J. L. Eve Construction Explained
J. L. Eve Construction was a civil engineering company from south London.
History
The company was formed on 8 February 1930[1] by John Leonard Eve (3 February 1887 - 25 June 1954)[2] from Aveley in Essex. In 1924 he was appointed as the Chief Engineer for the river crossings of the Scottish area of the Central Electricity Board (CEB, which existed from 1926 to 1947). He worked with Robert Chandler-Brown. The CEGB came into existence in 1957. J.L. Eve left a son and a daughter.
Chain Home and National Grid
In the 1930s the company built steel-lattice towers for the new National Grid and for the Chain Home transmitters. The electrical cable was often supplied by Pirelli UK of Eastleigh in Hampshire (now Prysmian Group).
The Air Ministry had contacted the company to build two test radar transmitters, one on the south coast, and one on Orkney. After 1939, the company extended it to over fifty radar sites. It built the first part of the supergrid in 1952 from Tilbury to Elstree - with a 275kV voltage instead of 132kV and 136 ft instead of 85 ft, with 45 miles for the British Electricity Authority[3]
Ownership
From 1982 to 1988 it was known as Eve Construction. It would later be known as Eve Group plc from April 1988, then Eve Group Ltd and Babcock Networks Ltd from 2004. It was bought by the Peterhouse Group plc in January 2000.
Babcock Networks, its successor, is situated off the M1 at Sherwood Park at Annesley, next to E.ON UK; its training base is at the former RAF Newton in Nottinghamshire.
Sponsorship
From 1982 to 2000, it sponsored the Surrey Championship (cricket), being replaced by Castle Lager.
Structure
It was based at Minster House on Plough Lane in Tooting. It was based south of Summerstown on the B235, north of Haydons Road railway station (on the A218).
Divisions
Later divisions of Eve Group were:
Eve Transcom, comprised
- Eve Transmission - carried out construction and repair of transmission lines for the National Grid
- Eve Cellular - in late 1999, it had built over 7,000 mobile phone base stations throughout the 1990s
- Eve Engineering Design Services
- Eve Structures
Products
It built structural steel fabricated buildings or structures.
Transmitters
- Bilsdale transmitting station on the North York Moors
- Divis transmitting station (500 ft), carries television for eastern Northern Ireland in the mid-1950s
- Durris transmitting station; 38-year-old Thomas Sutherland of Blairgowrie died in its construction on 24 October 1966, falling 175 ft from 300 ft up the mast; the company had a regional office in Edinburgh[4]
- The original Emley Moor steel-tube mast, which collapsed on 19 March 1969.;[5] also built the 50-ton 180 ft top steel lattice, on the top of the current structure in December 1970[6]
- Meldrum transmitting station (500 ft) on Core Hill carries national radio in north-east Scotland, in the mid-1950s
- Selkirk transmitting station in 1961/62, which is 925 ft above sea level[7] [8]
- Skelton Transmitting Station, the tallest structure in the UK at 365 metres, and was built in the war for clandestine broadcasts, now a few miles west of the M6, north of Penrith
- Start Point transmitting station on the most southern point of the Devon coast, in the late 1930s
- Stockland Hill transmitting station, in the east of Devon, towards Dorset, for the IBA in 1961 for 405-line b/w television
- Tacolneston transmitting station for the new BBC East services; the site was known for many years first as the Norwich television transmitter[9]
- Woofferton transmitting station, at Woofferton in the south of Shropshire, on the Herefordshire boundary, important in clandestine broadcasts in the Second World War
Powerlines
See also
External links
Notes and References
- https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/company/00245626 Companies House
- https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/John_Leonard_Eve John Leonard Eve
- Times Tuesday 30 December 1952, page 2
- Aberdeen Press and Journal Thursday 12 January 1967, page 3
- http://tx.mb21.co.uk/emley/construction/emc-ise.pdf MB21 Emley Moor
- The Stage Thursday 3 December 1970, page 12
- The Stage Thursday 29 June 1961, page 10
- The Stage Thursday 9 November 1961, page 12
- Liverpool Echo Monday 14 March 1955, page 5
- Highways and Bridges and Engineering Works, Volume 23, 1955
- The Electrical Journal Vol 164, 1960
- The Engineer, Vol 195, 1953