London Hydraulic Power Company

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The London Hydraulic Power Company was established in 1883 to install a hydraulic power network in London. This expanded to cover most of central London at its peak, before being replaced by electricity, with the final pump house closing in 1977.

History

The company was set up by an Act of Parliament (the London Hydraulic Power Company Act 1884), sponsored by railway engineer Sir James Allport,[1][lower-alpha 1] to install a network of high-pressure cast iron water mains under London. It merged the Wharves and Warehouses Steam Power and Hydraulic Pressure Company, founded in 1871 by Edward B. Ellington, and the General Hydraulic Power Company, founded in 1882. The network gradually expanded to cover an area mostly north of the Thames from Hyde Park in the west to Docklands in the east.[3]

The system was used as a cleaner and more compact alternative to steam engines, to power workshop machinery, lifts, cranes, theatre machinery (including revolving stages at the London Palladium and the London Coliseum, safety curtains at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, the lifting mechanism for the cinema organ at the Leicester Square theatre and the complete Palm Court orchestra platform),[1] and the backup mechanism of Tower Bridge.[3] It was also used to supply fire hydrants, mostly those inside buildings. The water, pumped straight from the Thames, was heated in winter to prevent freezing.[1]

Pumping stations

File:Wapping Hydraulic Power Station 1.jpg
Wapping Hydraulic Power Station

The pressure was maintained at a nominal 800 pounds per square inch (5.5 MPa) by five hydraulic power stations, originally driven by coal-fired steam engines.[1] These were at:

Short-term storage was provided by hydraulic accumulators, which were large vertical pistons loaded with heavy weights.

The system pumped 6.5 million gallons of water each week in 1893; this grew to 32 million gallons in 1933. The mains crossed the River Thames via Vauxhall Bridge, Waterloo Bridge and Southwark Bridge and via the Rotherhithe Tunnel as well as the Tower Subway.[6]

Decline and acquisition

From about 1904, business began to decline as electric power became more popular. The company began to replace its steam engines with electric motors from 1923. At its peak, the network consisted of 180 miles (290 km) of pipes, and the total power output was about 7,000 horsepower (5.2 MW).

The system finally closed in June 1977. The company, as a UK statutory authority, had the legal right to dig up the public highways to install and maintain its pipe network. This made it attractive to Mercury Communications (a subsidiary of Cable & Wireless) who bought the company and used the pipes as telecommunications ducts.[3][7] Wapping Hydraulic Power Station, the last of the five to close, later became an arts centre and restaurant.

See also

References

  1. Some accounts incorrectly name him as Sir John Allport. Sir James had direct experience of hydraulic power, having deployed the technology to power cranes at Newcastle-upon-Tyne railway station.[2]
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