|
Date: |
|
Description: | PRN 43558
A good example of a small fen drainage installation. It is a simple rectangular brick building with cast iron window frames and slate roof, which contains a ?Boulton and Watt beam engine of 1855, which drives via a reduction gear, a cast iron scoop wheel with wooden blades. There is also a boiler by William Foster of Lincoln. The building was last used in 1940 and the chimney was felled in 1942. The condition of the equipment was good although the building (still with lined plaster walls inside) was suffering from neglect. {1}{3}
The first pump on this site was wind powered and begun in 1796, draining land in Tattershall and Tattershall Thorpe parishes. The wind powered pump was replaced by a beam engine in 1856. The beam engine operated until 1940 when it was replaced by a Ruston and Hornsby diesel engine, housed in an adjacent engine. A trust was established in 1973 to restore the steam engine and it fired up again in 1977. The engine was made by Bradley and Craven of Wakefield in 1855 to 1856 and is a low pressure double acting separate condenser engine of sixteen horse power (approximately). It is capable of lifting twenty five tons of water per minute via the scoop wheel. {2}
A survey of the pumping station buildings was carried out in 2001. {5}
For the full description and the legal address of this listed building please refer to the appropriate List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest. {6} | Subjects: | Building | Temporal: | 1796 - 1856 | Source: | Lincolnshire County Council | Identifier: | http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/Re... | Go to resource |
|
|