Powlesland and Mason (railway shunting contractors)
Powlesland and Mason were a company that provided steam locomotives and crews for shunting within Swansea Docks. The first name has sometimes been spelt "Powesland" and it is uncertain which spelling is correct.
Early history
Powlesland and Mason (P&M) were a Swansea-based firm that existed between 1903 and the merger of their railway operations into the Great Western Railway (GWR) on 1 January 1924. As at 1 January 1924, P&M were operating nine steam locomotives on shunting activities within Swansea docks, supplementing the locomotives of the Swansea Harbour Trust.[1]
Operations under GWR ownership
The GWR continued to use the ex-P&M steam locomotives for shunting and short-trip freight train workings throughout the GWR's existence. Latterly, some P&M locomotives were based at locomotive sheds away from the immediate vicinity of Swansea docks,[2] including Danygraig shed, to the east of Swansea, which was located to the west of Jersey Marine railway station.[3]
Locomotives operated
Powlesland and Mason utilised a fleet of nine 0-4-0ST saddle tank shunting locomotives on their railway duties within Swansea docks. The locos had been built between 1874 and 1916. The oldest, P&M No.7, was a former Raven Class broad gauge locomotive constructed for the South Devon Railway Company in 1874, and was sold by the GWR to P&M in 1906.
The P&M engines had been built by five different firms of locomotive constructors: Peckett and Sons (4 locos); Brush Electrical (2 locos); Avonside (1 loco); Andrew Barclay (1 loco); and Hawthorn Leslie and Company (1 loco).[1]
Preservation
Four of the locomotives survived to be taken into ownership of British Railways Western Region in 1948 and the last to be withdrawn from service was Peckett-built BR No. 1152 (P&M No. 12; GWR No. 935) in 1963.[4]
Today, only one Powlesland and Mason locomotive survives in preservation. This is P&M loco No.6 (GWR No. 921) built by Brush in 1903/06 and sold by the GWR in 1929 to a private operator for further service. It was on public display, but not operational, at the Snibston Discovery Museum near Coalville wearing No. 921.
References
- Notes
- 1 2 Casserley 1966, pp. 132–134
- ↑ Allan 1982, p. 8
- ↑ Fuller 1961, p. 76
- ↑ Casserley 1966, p. 132
- Bibliography
- Casserley, H.C. (1966), Locomotives at the Grouping - 4 - Great Western Railway, Ian Allan Limited
- Allan, Ian (1982), ABC of GWR Locomotives - 1943, Ian Allan Limited, ISBN 0-7110-1259-8
- Fuller, Aidan L.F (1961), The British Locomotive Shed Directory
RCTS. Locomotives of the Great Western Railway. Part 10. Absorbed engines, 1922-1947. 1966