William McNaught (Rochdale)
William McNaught was a steam engine engineer from Rochdale, Lancashire, England.
McNaught was born in Manchester and apprenticed with a Mr Mills of Heywood, Bury. He then worked in London for John & Thomas Rennie before coming to Alexander Petrie & Son, around 1838.
McNaught became chief designer and superintendent at James Petrie's[1] and designed a cutoff gear for use on a stationary steam engine. This was patented by James Petrie in 1844.[2] Petrie started to build mill engines in 1819, McNaught joined in 1838 and remained until 1858, when he started his own company. Before this patent, there were problems with slide valves which suffered excessive wear. The Petrie and McNaught cutoff valves were circular with sloping faces that allowed a variable cut-off; they could be easily connected to the governor that McNaught patented in 1850.
In 1860 he left Petrie's to set up his own business building steam engines at the former Halstead's 'Union Foundry' at Wet Rake on Drake Street, Rochdale. He was so successful that by 1863 he had built the St George's Foundry on Crawford St. Rochdale. . When he retired in 1870, the firm was taken over by his sons John and William and became known as J&W McNaught. They later amalgamated with John Petrie becoming Petrie and McNaught.[3]
References
- Notes
- ↑ Link4Life Rochdale
- ↑ Hills 1993, p. 175
- ↑ Pickles 1979
- Bibliography
- Hills, Richard Leslie (1993), Power from Steam: A History of the Stationary Steam Engine (paperback ed.), Cambridge University Press, p. 244, ISBN 9780521458344, retrieved January 2009
- Pickles, Newton; Graham, Stanley (19 June 1979), "Lancashire Textile Project", Tape 79/AG/13 (Stanley Graham, Barnoldswick), retrieved 15 June 2010
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