NR MTR I

Three-quarter view of Northern Railways Loco. MTR No. 1. The engine plate carries the words "Dick, Kerr & Co, Limited, London. Britannia Engineering Works, Kilmarnock 1910." Just above this another small plate explains that it was renovated by the Amritsar Workshops in September 1990. Details about its sister engine (NR MTR 2) in the National Rail Museum, New Delhi, probably apply here too: "Indian Saddle Tank Steam engine ... a local shunting and freight engine." This one is now on a concrete plinth outside the General Manager's Office, Northern Railway, at Baroda House, Kasturba Gandhi Marg, New Delhi, India. [Click on these images to enlarge them.]

NR I NR I

Left: The engine plate. Right: A side view of the steam engine.

Grace's Guide gives a history and chronology for the manufacturer. The partnership was formed in 1883 by "spinning out the rail and tramway activities from W. B. Dick and Co with John Kerr and was given the name of Dick, Kerr and Co; the company built around fifty locomotives up to 1919." It had its Britannia works in Kilmarnock in Scotland, as the engine plate says, but its head office in Leadenhall Street (later, in Preston), hence the different locations given on the plate.

Related Material

Photographs, formatting and text by Jacqueline Banerjee. You may use these images without prior permission for any scholarly or educational purpose as long as you (1) credit the photographer and (2) link your document to this URL in a web document or cite the Victorian Web in a print one.]

Sources

"Dick, Kerr and Co." Grace's Guide: British Industrial History. Web. 11 March 2014.

"National Rail Museum, Delhi, India." india-tour-guide.co.uk. Web. 11 March 2014.


Last modified 11 March 2014