Richard Edward Lloyd Maunsell
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Richard Edward Lloyd Maunsell (pronounced "Mansell") (26 May 1868 – 7 March 1944) held the post of
chief mechanical engineer Chief mechanical engineer and locomotive superintendent are titles applied by British, Australian, and New Zealand railway companies to the person ultimately responsible to the board of the company for the building and maintaining of the locomotive ...
(CME) of the South Eastern and Chatham Railway from 1913 until the
1923 Grouping The Railways Act 1921 (c. 55), also known as the Grouping Act, was an Act of Parliament enacted by the British government and intended to stem the losses being made by many of the country's 120 railway companies, by "grouping" them into four la ...
and then the post of CME of the Southern Railway in
England England is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. It shares land borders with Wales to its west and Scotland to its north. The Irish Sea lies northwest and the Celtic Sea to the southwest. It is separated from continental Europe b ...
until 1937. He had previously worked his way up through positions in other railways in Ireland, England and India.


Biography

He was born on 26 May 1868 at Raheny, County Dublin, in Ireland, the seventh son of John Maunsell, a Justice of the Peace and a prominent solicitor in Dublin. He attended The Royal School, Armagh from 1882 to 1886. He commenced studies at Trinity College, Dublin on 23 October 1886 for a law degree; however by this stage he had shown a keen interest in engineering. He concurrently began an apprenticeship at the Inchicore railway works, Inchicore works of the Great Southern and Western Railway (GS&WR) under Henry A. Ivatt, H. A. Ivatt in 1888. Following completion of his degree in January 1891 he was able to complete his apprenticeship at Horwich Works on the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (as Nigel Gresley had done before him). At Horwich, he worked in the drawing office, before occupying the post of locomotive foreman in charge of the Blackpool and Fleetwood District. It was at a social evening organised by the L&YR's John Aspinall (engineer), Aspinall that Maunsell was to meet his future wife, Edith Pearson. He evidently impressed Edith as she was to send him a letter in March 1893 requesting a tour of the grain elevator at Fleetwood, Fleetwood Docks. Their correspondence became increasingly familiar and on 1 August 1893 Maunsell wrote to Edith's father requesting permission for an engagement to be married, which was refused on the basis of funding with Edith sent to Paris. Maunsell went to India in 1894, as assistant locomotive superintendent of the East India Railway, He subsequently was appointed district locomotive superintendent of the Asansol District. He returned in 1896 to become works manager at Inchicore railway works, Inchicore on the GS&WR., Robert Coey having been promoted to locomotive superintendent on the departure of Henry Ivatt. O.S. Nock comments "with Robert Coey as Locomotive Superintendent and R. E. L. Maunsell as Works Manager at Inchichore the whole department was run with a smoothness to equal anything in the British Isles". The increased salary with a free house finally met the income stipulations of Edith's father and enabled Maunsell to marry Edith on 15 June 1896 in London. Maunsell moved up to become locomotive superintendent in 1911. In 1913, he was selected to succeed Harry Wainwright as CME of the South Eastern and Chatham Railway (SE&CR). When that line was merged in the Railways Act 1921, 1923 grouping, with Robert Urie, Urie of the London and South Western Railway retiring and with L. B. Billinton, Billinton of the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway having less experience, he became chief mechanical engineer of the newly formed Southern Railway. He retired in 1937, Oliver Vaughan Snell Bulleid taking over from him. He was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 1918 New Year Honours for his efforts during the First World War.


Locomotives

Maunsell's key skill was engineering management rather than locomotive design, and he made use of design teams to create easy-to-maintain locomotives that could operate the required services with effective performance. O. S. Nock in his book ''Irish Steam'' observed Maunsell was known to frequently stress the dictum "make everything get-at-able". He was responsible for several notable locomotive classes and related equipment. From his second spell at the GS&WR he is jointly credited with his predecessor Robert Coey with the one-off express passenger engine 4-4-0 GS&WR Class 341, No. 341 ''Sir William Goulding''. He is also credited there with the design of the GS&WR Class 351, GS&WR Class 257 (J4) of eight locomotives which were generally thought of as quite successful. While these were an incremental development of a series of GS&WR 0-6-0 classes of and in particular his predecessor Robert Coey, Coey's GS&WR Class 351, GS&WR Class 351 (J9) Maunsell's locomotives were the first on the GS&WR to use superheaters and piston valves. With Maunsell departing Inchicore railway works, Inchicore in 1913 the final members of this class were completed under his successor Watson. While at the SE&CR in 1917 the Maunsell team created two related prototype locomotives: one was a 2-6-0 ("mogul") tender freight locomotive, that was to become SECR N class, SE&CR Class N; the other was a 2-6-4T SECR K and SR K1 classes, SE&CR Class K for express passenger work. These were followed by over 200 succeeding locomotives including classes K, K1, N, SECR N1 class, N1, SR U class, U, SR U1 class, U1 and SR W class, W. Further locomotives for other railways came from kits of parts produced at Royal Arsenal, Woolwich Arsenal; these consisted of six kits purchased by the Metropolitan Railway Metropolitan Railway K Class and 26 kits purchased by Irish Railways GSR Classes 372 and 393, classes 372 and 393 some of which were constructed at Inchicore, Maunsell's old establishment. A major achievement was the introduction of the 4-6-0 SR Lord Nelson class locomotives and also the 4-4-0 SR V class or Schools Class, which were the ultimate and very successful development of the British 4-4-0 express passenger type. He also introduced pulverised fuel equipment and new types of valve gear.


Patents

* GB191419269 (with George Victor Valen Hutchinson), published 26 November 1914, Improvements relating to steam superheaters * GB192985 (with James Clayton), published 15 February 1923, Improvements in or relating to condensers for lubricators of the condensation type * GB202523 (with James Clayton), published 23 August 1923, A double-feed lubricator


See also

* Locomotives of the Southern Railway


Notes, references and sources


Notes


References


Sources

* * * *


External links


Biographical notes
{{DEFAULTSORT:Maunsell, Richard Edward Lloyd 1868 births 1944 deaths Locomotive builders and designers Irish people in rail transport South Eastern and Chatham Railway people Southern Railway (UK) people Irish railway mechanical engineers Alumni of Trinity College Dublin Commanders of the Order of the British Empire People educated at The Royal School, Armagh Irish expatriates in England