The carriage preserved at the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu | |
Vehicle | |
---|---|
Length | 11 ft 6 in (3.51 m) |
Width | 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m) |
Height | 8 ft 3 in (2.51 m) |
Weight | 5,150 lb (2,340 kg) |
Capacity | Seven (two crew, five passengers) |
Engine | |
Fuel | Coal |
Boiler | Vertical |
Boiler pressure | 120 psi (830 kPa) |
Tubes | 50 x 1 in (25 mm) inclined tubes |
Engine | 2 cylinder simple expansion |
Valve gear | Stephenson link motion operating slide valves between the cylinders |
Bore | 5 in (130 mm) |
Stroke | 6 in (150 mm) |
Heating Surface | |
Total | 29 sq ft (2.7 m) |
Firebox | 13 sq ft (1.2 m) |
Tubes | 16 sq ft (1.5 m) |
Grate Area | 2+1⁄2 sq ft (0.23 m) |
Water Capacity | |
Boiler | 35 imp gal (160 L) |
Water Tank | 50 imp gal (230 L) |
The Grenville steam carriage was developed in 1875 by Robert Neville-Grenville, assisted by George Jackson Churchward. It was built around a boiler from a Merryweather & Sons fire engine, and could carry seven people including the driver, steersman and stoker.
The carriage is preserved at the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu, and is thought to be the oldest self-propelled passenger-carrying vehicle still in working order.
Design
Neville-Grenville, the eldest son of Ralph Neville-Grenville, of Butleigh Court, Butleigh, Glastonbury, is said to have received the first engineering degree from Cambridge University. He gathered several steam tractors, ploughs and other engines to work on the family estate. He and Churchward met as apprentices at the South Devon Railway's works at Newton Abbot.
From 1874, in a collaboration that lasted fifteen years, they designed and built a steam-powered, passenger carrying road vehicle. Built on a 4 in × 2 in (102 mm × 51 mm) steel girder, it had a single steering wheel turned by a tiller at the front, and two wheels on the driven axle at the rear. The three wheels were each built up from 16 teak segments held together by an iron tyre, a design known as a Mansell wheel. Two parallel seats carry six passengers, including the driver, though the brakes may be operated by a separate brakesman on the driver's right. A fireman sits at the rear, stoking the fire and maintaining the water level in the boiler. The boiler itself was taken from a Merryweather fire engine, and supplies the twin cylinders (which replaced the original single-cylinder design).
Operation
Once steam is raised, the driver steers and controls the reverse/cut-off lever from the front seat. Brakes are applied through a foot pedal. For steeper roads, a dog clutch can engage an epicyclic reduction gear with a 2:1 ratio. The fireman can top-up the boiler using a feed pump driven by an intermediate shaft, or an injector when the vehicle is stationary. On a level road, it can reach almost 20 mph (32 km/h), and consumes 4–5 imp gal (18–23 L) of water and 5–6 lb (2.3–2.7 kg) of coal per mile.
Use and preservation
The carriage was used around the Glastonbury area for about twenty years, until in 1898 it was converted to a stationary engine to power a cider-press. In the late 1930s it was restored to working order by John Allen & Sons. An account of this restoration is given by George Allen.
In 1946 it was chosen to lead the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders' London Cavalcade in celebration of the British Motor Industry's fifty-year Jubilee. It was driven by Captain Allen, while its stoker " read or write...; he had never before been out of his native Sussex."
It was gifted to Bristol City Museum in 1947 by Captain Philip L. Neville, the builder's nephew, where, after years on static display, it was again restored to working order. Paul Elkin the driver, and his stoker Fred Lester, managed to get the vehicle to pass the MOT test, so that it could take part in the 1977 Bristol Lord Mayor’s Jubilee Procession. After this, however, the 1938 replacement boiler from Shand Mason & Co was found to be under the original specification, so it was taken off the road and Jefferies of Avonmouth tasked with repairing it.
It was running again in 2000, in which year it was the oldest entrant to the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run, completing it in about nine hours. In 2009 it was loaned to the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu, where it is thought to be the oldest self-propelled passenger vehicle that remains in working order.
See also
Notes and references
Notes
- Prior to 1899, fire engines were horse-drawn; the steam engine was used only to pump the water.
References
- ^ BIAS 1977.
- ^ WesternGroup 2020.
- Venn 2022.
- ^ Griffiths 1987, p. 34.
- Graham 2020.
- ^ nationalmotormuseum 2022.
- Allen 1941.
- MotorSport 1946.
- butleigh 2022.
- ^ vccofgb 2000.
Sources
- Allen, G. W. G. (October 1941). "The Grenville Steam Carriage of 1875". Meccano Magazine. XXVI (10): 316–317. Retrieved 19 November 2022.
- "BIAS JOURNAL No 10 1977 - THE GRENVILLE STEAM CARRIAGE" (PDF). Bristol Industrial Archaeological Society (BIAS). Retrieved 7 October 2022.
- "Butleigh People N". Butleigh. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
- Griffiths, Denis (1987). Locomotive engineers of the GWR. Wellingborough: Stephens. ISBN 0-85059-819-2.
- "London to Brighton Veteran Car Run - The General Items Page". The Veteran Car Club of Great Britain. Retrieved 7 October 2022.
- "Grenville Steam Carriage". The National Motor Museum Trust. Retrieved 7 October 2022.
- "The British Motor Industry's Jubilee". Motor Sport Magazine. XXII (9): 205. September 1946. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
- "Searching for Surname=GRENVILLE; Forename=robert". A Cambridge Alumni Database. Retrieved 9 October 2022.
- "From Somerset it came". The Western Group of Motoring Writers. Retrieved 7 October 2022.
- Graham, Chris (9 August 2020). "Merryweather Fire Engines". Heritage Machines. Retrieved 21 November 2022.
External links
- Video: Grenville carriage in steam at Beaulieu
- Video: Grenville steam carriage visits the SS Great Britain
- Video: Newsreel of Grenville steam carriage at the 1947 SMMT parade (starting at 1:45)