful to result in further orders from Bury. Bury Bar Frame four wheelers proved more suited to the lightweight track and wood fuel used in America. The use of the bar-frame and D-plan dome topped firebox became the classic American design of the nineteenth century, being adopted by the major manufacturers Baldwin, Norris, and Rogers.


France

Four locomotives were supplied to the ''Chemin de Fer de Paris à St. Germaine'' which opened in 1837.


Ireland

Twenty locomotives for the Great Southern and Western Railway of Ireland, one of which, No. 36, is preserved, were the last to use the cylindrical firebox.


Characteristics

Notable features were: forged-iron bar frames; spherical topped outer firebox with internal copper firebox of semi-circular section; near horizontal inside cylinders driving cranked axles.


Frames

A major problem was the effect of their weight on the track of the time. Engines were increasing in size as more power was needed. Robert Stephenson had developed the ''Patentee'' with an extra pair of wheels to distribute the weight. However, this brought problems in that the extra length affected road-holding on curves. Such locomotives used a heavy, rigid frame of timber sandwiched between iron plates outside the wheels, plus internal iron sub-frames. Bury adopted a different approach by keeping to two axles and fabricating a
bar frame A locomotive frame is the structure that forms the backbone of the railway locomotive, giving it strength and supporting the superstructure elements such as a cab, boiler or bodywork. The vast majority of locomotives have had a frame structure o ...
inside the wheels, consisting (on each side) of two wrought-iron bars, a rectangular-section bar above the axle bearings and a round-section bar below. From 1845 Bury built much bigger six-wheeled locomotives with bar frames; one of these, a
2-2-2 Under the Whyte notation for the classification of steam locomotives, 2-2-2 represents the wheel arrangement of two leading wheels on one axle, two powered driving wheels on one axle, and two trailing wheels on one axle. The wheel arrangement bo ...
of 1847, was preserved and may be seen in Cork railway station.


Boilers

Bury engines were also notable for their round topped "
haystack Hay is grass, legumes, or other herbaceous plants that have been cut and dried to be stored for use as animal fodder, either for large grazing animals raised as livestock, such as cattle, horses, goats, and sheep, or for smaller domesticated ...
" fireboxes from 1830 until mid-1847; thereafter Bury, Curtis & Kennedy's engines were fitted with a raised but straight-topped firebox. The boiler pressure was gradually increased from 50 psi in the 1830s to a maximum of 85 psi by about 1850.


Advantages and disadvantages

While Bury's four-wheeled engines were criticised for their alleged lack of strength and power they were in practice fast, reliable, low maintenance, and performed well on the typical 50-ton trains of the 1830s. In general they were superior to the type Stephenson six-wheelers of the same period that despite appearances had smaller boilers, poor weight distribution, and less longevity. The design was emulated by a number of manufacturers, and they lasted on the
London & North Western Railway The London and North Western Railway (LNWR, L&NWR) was a British railway company between 1846 and 1922. In the late 19th century, the L&NWR was the largest joint stock company in the United Kingdom. In 1923, it became a constituent of the Lon ...
until the 1860s, and on other lines until much later. The main problem with them (and with other inside-cylinder engines) was the breakage of the crank axle but this was a rare occurrence with Bury's engines.


References


Footnotes


Sources

* * * * *


Further reading

* {{cite book , last=Williams , first=R. , year=1988 , title=The Midland Railway: A New History , location=Newton Abbot , publisher= David and Charles London and Birmingham Railway London and North Western Railway locomotives Steam locomotive types Steam locomotive technologies