Wednesday 17 November 2021

Who Invented the Steam Blast - a tract by John Wesley Hackworth 1876

 After the controversy surrounding the publication of Samuel Smiles book The Life of George Stephenson in 1857, John Wesley Hackworth and the descendants of other locomotive pioneers debated and defended their forebears reputation in the press. 

The controversy surround the steam Blast (Blast pipe) invention raised its head again after the jubilee is 1875. John Wesley Hackworth's reply to the Times was not published and he reconfigured it as a tract which he sent out or made available in 1876. The tract is on this site in various relevant places but I've typed it out to make it easier to read - the typeface is very small and to make it easier to copy and paste from for the purpose of quotes. The typed text is below the graphic version..



WHO INVENTED THE STEAM BLAST?

To the Editor of the “Northern Echo”

By John Wesley Hackworth 1876

Sir – In answer to the letters of Miss Gurney and Mr Smiles on the above subject, which appeared in the Times 27th ult. And 1st inst., I beg to say that 16 years before Sir Goldsworthy Gurney professed to have discovered the “steam jet” or “blast,” William Nicolson patented, illustrated, described it in his specification No 2990, and dated 22nd November 1806. This invention he applied to most of the purposes enumerated by Miss Gurney; but it now almost entirely superseded by more economical and modern inventions. While Nicholson’s specifications and Gurney’s pamphlet of 1859 prove that they represent one and the same thing, they are equally conclusive as to the locomotive steam-blast being essentially different. For example, we are informed – “The steam must be high pressure, the steam draught cannot be produced by exhaust steam” Now, as the exhaust steam is the agency employed to produce the locomotive blast - the intermittent sound of which (only emitted when the engine is in motion) is familiar to the ear of everyone, where as the steam jet or ‘blower’ has a continuous sound, caused by steam issuing direct from a boiler when at rest, as well as when in motion – it follows that they are unquestionably two distinct things. It is equally certain that Miss Gurney is in error in her supposition that “Timothy Hackworth conveyed her father’s plan to the north of England” as will be clearly seen in the following facts, which will likewise correct Mr Smiles’s statements. George Stephenson, in his first locomotive at Killingworth in 1814, adopted Blenkinsop’s exhaust, ejecting the steam vertically into the air from an inverted T pipe ; and in his subsequent engines, Stephenson resorted to the plan used by Timothy Hackworth in the Wylam locomotives four or five years before, the method being to carry the exhaust pipes just within the circumference of the chimney, and allow the steam to escape upwards. This became the established mode and the engines did tolerably well in conveying coals at three to five miles an hour on short lines of four and five miles, when due attention was paid to having plentiful supply of steam and water in the boiler with which to commence the journey ; but even with strict observance of these conditions, the engines not infrequently came to a halt and had so to remain till steam was generated to complete the distance. Matters were in this state when the Stockton and Darlington Railway approached completion, and as the distance intended to be worked by horses or locomotives was 20 miles, it was predicted by competent judges that it would be impractical by the latter power, and such it proved to be, for after 18 months’ trial of the locomotives the directors determined to abandon them, as horses were found to do the work at less cost. Letters which I hold from George and Robert Stephenson to my father show their disappointment at this decision. At this juncture Timothy Hackworth proposed to make an engine to answer the purpose. This proposition was considered, and the directors resolved, as a last experiment, that Hackworth should be allowed to carry out his plan. This engine, the “Royal George,” was started in 1827.We can not stop here to enumerate the novelties in its construction ; suffice to say it had his invention “the blast pipe” for the first time, and as used at the present day, only that the contraction is doubled. The result of the working of this engine may be asserted from data adduced from an experiment witnessed by Robert Stephenson, Joseph Lock, my father and myself, which Robert Stephenson had inserted in Rastrick and Walker’s report, which was laid before the directors of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway in March, 1829, to show what a locomotive could accomplish.   

Report p.17 “Hackworth’s engine took 48 ¾ at 112.10 miles an hour, on a level, and the steam was blowing off when the experiment concluded” … “I state the preceding as it has been given to us. Hackworth’s engine is undoubtably the most powerful that has yet been made, as the amount of tons that have been conveyed, compared with the other engines, prove.

