Phoenix Foundry Explained

The Phoenix Foundry was a company that built steam locomotives and other industrial machinery in the city of Ballarat, Victoria, Australia. Over 30 years they built 352 locomotives for the Victorian Railways, of 38 different designs.[1]

History

The Phoenix Foundry was established in 1854 to build mining machinery and was incorporated as the Phoenix Foundry Co. Ltd. in 1870.[2]

The company was established by iron-founder William Shaw, moulder Robert Holden, and engine-smiths Richard Carter and George Threlfall. The business prospered, and by November 1861 it employed 96 men, producing a wide range of products. From around 1858 the employees were working an eight-hour day while doing as much work as English workers did in ten hours.[3] In 1871 Phoenix completed the locomotive named Governor Weld which was the first steam locomotive to operate in Western Australia. Also in August 1871 the foundry successfully tendered for the first Victorian Government railway locomotive contracts, with the first locomotive being delivered on 27 February 1873, and by 1884 over 350 men were employed. Modernisation of the works was carried out after Shaw visited Britain in 1871 and 1885, with the workshops becoming the most advanced in the southern hemisphere. The hundredth locomotive was completed in April 1883 and the two hundredth by October 1887. The majority of locomotives built were duplicates of imported 'pattern engines' designed and built overseas by other companies.[4]

Problems arose in 1889 when Shaw attempted to enforce a non-union shop, which resulted in conflict with the employees. Further trouble arose regarding the foundry's relationships with the Victorian Railways (VR), with a tender war erupting between Phoenix and the VR Newport Workshops for the construction of Dd class 4-6-0 light-line locomotives.[5] A Royal Commission was appointed in October 1904 to resolve the question of the 'real costs' of production. The Commission found in favour of Newport, which could produce a locomotive for £3,364 - some £497 cheaper than Phoenix's cost, and noted that Phoenix was making a 23 percent profit on each locomotive. Phoenix received no further orders from the VR beyond the seven members of the Dd class which were delivered in 1904. The works lasted another year until the directors entered voluntary liquidation.

Locomotives

Locomotives built by the Phoenix Foundry for the Victorian Railways included:[6] [7]

Engineering heritage award

The foundry received an Engineering Heritage Marker from Engineers Australia as part of its Engineering Heritage Recognition Program.[11]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Victorian Railways: Phoenix Foundry Locomotives. Museum Victoria. 2008-08-03.
  2. Web site: Phoenix Foundry Co Ltd - Australian Science at Work Corporate entry. www.austehc.unimelb.edu.au. 2008-08-02.
  3. Web site: Shaw, William Henry (1830 - 1896) . Australian Dictionary of Biography Online. Graeme Cope. www.adb.online.anu.edu.au. 2008-08-02.
  4. Book: Lee, Robert . The Railways of Victoria 1854-2004 . Melbourne University Publishing Ltd . 2007 . 978-0-522-85134-2 . 109.
  5. Book: Lee, Robert . The Railways of Victoria 1854-2004 . Melbourne University Publishing Ltd . 2007 . 978-0-522-85134-2 . 141.
  6. Book: 1981 . Power Parade . VicRail Public Relations . 0-7241-3323-2 .
  7. Book: 2002 . Steam Locomotives of the Victorian Railways - Volume 1: The First Fifty Years . Melbourne . ARHS . Cave, Buckland & Beardsell . 1-876677-38-4 .
  8. Cave, et al., p. 51
  9. Book: Oberg, Leon. Locomotives of Australia 1854-2007. Rosenberg Publishing. 2007 . 83–84 . 1-877058-54-8.
  10. Cave, et al., p. 202
  11. Web site: Phoenix Foundry, 1856 - 1906. Engineers Australia. 2020-05-07.