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George Brittain

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Nationality
  
British

Spouse(s)
  
Margaret Grant


Name
  
George Brittain

George Brittain 108 GB Anchor George Brittain in Dark Horn

Born
  
Children
  
Louisa Mary Brittainand four others

Engineering discipline
  
Mechanical engineering

George Brittain (born 1821, in Chester, England, died 1882) was Locomotive Superintendent of the Caledonian Railway from 1876 to 1882, between Benjamin Connor and Dugald Drummond.

Contents

Previously he had been locomotive superintendent of the Dundee, Perth and Aberdeen Junction Railway (1859–63) and assistant to Alexander Allan on the Scottish Central Railway (1863–65). Outdoor superintendent, Caledonian Railway (1865–76) and assistant/deputy to the incumbent and ailing Conner.

In common with many of his professional contemporaries he described himself as a civil engineer in 1861 and 1871 but as a mechanical engineer (locomotive superintendent) in 1881.

Locomotive designs

On his own account, he was responsible for the management of the design of:

  • 10 x 2-4-0 [1878]
  • 30 x 0-4-2 [1878-1882] (Caledonian Railway 670 Class)
  • 10 x 4-4-0 [1882] (Caledonian Railway 179 Class)
  • 12 x 2-4-0T [1879] (Tank locomotive)
  • 1 x 2-2-2WT [1881]
  • 15 x 2-4-2T [1880]
  • 1 x 0-4-0CT (Crane tank)
  • 6 x 0-6-0ST
  • About 30 of these locomotives saw their way into the stock of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway, some possibly gaining an extended lease of life due to the demands on the railway caused by the Great War. All had outside cylinders.

    Most of his engines had a reasonable service life for the period but were ill-suited for the age of standardisation that swept the country from the mid-1870s onwards.

    Later years

    Seen more as a running man than a designer and innovator, and with failing health and support from the board of directors that had appointed him, he was sidelined in a reoganisation of his department and appointed consultant, before resigning his £850/annum post in April 1882. He died shortly afterwards.

    Family

    He married Margaret Grant, a Scot, by whom he had at least five children, all born in Carlisle, Cumberland. His eldest daughter, Louisa Mary Brittain, married Andrew T. Scott on 7 June 1897 at St. John's Episcopal Church, Perth.

    References

    George Brittain Wikipedia


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