Yorkshire Post

Heavyweigh­t contest for an industry giant

Traction engines were the first workhorses of agricultur­e and haulage. David Behrens looks at rare pictures that tell their story.

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IT IS an industrial area still, but the mighty powerhouse­s that were its beating heart have given way to a workaday landscape of warehouses and workshops.

Leathley Road, inside the spider’s web of the one- way system and behind the Crown Point shopping centre, is less than a mile from the centre of Leeds yet it is a backwater.

But a century and a half ago, it stood as a symbol of Britain’s industrial might. More than 1,000 men turned up each day at the John Fowler factory alone.

Fowler was one of the great names of the traction engine era. These wheeled leviathans, evolved from the stationary steam engines of a generation earlier, were the workhorses of agricultur­e and haulage in an age before petrol, and Leeds was a centre of production.

John Fowler was an agricultur­al engineer from the West Country, who had seen the potential for mechanisat­ion after witnessing the effects of the potato famine in Ireland. His idea was to harness the power of steam to plough the farmers’ fields in straight lines, and by 1860 his Steam Plough Works was up and running, next to a locomotive plant off Leathley Road. The following year, Fowler trialled a steam plough that could scarify four acres in four hours.

He did not live to see his factory in its heyday. He suffered a nervous breakdown in 1864, and died not long afterwards. But his brother, Robert, took the business forward and it survived a string of mergers and acquisitio­ns that kept it going long after traction engines had retreated to a niche market. During the Second World War, it was making tanks for the Army, and production did not finally cease until 1974.

Meanwhile, other steam engines continued to be used well into the modern era. As late as the 1960s, steam- powered road rollers were being used to flatten sections of the M1.

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 ?? PICTURES: MAEERS/ FOX PHOTOS/ GETTY IMAGES ?? READY TO ROLL: From top, a steam roller on Rushcombe Hill in Gloucester­shire, May 1933; a steam traction engine with a broken rear axle in Pall Mall, London, November 1923; a traction engine pulling an all metal barge on the road to London, February 1936; Jonathan Minns delivers his Edwardian traction engine to Christie’s for auction, London, in July 1967. Ten- year- old Paul Walter, son of a Christie’s saleroom employee, travels as a passenger.
PICTURES: MAEERS/ FOX PHOTOS/ GETTY IMAGES READY TO ROLL: From top, a steam roller on Rushcombe Hill in Gloucester­shire, May 1933; a steam traction engine with a broken rear axle in Pall Mall, London, November 1923; a traction engine pulling an all metal barge on the road to London, February 1936; Jonathan Minns delivers his Edwardian traction engine to Christie’s for auction, London, in July 1967. Ten- year- old Paul Walter, son of a Christie’s saleroom employee, travels as a passenger.
 ?? PICTURES: TOPICAL PRESS AGENCY/ GETTY IMAGES ?? TAKING THE STRAIN: Top, a steam tractor belonging to the East Lancashire and Oldham Carrying Company, October 1906; Two women war workers driving a steam engine at a site for tank trials in Lincolnshi­re, March 1918.
PICTURES: TOPICAL PRESS AGENCY/ GETTY IMAGES TAKING THE STRAIN: Top, a steam tractor belonging to the East Lancashire and Oldham Carrying Company, October 1906; Two women war workers driving a steam engine at a site for tank trials in Lincolnshi­re, March 1918.
 ?? PICTURE: HULTON ARCHIVE/ GETTY IMAGES ?? REVOLUTION­ARY: Fowler’s steam plough, traction engine and windlass in use circa 1860. John Fowler set up his Steam Plough Works in Leeds and was one of the one of the great names of the traction engine era.
PICTURE: HULTON ARCHIVE/ GETTY IMAGES REVOLUTION­ARY: Fowler’s steam plough, traction engine and windlass in use circa 1860. John Fowler set up his Steam Plough Works in Leeds and was one of the one of the great names of the traction engine era.
 ?? PICTURE: TOPICAL PRESS AGENCY/ GETTY IMAGES ?? PULLING POWER: A steam traction engine drives a heavy load across a bridge, December 1915.
PICTURE: TOPICAL PRESS AGENCY/ GETTY IMAGES PULLING POWER: A steam traction engine drives a heavy load across a bridge, December 1915.

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