Beyer, Peacock and Company

{{Short description|Railway locomotive manufacturer}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2015}}

{{Use British English|date=February 2015}}

{{more citations needed|date=November 2024}}

{{Infobox company

| name = Beyer, Peacock and Company Limited

| logo =

| image = Bassendean rail museum gnangarra 07.jpg

| image_caption = A Beyer, Peacock and Company builder's plate from 1885

| type =

| industry = Locomotive manufacturing

| fate =

| predecessor =

| successor =

| founded = {{Sda|1854}}, in England

| founders = Charles Beyer
Richard Peacock
Henry Robertson

| hq_location_city = Greater Manchester

| hq_location_country =

| areas_served = Africa, South America, Asia, Australia and South Pacific

| key_people =

| products = Locomotives and machine tools

| owners =

| num_employees =

| num_employees_year =

}}

File:Lok_Prins_August.JPG in 1856, preserved at Swedish Railway Museum in Gävle, Sweden. It is said to be the oldest operating steam engine in the world.[https://www.jarnvagsmuseet.se/tagresor/vara-tag Swedish Railway Museum. Retrieved 12 August 2023.]]]

Beyer, Peacock and Company was an English general engineering company and railway locomotive manufacturer with a factory in Openshaw, Manchester. Charles Beyer, Richard Peacock and Henry Robertson founded the company in 1854. The company closed its railway operations in the early 1960s. It retained its stock market listing until 1976, when it was bought and absorbed by National Chemical Industries of Saudi Arabia.

Founders

German-born Charles Beyer had undertaken engineering training related to cotton milling in Dresden before moving to England in 1831 aged 21. He became draughtsman at Sharp, Roberts and Company's Atlas works in central Manchester, which manufactured cotton mill machinery and had just started building locomotives for the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. There he was mentored by head engineer and prolific inventor of cotton mill machinery Richard Roberts. By the time he resigned 22 years later he was well established as the company's head engineer; he had been involved in producing more than 600 locomotives.

Richard Peacock had been chief engineer of the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway's locomotive works in Gorton when he resigned in 1854, confident in his ability to secure orders to build locomotives. Beyer's resignation presented Peacock with a partnership opportunity. However, the business at the outset (Beyer, Peacock & Co.) was a legal partnership and the partners were therefore liable for debts should the business fail; in a mid-Victorian economic climate of boom and bust, it was a risky venture. Beyer could raise £9,524 (nearly £900,000 in 2015) and Peacock £5,500, but they still required a loan from Charles Geach (founder of the Midland Bank and first treasurer to the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, of which Beyer and Peacock had been founding members). Soon afterwards, however, Geach died, the loan was recalled, and the whole project nearly collapsed. Thomas Brassey came to the rescue, persuading Henry Robertson to provide a £4,000 loan in return for being the third (sleeping) partner.{{Cite book|title = Steam to silver|last = Bruce|first = J. Graeme|publisher = London Transport|year = 1971|isbn = 9780853290124|location = London}} It was not until 1883 that the company was incorporated as a private limited company and renamed Beyer, Peacock & Co. Ltd. In 1902 it took on its final form as a public limited company.{{cite web |url= https://collection.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/people/ap16805/beyer-peacock-co-ltd |title= Beyer Peacock & Co Ltd |author= |date= 2019 |website= Science Museum Group |access-date= 8 January 2020 }}The public company was incorporated as Beyer, Peacock & Co. (1902) Ltd; the "(1902)" was dropped in 1903.

During the Great Depression, faced with competition from tramways and electric railways, the company began to look for alternatives so that they were not dependent on one product. In 1932 they acquired their first company and in 1949 formed a joint company with Metropolitan-Vickers to build locomotives other than steam. By 1953 Beyer, Peacock had acquired more than five subsidiary companies; two others followed five years later. In 1958 Beyer, Peacock (Hymek) Ltd was formed.

