Information AboutBassett-lowke |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT BASSETT-LOWKE | |
| model railroad manufacturers | |
| toy train manufacturers | |
| minimum gauge railways | |
| locomotive manufacturers of the united kingdom | |
|
OVERVIEW Bassett-Lowke were primarily a sale organisation, contracting out the manufacture of models and parts to other manufacturers, such as Twining Models , and Wintringham's also of Northampton. They did, however, keep the manufacture of shipmodels for display purposes in-house. Bassett-Lowke produced trains in a variety of sizes, from 15-inch gauge Live Steam models to Gauge 2, Gauge 1 , and 0 Gauge . Their first 15-inch gauge steam locomotive, test run on the Eaton Hall Railway in 1905 was ''Little Giant.'' Unlike other engines on the line it was a replica of main-line locos, being built for a new public miniature railway at Blackpool . It was a quarter scale 4-4-2 Atlantic tender engine, though not an exact copy of any particular prototype. This engine still exists in private ownership. In 1914 , Bassett-Lowke produced only the second Pacific 4-6-2 (of any size) to be built in Britain (the first was GWR 111 The Great Bear ). This was the ''John Anthony,'' built for a private miniature railway at Staughton Manor. It was never delivered, but after storage at Eaton Hall during World War I , it was sold to the Ravenglass And Eskdale Railway and renamed ''Colossus.'' It was scrapped in 1927 . Previously the Ravenglass and Eskdale had purchased another Bassett Lowke Atlantic, the ''Sans Pareil.'' In the 1920s , Bassett-Lowke introduced 00 Gauge products as well. The company would also provide a complete custom-build railway service for those with necessary funds; one such layout survives in modified format at Bekonscot Model Village in England. Bassett-Lowke's decline starting in the late . Bassett-Lowke's fall was mirrored by two of its U.S. counterparts, the A. C. Gilbert Company and Lionel Corporation . However, the 1960s were also to bring their problems, and in 1964 the company ceased its retail sales and sold its shops, including the famous one at High Holborn in London, to Beatties. The original Bassett-Lowke went out of business in 1965 . In 1966 the company was acquired by Messrs Riley and Derry, and in the late 1980s by Nigel Turner, a Northampton businessman. In 1993 the name was revived for a while with short-run white metal models. These included a Burrell Type Traction Engine, Clayton Undertype Steam Wagon, Burrell Type Steam Roller, and London 'B' Type bus. The brand name was in 1996 acquired by Corgi , which has now linked it with live steam 0 gauge locomotives. Because of the premium nature of Bassett-Lowke's toys, they tended to be well preserved, and many examples survive today. They are highly collectible. Key competitors to Bassett-Lowke were Hornby and Exley . NARROW GAUGE RAILWAYS LTD In 1912 W. J. Bassett-Lowke, Robert Proctor-Mitchell and John Wills set up Narrow Gauge Railways Ltd (NGR) to promote and run 15 inch gauge railways. An earlier company, '''Miniature Railways of Great Britain Ltd''', went into voluntary Liquidation in 1912. NGR's first railway was opened in 1912 at Luna Park in the Parc des Eaux-Vives, Geneva , Switzerland . In Britain, the Ravenglass And Eskdale Railway was taken over, converted to 15 inch gauge and re-opened in 1915. The Fairbourne Railway followed in 1916. LOCOMOTIVES Bassett-Lowke locomotives were often re-named when moved to new sites and it is sometimes uncertain whether a locomotive is a new one, or an old one with a new name. The following list (which is probably incomplete) should not be regarded as definitive. Most of Bassett-Lowke's locomotives were designed by Henry Greenly who was a notable contributor to Model Engineer Magazine . Class 10 Atlantic
Class 20 Atlantic
Class 30 Atlantic
Class 60 Pacific
The Class 10 and Class 20 had narrow fireboxes. The Class 30 and Class 60 had wide fireboxes. SEE ALSO SOURCES
EXTERNAL LINKS
|
|
|