William Pickersgill

William Pickersgill (1861 2 May 1928) was an English railway engineer, and was chief mechanical engineer of the Caledonian Railway from 1914 until Grouping in 1923. He was appointed locomotive superintendent of the Northern Division of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway but retired in 1925. He died in Bournemouth.

Career

Great Eastern Railway

Pickersgill was born in Nantwich, Cheshire.[1] He started work on the Great Eastern Railway at Stratford in 1876, where he was a Whitworth Exhibitioner, and after several posts in the running department he was appointed district locomotive superintendent in Norwich in 1891.

Great North of Scotland Railway

In 1894 he succeeded James Johnson as the locomotive superintendent of the Great North of Scotland Railway, where he continued to develop the 4-4-0 type for that railway and was responsible for the new locomotive works at Inverurie which replaced the unsatisfactory premises at Kittybrewster. He was chairman of the Association of Railway Locomotive Engineers in 1912 and was interested in flange and check rail dimensions.

Caledonian Railway

In March 1914 succeeded John F. McIntosh as locomotive, carriage & wagon superintendent of the Caledonian Railway. He further developed the McIntosh 4-4-0 type, introduced the class 60 4-6-0 for freight service, and an extraordinary 4-6-0 with derived motion which was highly unsuccessful.

London Midland and Scottish Railway

Following the Grouping he was appointed mechanical engineer of the Northern Division of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway but retired in 1925.

Locomotive designs

William Pickersgill's locomotive designs for the Caledonian Railway included:

See also

References

Business positions
Preceded by
James Johnson
Locomotive superintendent of the
Great North of Scotland Railway

1894-1914
Succeeded by
Thomas E. Heywood
Preceded by
John F. McIntosh
Chief mechanical engineer of the Caledonian Railway
1914-1923
Succeeded by
George Hughes (LMS)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.