In 1828, George Stephenson being wishful to produce an equally powerful engine built the Lancashire Witch, which, besides having the Wylam mode of exhaust, was provided with two bellows – an arrangement he was sanguine would effect the desired result. After the trial – he wrote the following to his friend, Timothy Hackworth –

Liverpool July 25th 1828. We have tried the new locomotive engine at Bolton ; we have also tried the blast to it for burning coke, and I believe it will answer. There are two bellows worked by eccentrics underneath the tender.”

It did not answer, and it is obvious at this date, Stephenson knew nothing of the blast pipe, nor did he acquire a knowledge of it October 1829.At a preliminary trial of the Sanspareil, Hackworth gave Stephenson a brisk run on his engine, when the latter made his observations, and at length put the question – “Timothy, what makes the sparks fly out of the chimney?” Mr Hackworth touched the exhaust pipe near the cylinders and said – “It is the end of this little fellow that does the business”

That night men were sent to purloin Hackworth’s invention, and the Rocket was fitted with a similar blast pipe for the race. I think it unfair on the part of Nicholas Wood to have chronicled (p. 290 e., 1831) the fuel destroyed by a disorganised engine working with an internally burst cylinder. However, after the engine was fitted with a new cylinder, Wood, (in table V11., p. 387) shows that, taking the difference of speed into account, she had the advantage of fuel in the economy of fuel over her rival “Rocket” 14 miles per hour consumed 2,41lbs per ton per mile.

Moreover, the short history sent by Mr John Hick, M.P., with the old engine, when he presented it to the South Kensington Museum, shows the Sanspariel to have been a much superior engine to the Rocket. William Gowland, an engine driver whom George Stephenson brought from Killingworth to assist in opening the Stockton and Darlington line in 1825, after having run the Royal George two years, and been the driver of the Sanspariel at Rainhill, gives testimony in a letter to The Engineer, 23rd October, 1857, to the following effect :-

I was driver of the Royal George on the Stockton and Darlington Railway for about two years, it having come out of Shildon works in 1827 - the complete production of Timothy Hackworth. It contained the blast pipe as perfect as any used at the present day…I can solemnly assure you that when the Sanspariel left Shildon it contained the blast pipe not only by accident but by clear design, with a full knowledge of its value, as proved in the case of the Royal George. Of course everybody knew that the Rocket had not the blast pipe when it came to Rainhill. The Sanspariel had.”

Respecting Nicholas Wood (in treatise 1825), noting the slightly increased draught obtained from his colleague, George Stephenson, turning the exhaust steam into the chimney at Killingworth, this was merely recording an old face known at Wylam years before, which Wood and Stephenson were familiar with, though they differed in opinion as to the utility of adopting it, the effect being so slight. The same phenomenon was observed in Trevithick’s engine, and, although noted in Nicholson’s journal, in 1806, there is no mention made of using the exhaust steam to produce a blast in Trevithick’s minutely drawn patent specification (No. 2,599), the omission proving beyond question that he neither knew its value nor apprehended its principal. In further proof, he patented (Fanners, &c., for creating an artificial draft in the chimney,)

The error in the Encyclopaedia Britannica has been corrected in subsequent editions. Referring to the quotations given by Mr Smiles, first, that –

“During the construction of the Rocket a series of experiments was made with blast pipes of different diameters, and their efficiency was tested by the amount of vacuum that was found in the smoke-box.”

Secondly –

The contraction of the orifice in many of our best locomotives is totally unnecessary, and rather disadvantageous, than otherwise, for since the speed of the engines have been increased the velocity of the steam is quite sufficient to produce the needful rarefaction in the chimney without any contraction whatever.”

In the first place, the smokebox had not then been introduced. The Rocket had not one, she merely had a chimney with a right-angle bend to fix to the boiler end, into which the copper tubes were inserted. And secondly, the early engine exhausts at the cylinder faces and blast orifices were in proportion of three or three and half to one. The present practice is six or seven to one. Hence the contraction is doubled. Imagine an engine constructed with the modern blast orifice - say 16 square inches – carried down uniformly to the cylinder faces - that is eight inches to each, we need no philosopher to tell us that such an engine could not run ; yet this is just what the world is asked to believe. It seems incredible that Robert Stephenson should d have so committed himself, but if on the authority of Mr Smiles we receive these statements they are almost as damaging to Stephenson’s reputation as the Suez canal affair. Instead of Robert Stephenson making such detrimental assertions, would it not have been wiser to have honourably accepted my challenge (in the Engineer, August 14th, 1857) and settled this question on evidence before a properly constituted tribunal?

