The Newcomen Engine

House

An early Newcomen Engine at Oxclose. They were used to pump water from mines. The drawing, by Henry Beighton, was completed in 1717.

Thomas Newcomen is one of Dartmouth's most famous sons. His pumping engine represents a landmark in the development of steam engines.

He was born in 1663, the son of a merchant and shipowner. The family had strict Baptist beliefs and, throughout his life, Thomas was a highly active preacher. He worked as an ironmonger and inventor and by 1707 was living next to the Guildhall. With his partner, a fellow Baptist, Jon Calley, he developed a steam engine which represented one of the major advances of the Industrial Revolution.

He developed a scale model of his engine in his workshop in Dartmouth around 1710 and the first working engine, built near Dudley Castle in the South Staffordshire coalfield, followed two years later. By the time of his death in 1729 there were over a hundred engines working all over Europe.

The engine on display in Dartmouth was donated by the British Transport Commission to the Newcomen Society in 1963 and erected within an old electricity sub station. This particular engine was built around the end of the 18th Century and used by the Coventry Canal Company from 1821 to 1913 for pumping water from a well into the canal at Hawkesbury Junction. The engine is a direct descendent of Newcomen's first machine.

Inside the Newcomen Engine House the massive machine stands proud and attractive and wooden interpretive panels made by local craftsman Peter Walmsley tell the story of Thomas Newcomen and his inventions.

 

Open all year Daily Sunday
Summer 0900 -1730 1000 - 1600
Winter 0900 - 1700 Closed

TO RETURN TO THINGS TO SEE AND DO CLICK HERE

© Dartmouth Directory, Waterloo House, 15a Duke Street, Dartmouth, Devon, TQ6 9PZ
Telephone/fax 00 44 (0) 1803 834766
Reg No 03884182
Disclaimer: Every effort has been taken to ensure the accuracy of the information contained in the Dartmouth Directory. It is not a validation service and inclusion does not necessarily indicate approval. The Dartmouth Directory is unable to accept liability for any of the information contained within any of its pages or for any of the websites visited from its links. We reserve the right and, if considered appropriate, remove entries without any prior notice being given.