Gorton Foundry

{{Distinguish|text=Gorton Locomotive Works (sometimes known as Gorton Works or Gorton Tank)}}

File:Beyer, Peacock and Co. Ltd -- plan of Gorton Foundry workshops layout.png

File: Beyer, Peacock and Co Gorton Foundry in 1870.jpg

Beyer and Peacock started building their Gorton Foundry in 1854 two miles east from the centre of Manchester at Openshaw on a 12-acre site, on the opposite (south) side of the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (MS&LR) line from Peacock's previous works.The two works were adjacent, on either side of the line between the present-day stations of Ashburys and Gorton. The site was chosen because land was cheaper than in the city, allowing ample room to expand, and there was a good water supply from an MS&LR reservoir. At the Foundry, Beyer designed and manufactured machine tools needed to build the locomotives, and oversaw locomotive design and production. Peacock dealt with the business side, often travelling to continental Europe to secure orders.{{cite book |last1= Hills |first1= R.L.|last2= Patrick |first2= D.|date= 1982 |title= Beyer, Peacock: Locomotive builders to the world |location= Glossop |publisher= Transport Publishing Co.|isbn= 0903839415}}

In July 1855 the first locomotive, built for the Great Western Railway, left Gorton Foundry. Between 1854 and 1868 the company built 844 locomotives, of which 476 were exported. The company sold mainly to the British colonies, Southern Africa and South America. The London and North Western Railway had commissioned Beyer, Peacock to build a single copy of its Dreadnought Class for the Pennsylvania Railroad,Nock, O. S., et al. Railways at the Turn of the Century, 1895-1905. Blandford P., 1969. as the former railway's shops were not legally permitted to sell their locomotives. Aside from this locomotive, and nine 2-6-0's built for the Costa Rica Railway,[http://www.railwaysofthefarsouth.co.uk/Resources/Central%20American%20steam%20loco%20list.pdf Part 16 Central American countries steam locomotive list (other than Panama)] the company remained out of the North American market.

During the First World War Beyer, Peacock manufactured artillery; in August 1915 Gorton Works was put under government control with production switching almost entirely to the war effort, especially heavy field artillery. During the Second World War, the company was again brought under government control but continued to build locomotives throughout the war.

Condensing locomotives for underground railways

File:Hugh llewelyn 23 (5568451481).jpg rather than ejecting it into the atmosphere as on conventional locomotives.]]

A technological innovation that strengthened the company's reputation was the world's first successful condensingBy condensing steam, little of it emanated from the locomotives, and using coke (later, "smokeless" Welsh coal) greatly reduced smoke pollution. locomotive design for London's first underground railway – the Metropolitan Railway A Class 4-4-0 tank engine. Between 1864 and 1886, 148 were built for various railways; most operated until the lines' electrification in 1905. The locomotives' main designer, Hermann Ludwig Lange (1837–92), was a native of Beyer's home town, Plauen, Saxony (now Germany) who had undertaken an apprenticeship followed by engineering training. Beyer had invited him to England in 1861 and employed him for the first year in the company workshops, then as a draughtsman under his direction. He became chief draughtsman in 1864 or 1865. After Beyer's death in 1876, he became chief engineer and co-manager of the company.{{cite web |url= https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Hermann_Ludwig_Lange |title= Hermann Ludwig Lange |author= |date= 2019 |website= Grace's Guide to British industrial history |publisher= Grace's Guide Project |access-date= 2 January 2020 }}

Beyer-Garratt articulated locomotives

File:South Australian Railways 400 class Beyer-Garratt locomotive (Peter Manning) -- side elevation.png was double that of its {{whyte|4-8-0}} predecessor. (Click to enlarge.)]]

An articulated locomotive design that became renowned in the 20th century was another innovation, the Garratt articulated locomotive, invented by Herbert William Garratt, who was granted a patent in 1908; Beyer, Peacock had sole rights of manufacture in Britain. After the patents ran out in 1928, the company began to use the name "Beyer-Garratt" to distinguish their locomotives. They became widely used throughout Africa, South America, Asia, Australia and the South Pacific, where difficult terrain and lightly laid, tightly curved track, usually narrow-gauge, severely limited the weight and power output of conventional locomotives. In Garratt's design, two girders holding a boilerSignificant in the performance of the boiler, hence power output, was that the Garratt's firebox was no longer confined to the narrow space between a locomotive's frame but was constrained only by the much greater distance between girders. and a cab were slung between two "engine" units, each with cylinders, wheels and motion. The weight of the locomotive was therefore spread over a considerable distance. Both engine units were topped by water tanks. The unit adjoining the cab end also held a fuel bunker.{{cite web |last=Walker |first =Rosanne |website=Encyclopedia of Australian Science|title =Garratt, Herbert William (1864-1913) |publisher =The University of Melbourne eScholarship Research Centre |date =18 August 2011 |url =http://www.eoas.info/biogs/P003552b.htm |access-date = 2 January 2020}}{{cite web |url= https://www.britannica.com/technology/Beyer-Garratt |title= Beyer-Garratt |author= |date= 2019 |website= Encyclopedia Britannica |access-date= 4 January 2020}}

