Peckett & Sons     Works No 2130 2 0-4-0ST

Peckett 2130 at the Northampton & Lamport Railway-February 2018..jpg

This is one of a pair of class W7 locomotives built by Peckett & Sons in 1951 for CWS Soap Works near Irlam. Both Works no 2130 and 2131 have been preserved. There they joined another Peckett locomotive Works No 1530 which was delivered to CWS in 1919 and which has also been preserved.

The CWS site had railway connections to the Cheshire Lines Committee railway which was the second-largest joint railway in Britain and served many major centres in the north including Liverpool and Manchester. The railway was also connected to the extensive Manchester Ship Canal Railway as well as having its own wharf.

CWS owned rolling stock as well as locomotives and for many years ran a twice-daily service for the work force to coincide with main line train arrivals and departures at Irlam station. The service used an ex-Midland Railways six-wheel carriage, hauled by a Peckett locomotive. The carriage has since been restored and is on display in York Railway Museum.

After the line at Irlam closed in 1966 2130 and 2131 were sold to work at Fort Dunlop in Birmingham where they became Dunlop No 6 and No 7.

The Dunlop Rubber Co. Ltd. established their works on a 40 acre site purchased from the Birmingham Tame and Rea District Drainage Board in 1916. A connection was made with the Midland Railway Birmingham to Derby Line at the east end of Bromford Bridge Station and several locomotives were employed to move the raw materials required for tyre manufacture and coal for the boiler plant.

There was no overall accommodation at any time for the locomotives here, just a canopy, and an attempt to build a shed in the 1960s was never completed! The Peckett arrived at the Erdington works from CWS Irlam in 1967 where it joined a Bagnall 0-4-0St (Works No 2648).

The company changed name to Dunlop Co Ltd in December 1966 and in 1985 the site was split up into the different organisational divisions and then disposed of.

Both locomotives worked at Fort Dunlop until they were disposed of in 1971 when they were bought by Mr A Hunt for preservation and moved to his mineral water factory at Hinckley for storage.

2130 then moved to the Battlefield Line at Shackerstone in December 1974. It was returned to steam there in January 2016 and in early 2018 it moved to the Northampton & Lamport Railway.

In the summer of 2020 the locomotive was reported to be at the Northamptonshire Ironstone Railway where it was undergoing an overhaul.

2130 at Fort Dunlop – 1970
Peckett 2130 at the Northampton & Lamport Railway-February 2018..jpg
2130 at the Northampton & Lamport Railway – February 2018.
2130 at the Northampton & Lamport Railway – August 2018

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