I am, &c., John Wesley Hackworth

January 12th 1876

…………………………………………………………………………………

This letter is published separately, owing to having been excluded from the Times. A copy can be had on application to John W. Hackworth, Darlington, enclosing postage stamp.

Darlington: Bell, Priestgate.


Thursday 8 April 2021

Esther - Extended Poem by Jane Elizabeth Holmes 1865 (Grand daughter of Timothy Hackworth)

Jane Elizabeth Holmes, born in 1838, (the grand daughter of Locomotive pioneer, Timothy Hackworth) wrote the book 'Esther'

"Though Esther was as wild and free 
As light wind sweeping o'er the lea, 
Her mind had been improved with care,
And to its natural powers - as rare" p22 Esther.

An extended poem of a 124 pages, in the early 1860's, published posthumously in 1865. The poem is set in the lakes, around Pooley Bridge and Ullswater, moving on to London, but more specifically centered in and around Lyulph's Tower, Aira Force Waterfall, Dockray, Cumbria, where Wordsworth set the poem “The Somnambulist”  (1828) in response to the legend of the ghost of Aira Force.

Trish Campbell (a teacher) describes it as "a story of a girl (Esther Stafford) from 16 to 23, just 7 years. She dies at 23, so similar to her own life. I wonder if it was imagination or autobiographical maybe. It reads like a minstrel or a bard recounting / singing a tale to preserve history and it really touched me. Very sensitive and religious. The moral is 'don't let pride get in the way of love'. It took me a while to get used to the style but it made me cry. So sad and yet beautifully descriptive. It's hard to imagine it was written by one so young but then Kate Bush was the same. It's set in the hall and the falls around Ullswater at the beginning, but then life's journey of joys and sorrows goes to London..a tale of love, pride and sorrow. In particular I liked the description on pages 20 - 22, 39,40,79, 87,114, 121 to the end"


Jane Elizabeth Holmes, never got to see her poem in print, although that was her desire.


Sadly, she died in 1863 at the age of 24 and her poem  was sent to print by her family, in 1865 and published by HJ Tresidder, 17, Ave Marie Lane, London EC and printed by Spottiswoode and Co. 5, New Street Square, London EC.

I found a hard copy in the archives of Joan Hackworth Weir in 2021, which belonged to her forebear, John Wesley Hackworth, son of Timothy. The page with the signature is on this page below. The book was already on line as a pdf and in other formats which you can view here. https://archive.org/details/estherpoem00jerr/mode/2up?ref=ol&view=theater

Here is the book / Poem Esther by Jane Elizabeth Holmes, in pdf form and below it you'll find some background to the poem and also Jane's family history.
 

This is a link to where the book Esther is located on Open Books

This is an article I wrote about the book Esther by Jane Elizabeth Homes for The Globe - The Journal of the Friends of the Stockton and Darlington Railway in 2022.



JANE ELIZABETH HOLMES 1838 – 1863 - ESTHER (Novel in Verse 1865)
POET, AUTHOR, GRANDDAUGHTER OF TIMOTHY HACKWORTH and UNACKNOWLEDGED FEMALE LAKELAND POET!)

By Trev Teasdel (This Article was Published in The Globe (The Journal of the Friends of the Stockton and Darlington Railway, Issue 19 December 2022)

The book is online and free to read here https://drive.google.com/.../11Dy4krVi2AI0UJ.../view

"Though Esther was as wild and free
As light wind sweeping o'er the lea,
Her mind had been improved with care,
And to its natural powers - as rare"

Extract from ‘Esther’ by Jane Elizabeth Holmes p22

Jane Elizabeth Holmes, a granddaughter to Timothy and Jane Hackworth, was often to be seen in Shildon where she lived for a while. Her story is sad and brief but not without literary honour, and although Jane doesn’t mention the railways in her literary work, she is an undiscovered Lakeland Poet writing at a time when women were overlooked as writers. Like the Lakeland literary set, she captures the rapidly changing times in her writing:

"Can English hearts be growing cold,
That now 'tis thought a fashion old,
Unfit for stirring times like these,
When bustling haste seems best to please.
" p33

Like Coleridge and Southey, she wasn’t born in the Lakes, but she was schooled in Penrith and her beautiful and intelligent epic poem Esther was set in Ullswater, around Aria Falls and Lyulph Tower where Wordsworth found inspiration for both Daffodils and The Somnambulist (The Sleepwalker), the latter which she references in her poem.