Between 1909 and 1958, Beyer, Peacock built more than a thousand Garratts;{{sfnp|Atkins|1999|page=104}} significant types are listed below. Among them, three of the most significant are preserved (see the "Preserved steam locomotives" table below):

Diesel and electric locomotives

In the decade following 1954, the company built four types of diesel-powered locomotives and two electric types, listed below.

Decline and closure

Locomotive manufacturing transformed rapidly in the late 1950s. In 1955 British Railways decided to switch from steam to diesel traction and by then overseas railways had done the same. A major problem the company soon faced was that it had chosen to make diesel-hydraulic locomotives when the Western Region had opted for lightweight locomotives with hydraulic transmission under the British Railways Modernisation Plan of 1955; but British Railways opted for diesel-electrics.Beyer Peacock (Hymek) Ltd was formed as a joint venture between Bristol Siddeley Engines, which was licensed to build Maybach engines, and Stone-Platt Industries, licensed to build Mekydro transmissions. The company all but closed down the Gorton Foundry at the end of 1958.

In 1966, after 112 years of operation, all production ceased at Gorton Foundry. During that time, the company had built nearly 8,000 locomotives.{{sfnp|Atkins|1999|page=104}}

In 1976 Beyer Peacock was sold to Sheikh Mohammed Y. Al Bedrawi's National Chemical Industries of Saudi Arabia. The remaining industrial parts of the company then were Space Deck, a supplier of steel roofing units, and its main industrial company Richard Garrett Engineering, a company that manufactured machines which made cardboard boxes in factories in Dereham with 90 employees and in Suffolk with 500 employees."Promises, promises ...", Daily Mail (London), 16 September 1977, p.30

Space Deck and Beyer Peacock International were praised in 1982 for having achieved increased profitability."Copydex Jumps to £169,000", Financial Times (London), 27 May 1982, p. 30

National Chemical Industries itself went bust in the early to mid-1980s.New York Times, "BELT TIGHTENING BY THE SAUDIS", Paul Lewis, 28 January 1986

As of 2012 the building that housed the former boiler shop, tender shop and boiler mounting shop – 550 feet (167 metres) in length – remained in use as part of the Hammerstone Road Depot of Manchester City Council.

Beyer, Peacock & Company Ltd last filed accounts to Companies House in 1989.{{cite web | url=https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/00073505/filing-history | title=BEYER,PEACOCK & COMPANY,LIMITED filing history - Find and update company information - GOV.UK }} Since then it has been compulsorily struck off several times, but restored on the request of creditors. No activity has been registered since 2015.

Companies House also lists another company called Beyer, Peacock & Company that was founded it 1998, and is now dormant. It is not clear what connection there is between the two firms. {{cite web | url=https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/03609929 | title=BEYER, PEACOCK & CO LIMITED overview - Find and update company information - GOV.UK }}

Archives

Beyer Peacock's archives are held at the Science and Industry Museum in Manchester.

Gallery

:(click to enlarge)

{{Gallery

|width=200

|Image:Beyer Peacock - Madras Railway No 425.jpg|{{whyte|0-4-2}} locomotive built for the Madras Railway in 1860 at the Gorton Foundry

|Image:ARHS_ACT_Locomotive_1210_a.JPG|NSWGR Z12 class locomotive no. 1210 of 1878 at Canberra, Australia in 2011

|Image:LocomotoraBeyerPeacockFCS-nov2016.jpg|Ferrocarril del Sud {{whyte|4-4-0}} locomotive no. 46 of 1883 at Mar del Plata, Argentina in 2016

|Image:The Beyer-Peacock Quarterly Review July 1927.jpg|Experimental Ljungström turbine condenser locomotive in 1927; it was developed with the LMS Railway

