Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,253 pages of information and 244,496 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Difference between revisions of "Atlas Engineering Co"

From Graces Guide
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1905 Atlas Engineering Co. Ltd was in liquidation; general meeting of the members at 5 Tulketh Street, Southport<ref>The London Gazette 6 June 1905</ref>
1905 Atlas Engineering Co. Ltd was in liquidation; general meeting of the members at 5 Tulketh Street, Southport<ref>The London Gazette 6 June 1905</ref>
1907 Advert: 'THE ATLAS ENGINEERING WORKS, LEVENSHULME. SALE BY AUCTION OF FIFTY MODERN MACHINE TOOLS. 20 Five-Ton HIGH-CLASS STEAM MOTOR WAGGONS. Three-Ton SPRING TRAILERS. One Four-Ton PETROL MOTOR WAGGON. About 60 Tons of WAGGON FITTINGS. PATTERNS AND DRAWINGS. See Catalogues. The Waggons will offered in the Afternoon.'<ref>Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser, 10 July 1907</ref>


1908 [[John Barnouin Rowcliffe]] was trading as [[Atlas Engineering Co (West Didsbury)|Atlas Engineering Co]] of West Didsbury.
1908 [[John Barnouin Rowcliffe]] was trading as [[Atlas Engineering Co (West Didsbury)|Atlas Engineering Co]] of West Didsbury.

Revision as of 07:59, 4 May 2020

1897.
1897.
1899.
1901.

Atlas Engineering Co, of The Atlas Tool Works, Levenshulme, Manchester.

1894 Universal Radial drilling Machine [1]

1897 Henry Jermy left the Partnership with John Barnouin Rowcliffe and Fred Rowcliffe carrying on business as Engineers and Tool Makers at Levenshulme Mill, Levenshulme under the style or firm of the Atlas Engineering Company[2]

1898 The Partnership formerly subsisting between John Barnouin Rowcliffe and Fred Rowcliffe, carrying on business as Engineers and Tool Makers at Levenshulme Mill, Levenshulme, near Manchester, under the style of the ATLAS ENGINEERING COMPANY, has been dissolved as from the nineteenth day of October 1898.[3]

1899 Atlas No. 12 milling machine described and illustrated in the American Machinist [4]

1900 Catalogue of machine tools [5]

1901 No 12 Universal Drilling Machine [6]

1905 EGM at the registered office of the Atlas Engineering Co, Virginia-street, Southport (not sure whether this was the same company), with A. Malam in the chair; agreement that the Company be wound up voluntarily[7]

1905 Atlas Engineering Co. Ltd was in liquidation; general meeting of the members at 5 Tulketh Street, Southport[8]

1907 Advert: 'THE ATLAS ENGINEERING WORKS, LEVENSHULME. SALE BY AUCTION OF FIFTY MODERN MACHINE TOOLS. 20 Five-Ton HIGH-CLASS STEAM MOTOR WAGGONS. Three-Ton SPRING TRAILERS. One Four-Ton PETROL MOTOR WAGGON. About 60 Tons of WAGGON FITTINGS. PATTERNS AND DRAWINGS. See Catalogues. The Waggons will offered in the Afternoon.'[9]

1908 John Barnouin Rowcliffe was trading as Atlas Engineering Co of West Didsbury.

Did this company then move to Leeds and/or Newcastle? See Atlas Engineering Co (of Leeds) and/or Atlas Engineering Co (of Newcastle upon Tyne)

See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. The Engineer of 23rd November 1894 p445
  2. London Gazette 23 Feb 1897
  3. The London Gazette 3 February 1905
  4. [1] American Machinist 31 Aug 1899
  5. The Engineer of 4th May 1900 p472
  6. Fielden’s Magazine Vol 4
  7. London Gazette 27 jan 1905
  8. The London Gazette 6 June 1905
  9. Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser, 10 July 1907