In the 1840’s, Prudence Nightingale (5th child of Timothy and Jane Hackworth) ran her own school in Penrith, a Seminary for Young Ladies - and it is here that Jane Elizabeth Holmes went to school from the age of 5 to 8. Pooley Bridge and Ullswater was only 5 miles from Penrith, and Jane captures the essence and natural detail of Ullswater in her later romantic epic.

Jane's mother was Elizabeth Hackworth, (the third child of Timothy and Jane Hackworth); she married Benjamin Holmes in 1837 and settled in Leeds where he was a linen merchant. The couple had four children and Jane was the eldest and the youngest was Samuel Holmes, an engineer, cousin and correspondent of Robert Young who wrote Timothy Hackworth -and the Locomotive.1 Her father died in 1847 from Phthisis (TB) and the family returned to Soho Cottage in Shildon to stay with Timothy Hackworth and his wife. Timothy died in 1850 and Jane in 1852 and so Elizabeth and family went to live with Prudence (who had to give up the school) and rented a farm in Heighington in Co Durham.

We are told that "Jane’s temper was naturally sweet and her manners gentle and graceful, adorned as they were by the higher excellences of Christian holiness which rendered her greatly endeared and universally beloved." Jane became seriously ill in 1854 when she was around 16 years old and a letter in the family archive says, "Leeches were applied to her temples and cat-collops 3 to the soles of her feet". She survived perhaps in spite of the treatment!

Jane finished Esther in 1861, two years before she died in 1863 age 24, nearly 25. It was left to the family to arrange for the work to be published by H.J. Tresidder in London in 1865.
The poem is a 124-page story of a fictitious young girl named Esther Stafford between the ages of 16 and 23. It is written in the style popular in the mid-19th century of a bard recounting the tale to preserve it and to spread its moral of 'don't let pride get in the way of love'. While fictitious, it is hard not to see parallels between Esther’s life and Jane’s given that both died tragically young, and perhaps the start date of Esther’s life at 16, the same age Jane was when she became dangerously ill, is also significant? A great talent lost, and who knows what she would have gone on to write had she lived a little longer.

John Wesley Hackworth’s signature at the front of his copy of Esther The copy of the poem belonging to John Wesley Hackworth, son of Timothy and Jane, found its way into the family archives via Joan Hackworth Weir. You can read Jane’s book Esther online for free via this PDF link provided by the University of California. It’s highly recommended! 4
I would also like to suggest that the Friends might consider republishing this now out of copyright book as a fundraiser, a celebration of this talented Hackworth lady, and as a cultural offering towards the 2025 Bicentenary. Just a thought!

Notes
1. You can read more about Samuel Holmes in Issue 11 of the Globe April 2020 in an entitled ‘A Washington
Monument to Timothy Hackworth in Shildon’ by Jane Hackworth – Young. (https://www.sdr1825.org.uk/.../11-The-Globe-April-2020.pdf)
2. Thanks to Jane Hackworth -Young for supplying a brief biography of Jane Elizabeth Holmes.
3. Cat’s collops are (apparently) small cuts of meat (like you would feed a cat).
4. https://archive.org/details/estherpoem00jerr/mode/2up...
Online versions of the book have been erroneously attributed to Mrs Jerram – a children’s author from
Nottingham whose maiden name was coincidentally Jane Elizabeth Holmes. This is confusing and I have
contacted The British Library about this, and they have changed the ‘name authority’ but it will be awhile before
they changed it online.
........................

Who Was Jane Elizabeth Holmes?
First a disclaimer: While sharing the same name, Jane Elizabeth Holmes, the author of Esther, was NOT Mrs Jerram! If you search the internet, the book Esther, Jane's name is associated with Mrs Jerram as author but it is an error. Mrs Jerram, whose maiden name was also Jane Elizabeth Holmes, published a book called The Children's own Story Book and Dialogues for Nursery in 1849 but not Esther. Esther was written by another Jane Elizabeth Holmes - a grand daughter of Timothy Hackworth. According to this  site https://nottinghamcityofliterature.com/blog/literary-locations-20-st-marys-church
Mrs Jerram was married in 1836 which is two years before the author of Esther was born! Also the author of Esther never married.