|Image:Timber trains in Manjimup Pemberton area.jpg|{{whyte|4-6-0}} locomotive no. 2 of the State Saw Mills (of Western Australia), similar to the WAGR G class, in the 1940s

|Image:South Australian Railways 400 class Beyer-Garratt locomotive no 405 in builder's photo colour scheme, with crew, Raismes, 1953.jpg|South Australian Railways 400 class no. 405 in "builder's photo" livery in 1953

|Image:Beyer, Peacock & Co. Ltd builder's plate on NSWGR AD60 class no. 6029 (Christine Lynch).jpg|Builder's plate on preserved NSWGR AD60 class locomotive no. 6029 of 1953

|Image:NSWGR AD60 Class Locomotive Beyer-Garratt Fittings and Controls.jpg|Fittings and controls on the 1952 NSWGR AD60 class Beyer-Garratt

|Image:D7076 at Bury East Lancashire Railway.jpg|British Rail Class 35 Hymek diesel-hydraulic locomotive of 1961

}}

Classes of locomotives

=Steam=

==Non-articulated==

List shows delivery year(s), railway and locomotive class, wheel arrangement (Whyte notation) and number in order.

==Beyer-Garratt (articulated)==

List shows delivery year(s), railway and locomotive class, wheel arrangement (Whyte notation) and number in order.

=Steam turbine=

=Diesel=

=Electric=

Preserved locomotives

Click "Show" to display.

class="toccolours floatright mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 100%; font-size:85%;"
bgcolor="#ffb300" colspan="9" | Preserved steam locomotives built by Beyer, Peacock
BP No.BuiltCompany built forLocomotive numberClassWheel arrangementPreserved at
331856Statens Järnvägar3 (43) Prins AugustB{{whyte|2-4-0}}On display at Swedish Railway Museum, Gävle
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 239

1861Statens Järnvägar22 (506) ThorÄ(Qä){{whyte|0-4-2|T}}On display at Swedish Railway Museum, Gävle
2951863T.B./later NORTE29 Basconia{{whyte|4-4-0|T}}On display at Abando Station, Bilbao
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 533

1865Maatschappij tot Exploitatie van Staatsspoorwegen13 (NS 705)9-16{{whyte|2-4-0}}On display at Dutch Railway Museum, Utrecht
7101866Metropolitan Railway23A{{whyte|4-4-0|T}}London Transport Museum, at Covent Garden
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 627

1866Statens järnvägar75 GötaA(Aa){{whyte|2-2-2}}On display at Swedish Railway Museum, Gävle
8091867Statens järnvägar93 JernsidaG(Gc){{whyte|0-6-0}}Nynäs, Swedish Railway Museum, Gävle, see 1442
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 846

1868St. Petersburg & Helsingfors Railway9B1{{whyte|0-4-2|T}}Finnish Railway Museum, Hyvinkää
9921870Norwegian State Railways21 AlfIII{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}Norwegian Railway Museum, Hamar
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 1253

1873Isle of Man Railway1 Sutherland{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}Stored pending rebuild (Isle of Man Railway)
12551873Isle of Man Railway3 Pender{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}On display at the Manchester Museum of Science and Industry (sectioned exhibit)
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 1412

1874London and South Western Railway30587LSWR 0298 Class{{whyte|2-4-0|WT}}On display at the Locomotion Museum
14141874London and South Western Railway30585LSWR 0298 Class{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}On display at the Buckinghamshire Railway Centre
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 1416

1874Isle of Man Railway4 Loch{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}In service (Isle of Man Steam Railway)
14171874Isle of Man Railway5 Mona{{whyte|2-4-0|WT}}Stored (Isle of Man Railway)
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 1442

1874Statens järnvägar161 WikG(Gc){{whyte|0-6-0}}Nynäs, Swedish Railway Museum, Gävle marked Gc 93
15241875Isle of Man Railway6 Peveril{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}On display at the Port Erin Railway Museum
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 1647

1877NSW Government Railways1905Z19{{whyte|0-6-0}}NSW Rail Museum
17671878NSW Government Railways120
(1210 after 1924)
Z12 class{{whyte|4-4-0}}Canberra Railway Museum
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 1827

