John Lambie (engineer)

Scottish engineer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Lambie was a Scottish engineer. He was born in Saltcoats, Ayrshire, on 29 October 1833 and died in Glasgow on 1 February 1895.[1] He was Locomotive Superintendent of the Caledonian Railway from 1891 to 1895.[2]

Born(1833-10-29)29 October 1833
Died1 February 1895(1895-02-01) (aged 61)
DisciplineMechanical engineering
Quick facts Born, Died ...
John Lambie (engineer)
Born(1833-10-29)29 October 1833
Died1 February 1895(1895-02-01) (aged 61)
Engineering career
DisciplineMechanical engineering
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Career

John Lambie became Locomotive Superintendent of the Caledonian Railway on 1 April 1891. He came from a railway background as his father had been Traffic Manager of the Wishaw and Coltness Railway until it was absorbed by the Caledonian Railway in 1848.

Innovations

John Lambie improved conditions for enginemen by fitting cab doors, better handrails and footsteps to locomotives. He improved on Dugald Drummond's 4-4-0 design in 1894 and he introduced condensing steam locomotives of the 4-4-0T and 0-4-4T types for underground lines.

See also

References

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