This is what the site says of Mrs. Jerram "Predominantly a children’s writer, Jane Jerram wrote under two names, her birth name Jane Elizabeth Holmes and Mrs Jerram. She was married at St Mary’s in 1836. Under the wing of the Nottingham writer Mary Howitt, Jerram wrote in the easiest language she could command “so that a child of three years old can understand it,” as she wrote in her introduction to her 1937 book The Child's Own Story Book; Or, Tales and Dialogues for the Nursery."

And no mention of Esther on that site! here is some biographical details of the author of Esther.

Jane Elizabeth Homes - Author of Esther Published 1865 (1838 - 1863)

Jane Hackworth-Young (descendent and researcher for the Timothy Hackworth

Museum at Shildon, Co Durham UK) has provided the following - 

Jane Elizabeth Holmes was the grand daughter of Timothy Hackworth, Superintendent of the Stockton and Darlington Railway and inventor and Locomotive engineer who built the Royal George.

Her mother was Elizabeth Hackworth, third child of Timothy Hackworth and she married Benjamin Holmes on the 8th November 1837 and they settled in Leeds where he was a Linen merchant. The couple had 4 children Jane Elizabeth (07.11. 1838 - 20.10. 1863). Ann (13.07.1841 - 08.12.1898), Mary (26.03. 1843 - not known) and Samuel Holmes 09.11.1845 - 1920).

Her father Benjamin Holmes died on 05.01.1847 from Phthisis (TB).

The little family then returned to Soho Cottage to stay with Timothy Hackworth and his wife Jane. Timothy died in 1850 and Jane in 1852 and so Elizabeth and the family went to live with Prudence (5th child of Timothy Hackworth). Prudence rented a farm in Heighington in Co Durham. 

Education - Prudence ran her own school in Penrith in the 1840's a Seminary for Young Ladies - the building is still there - and it is where Jane Elizabeth went to school - presumably from the age of 5 to about the age of 8 when her father died and they moved in with Timothy Hackworth. Elizabeth would have probably been familiar with the Pooley Bridge and Ullswater which is only some 4 or 5 miles from Penrith and this formed the background to her poem Esther. it is likely that she wrote the poem later though as the introduction to the book states that she finished the last lines of Esther two years before her death - about 1861 when she was 22 / 23. Prudence had to give up the school after her parents died and rented a farm at Heighington and brought Elizabeth and her children including Jane Elizabeth, to live with her. It's not hard to imagine that Prudence continued to have an education influence on Jane Elizabeth after the move.

In the introduction to the book it is written "Her school days were were passed in the neighbourhood of the English lakes where the scene of this poem is laid. Imagination ,emotion stirred, descriptive powers, tenderness and pathos and charmed with the purity of sentiment pervading the whole."

Jane Elizabeth became seriously ill in 1854 when she around 16 years old and a letter it says "Leeches were applied to her temples and cat-collops to the soles of her feet" She survived and she and her two sisters were full of fun and were known as the "three beautiful Miss Holmes".

I've no idea how long it took her to write it or if she revisited the location of the poem but it's clear it was written in her early 20's.

In terms of personality, we are told in the introduction that "her temper was naturally sweet and her manners gentle and graceful, adorned as they were by the higher excellences of Christian holiness which rendered her greatly endeared and universally beloved."

Jane Elizabeth never married. Jane's younger brother was Samuel Holmes who left for America, an engineer who wrote the proposed introduction to Robert Young's book on Timothy Hackworth which we have published on this site.

Below - Soho Cottage New Shildon where Timothy Hackworth and his wife lived.



Notes on Esther - The Poem 1865

The poem starts off rhythmically and descriptively but soon picks up and carries the story. Set mostly in Ullswater with references to Pooley Bridge and is largely set  by Aria Falls and Lyulph's Tower where Wordsworth gained the inspiration for Daffodils and The Somnambulist (or sleepwalker) and in fact Jane refers to Sir Eglamore from Wordsworth poem in her own. There is some good description of Penrith's history, in rhyme page 20-22. 

You can read more here http://www.ullswaterway.co.uk/somnambulist.html
and http://www.ullswaterway.co.uk/lyulphs-tower.html


Below Lyulph's Tower

Ullswater

Lyulph's Tower


Aira Force


John Wesley Hackworth's signature in his copy. Jane Elizabeth Holmes would be his niece. The cover of our copy is red not greem.