1879Beyer, Peacock and Company1827{{whyte|0-4-0|ST}}Operational at Foxfield Railway
19331880Bergslagernas Järnvägar27K{{whyte|0-6-0}}Nynäs, Swedish Railway Museum, Gävle
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 1950

1880Manx Northern Railway3 Thornhill{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}Privately preserved (Isle of Man)
19581880Isle of Man Railway7 Tynwald{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}Dismantled for spares. Frames moved to Southwold Railway
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 1989

1881Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway752L&YR Class 23{{whyte|0-6-0ST}}Keighley & Worth Valley Railway
21011881Maatschappij tot Exploitatie van Staatsspoorwegen326 (NS 1326)301-475{{whyte|2-4-0}}On display at Dutch Railway Museum, Utrecht
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 2237

1883Ferrocarril del Sud46?{{whyte|4-4-0}}Mar del Plata railway station on static display
2464188547John Bull{{whyte|0-4-0|VB}}National Tramway Museum
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 2601

1886Mersey Railway/J. & A. Brown1 The MajorI{{whyte|0-6-4|T}}NSW Rail Museum, Thirlmere, NSW, Australia
26051886Mersey Railway5 Cecil RaikesI{{whyte|0-6-4|T}}Museum of Liverpool
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 2711

1886Western Australian Government RailwaysA11A{{whyte|2-6-0}}Meredith, Victoria, Australia?
2734188613184{{whyte|0-4-0|VB}}National Tramway Museum
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 2840

1887Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway957L&YR Class 25{{whyte|0-6-0}}Keighley & Worth Valley Railway
32761890Ferrocarril Alcoy Gandia2 Villalonga{{whyte|2-6-2|T}}On display at Al-Azraq Square, Alcoi, Spain
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 3282

1891Ferrocarril Alcoy Gandia7 Cocentaina{{whyte|2-6-2|T}}On display at Gandia station, Spain
34021891NSW Government Railways3203C32{{whyte|4-6-0}}NSW Rail Museum
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 3413

1892NSW Government Railways3214C32{{whyte|4-6-0}}Valley Heights Locomotive Depot Heritage Museum
34361892NSW Government Railways3237C32{{whyte|4-6-0}}Operational, Lachlan Valley Railway
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 3610

1894Isle of Man Railway8 Fenella{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}In service (Isle of Man Railway)
36411894Nippon Railway, JapanB104B10{{whyte|4-4-0}} -> {{whyte|4-4-2|T}}Kominato Railway, Ichihara, Chiba, Japan
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 3815

1896Isle of Man Railway9 Douglas{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}Stored (Isle of Man Railway)
38241896Companhia Mogiana de Estradas de Ferro302{{whyte|4-6-0}}Stored, awaiting rebuild in Campinas, Brazil
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 3911

1897Nippon Railway, Japan55405500{{whyte|4-4-0}}Ome Railway Park, Ome, Tokyo, Japan
40281898Tobu Railway, Japan5B1{{whyte|4-4-0}}Tobu Museum, Sumida, Tokyo, Japan
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 4029

1898Tobu Railway, Japan6B1{{whyte|4-4-0}}Tobu Museum, Sumida, Tokyo, Japan
42211901NSW Government Railways3265 HunterC32{{whyte|4-6-0}}Operational, Powerhouse Museum
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 4231

1901Belfast & County Down Railway3030{{whyte|4-4-2|T}}On display at Ulster Folk & Transport Museum, Cultra
43721902NSW Government Railways5069D50{{whyte|2-8-0}}Dorrigo Steam Railway & Museum
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 4662

1905Isle of Man Railway10 G.H. Wood{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}In service (Isle of Man Steam Railway)
46631905Isle of Man Railway11 Maitland{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}Stored pending rebuild (Isle of Man Railway)
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 4748

1906Central Uruguay Railway88N{{whyte|2-6-0}}On display (Paysandú station, Uruguay)
47501906Central Uruguay Railway92N{{whyte|2-6-0}}On display in bad shape (San José, Uruguay)
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 4751

1906Central Uruguay Railway93N{{whyte|2-6-0}}On display (Young, Uruguay)
49431907Central Uruguay Railway96N{{whyte|2-6-0}}On display (City bus terminal, Artigas, Uruguay)
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 5054

1908NSW Government Railways5112D50{{whyte|2-8-0}}Bathurst
50741909NSW Government Railways5132D50{{whyte|2-8-0}}Dorrigo Steam Railway & Museum
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 5126

1908Isle of Man Railway12 Hutchinson{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}In service (Isle of Man Steam Railway)
52921909Tasmanian Government RailwaysK1K{{whyte|0-4-0+0-4-0}}Welsh Highland Railway (Caernarfon)
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 5382

1910Isle of Man Railway13 Kissack{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}Awaiting new boiler (Isle of Man Railway)
53991910Central Uruguay Railway119N3{{whyte|2-6-0}}In working order (CEFU, Montevideo, Uruguay)
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 5400

1910Central Uruguay Railway120N3{{whyte|2-6-0}}In service (AUAR, Montevideo, Uruguay)
22541911South Maitland Railways10, 17–20, 22–28, 30–3110{{whyte|2-8-2|T}}2 Operational, 12 in
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 5548

1912Victorian RailwaysD2 604D2{{whyte|4-6-0}}On display at ARHS Vic Railway Museum, Australia
57571913Great Northern Railway (Ireland)171 Slieve GullionGNRI Class S{{whyte|4-4-0}}Operational with the Railway Preservation Society of Ireland, Whitehead
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 5807

1914NSW Government Railways3112C30{{whyte|4-6-4|T}}Stored, Private ownership, Canberra
61121922Dublin and South Eastern RailwayGSR 461DSER 15 and 16{{whyte|2-6-0}}Operational with the Railway Preservation Society of Ireland, Whitehead
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 6268

1926Victorian RailwaysG 42G{{whyte|2-6-0+0-6-2}}Puffing Billy Railway
62961926Isle of Man Railway16 Mannin{{whyte|2-4-0|T}}On display at the Port Erin Railway Museum
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 1572

1928Great Eastern Railway8572GER Class S69{{whyte|4-6-0}}Operational at the North Norfolk Railway
66391930South African Railways2352GL{{whyte|4-8-2+2-8-4}}Manchester Museum of Science and Industry
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 6733

1932Great Northern Railway (Ireland)85 MerlinGNRI Class V{{whyte|4-4-0}}Railway Preservation Society of Ireland, Whitehead, Co. Antrim (run by)
Ulster Folk & Transport Museum, Cultra, Belfast (owned)
68411937Baddesley Colliery6841 William FrancisBeyer-Garratt{{whyte|0-4-0+0-4-0}}Bressingham Steam and Gardens
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 6935

1939Fyansford Cement Works Railway2{{whyte|2-6-0+0-6-2}}Bellarine Railway, Victoria, Australia
72421949Sligo, Leitrim and Northern Counties RailwayLough ErneSLNCR Lough class{{whyte|0-6-4|T}}Operational with the Railway Preservation Society of Ireland, Whitehead
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 7340

1950Rhodesia Railways398 Isidumuka15A{{whyte|4-6-4+4-6-4}}Flying Fifteen Group, Steam Incorporated Paekākāriki
74281951South African Railways127NGG 16{{whyte|2-6-2+2-6-2}}Puffing Billy Railway, Victoria, Australia
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 7430

1951South African Railways129NGG 16{{whyte|2-6-2+2-6-2}}Puffing Billy Railway, Victoria, Australia
76241951South Australian Railways402400 class{{whyte|4-8-2+2-8-4}}National Railway Museum, Port Adelaide
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 7631

1951South Australian Railways409400 class{{whyte|4-8-2+2-8-4}}National Railway Museum, Port Adelaide
75821953Rhodesia Railways50914A{{whyte|4-8-2+2-8-4}}Mainline Steam Heritage Trust Plimmerton New Zealand
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

|

1952RFFSA612{{whyte|4-8-2+2-8-4}}RFFSA Central Station Museum, Recife, Pernambuco
75311954NSW Government Railways6029AD60{{whyte|4-8-4+4-8-4}}Canberra Railway Museum
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 7650

1955East African Railways5918EAR 59 class{{whyte|4-8-2+2-8-4}}Nairobi Railway Museum
77021955East African Railways5930EAR 59 class{{whyte|4-8-2+2-8-4}}Nairobi Railway Museum
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 7541

1956NSW Government Railways6039AD60{{whyte|4-8-4+4-8-4}}Dorrigo Steam Railway & Museum
75421956NSW Government Railways6040AD60{{whyte|4-8-4+4-8-4}}NSW Rail Museum
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 7544

1956NSW Government Railways6042AD60{{whyte|4-8-4+4-8-4}}Dorrigo Steam Railway & Museum
76811956South African Railways4083GMAM{{whyte|4-8-2+2-8-4}}Mainline Steam Heritage Trust Mercer, New Zealand
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 7863

1958South African RailwaysNG138NGG 16{{whyte|2-6-2+2-6-2}}Welsh Highland Railway (Caernarfon)
78651958South African RailwaysNG140NGG 16{{whyte|2-6-2+2-6-2}}Welsh Highland Railway (Caernarfon)
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 7868

1958South African RailwaysNG143NGG 16{{whyte|2-6-2+2-6-2}}Welsh Highland Railway (Caernarfon)

class="toccolours floatright mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 100%; font-size:85%;"
bgcolor="#ffb300" colspan="9" | Preserved diesel locomotives built by Beyer, Peacock
BP No.BuiltCompany built forLocomotive number(s)ClassWheel arrangementPreserved at
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 7911

1962British RailwaysD7017BR Class 35 HymekBo-BoWest Somerset Railway
79121962British RailwaysD7018BR Class 35 HymekBo-BoWest Somerset Railway
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 7923

1962British RailwaysD7029BR Class 35 HymekBo-BoSevern Valley Railway
79801963British RailwaysD7076BR Class 35 HymekBo-BoEast Lancs Railway
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 8038

1965British RailwaysD7628, 25278 SybillaBR Class 25Bo-BoNorth Yorkshire Moors Railway - Operational
80391965British RailwaysD7629, 25279BR Class 25Bo-BoGreat Central Railway (Nottingham) - Operational
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

| 8043

1965British RailwaysD7633, 25283BR Class 25Bo-BoDean Forest Railway - Operational
80691966British RailwaysD7659, 25309BR Class 25Bo-BoPeak Rail - Operational
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

class="toccolours floatright mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 100%; font-size:85%;"
bgcolor="#ffb300" colspan="9" | Preserved electric locomotives built by Beyer, Peacock
BP No.BuiltCompany built forLocomotive number(s)ClassWheel arrangementPreserved at
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

|

1956NSWGR460146 ClassCo-CoValley Heights Locomotive Depot Heritage Museum
1956NSWGR460246 ClassCo-CoDorrigo Steam Railway & Museum
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

|

1956NSWGR461546 ClassCo-CoJunee Roundhouse Museum on permanent loan from the Sydney Electric Train Society
1956NSWGR462746 ClassCo-CoSydney Electric Train Society
-style="background:#E5E5FF"

|

1956NSWGR463846 ClassCo-CoNSW Rail Museum, Broadmeadow Locomotive Depot'Veteran electric finds new home as in-traffic units face uncertain future'. Railway Digest. July 1998. p. 10.
1961British RailwaysE3054, 82008BR Class 82Bo-BoBarrow Hill Engine Shed

Notes

{{Reflist|group=note}}

References

{{Reflist}}

Select bibliography

{{Refbegin}}

  • {{Cite book

|title=The golden age of steam locomotive building

|last=Atkins |first=P.

|year=1999

|publisher=Atlantic

|isbn= 978-0906899878

|pages=66–67

}}

  • {{Cite book

|title=Garratt locomotives of the world (rev. and enl. ed.)

|last=Durrant |first=A.E.

|year=1981

|publisher=David & Charles

|isbn= 0715376411

}}

  • {{cite book

|title=Beyer, Peacock, locomotive builders to the world

|publisher=Transport Publishing Co

|year=1982

|isbn=0-903839-41-5

|location=Glossop

|last1=Hills |first1=Richard L. |author-link=Richard L. Hills

|last2=Patrick |first2=D.

}}

  • {{Cite book

|title=British steam locomotive builders

|last=Lowe |first=James W.

|publisher=Guild Publishing |location=London

|orig-year=1975

|year=1989

|isbn=0900404213

|ref={{harvid|Lowe|1975}}

|section=Beyer, Peacock & Company

|pages=59–64

}}

{{Refend}}