James Weeks Szlumper

From Festipedia, hosted by the FR Heritage Group

Marker page for WHR Personality.

Also engineer for the Manchester & Milford Railway, 1864 to 1904

unedited material from Wikipedia

Sir James Weeks Szlumper JP DL PJGD (1834-1926-10-27), was an English civil engineer, who was Chief Engineer on a number of key railway engineering projects in the Victorian era.

Biography The son of Albert Szlumper a naturalised Pole of Liverpool, his half brother Alfred Weeks Szlumper (1858-1934), was also a railway engineer. James began his career with a London firm of engineers, and in 1853 was appointed surveyor to the county of Cardiganshire, a position in which he held for 25 years[1]. In this position, he was often in correspondence and conflict with the local land owners, particularly John Waddingham the then owner of the Hafod Estate[2]

Already a Justice of the Peace, in 1898 Szlumper became Sheriff of the County of Cardigan[3]


Railway engineer Szlumper had a dual career as a railway engineer, laying out some of key lines linking the major routes to the wider countryside of Wales and the West.

He started his railway career engineering parts of the London Underground in employment in London. When he took the job of Surveyor to the county of Cardiganshire, he also held the role of deputy engineer of the Manchester and Milford Railway, which never reached either of the locations in its title, being restricted to a line between Strata Florida and Pencader, Carmarthenshire[4]. However, he became good friends with the lines manager James Cholmeley Russell, and resultantly later became civil engineer to the North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways surveying and planning various extensions and on 2 November 1905 was elected a NWNGR director until he resigned between Directors reports of September 1910 and March 1911. Russell and Szlumper were two of the proposers of the Vale of Rheidol Light Railway from Aberystwyth to Devil's Bridge (originally proposed by the Manchester & Milford Railway), although Russell resigned from the VofR project in its infancy in 1899[4].

Szlumper later worked on project in the Montgomeryshire; the South Wales Valleys including the Barry Railway, the Vale of Glamorgan Railway and the Pontypridd Caerphilly and Newport Railway; and Devon including the Lynton and Barnstaple Railway.


West Wales railways On 1868-12-31, Szlumper was appointed Chief Engineer of the Whitland & Taf Vale Railway (W&TVR), having been recommended by business partner and Member of Parliament David Davies. The W&TVR was closely aligned to the Pembroke and Tenby Railway (P&TR), having a virtually common set of investors and board of directors. The P&TR also had close links to the Manchester & Milford Railway (M&MR), which ran over the Szlumper engineered metals of the Carmarthen and Cardigan Railway (C&CR) to connect to Carmarthen station

The W&TVR was driven by John Owen, the proprietor of some slate quarries near Gloque, and Szlumper agreed to see the construction of the railway for £50 per mile and £15 per mile for out of pocket expenses, and to deal with the preparation of all plans and sections for the necessary Parliamentary Bill. By 1868, Szlumper was engineer to the C&CR, M&MR, P&TR and the W&TVR.

After an accident with a through LNWR train to Tenby, Szlumper rebuilt the stations at Tenby and Pembroke, and extended the P&TR further into Pembroke Dock, to allow larger trains to access the line from 1870-08-03. The M&MR promoted the benefits of the P&TR to access Pembroke Dock to its customers in the Midlands, but the relationship only prospered for three years after the P&TR ceased working east of Whitland station over the Great Western metals, from 1872-07-31.

The board of the P&TR realised they needed to gain economies of scale, and so appointed the largest M&MR shareholder J.J.Barrow to their board on the 1871-08-31. Barrow needed the stable income and docks of the P&TR as his own M&MR was suffering financially through lack of traffic from the Midlands to Wales. Barrow appointed A.C.Sheriff to the board of the P&TR in May 1872, the former Traffic Manager of the Oxford Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway. Further developments had to wait until the formation of the P&TR and M&MR Joint Committee in 1879; but by this point the M&MR was totally insolvent and the GWR had developed its strength in West Wales.

On 1873-03-24 the W&TR opened to Glogue, and by October 1874 to Crymmych Arms. During the period 1859 to 1876, the P&TR had seen three different chairmen, two secretaries and three engineers. Due to the insolvency of the M&MR, in June 1879 the board joint board of company to investigate the costs of the railway. Szlumper was paid a salary of £150 per annum by the M&MR, and £80 for the P&TR. The board felt Szlumper had not fulfilled his duties properly, particularly after incorrectly engineering the M&MR junction at Pencader which was investigated by the Railway Inspectorate, and he was replaced by Lionel R. Woods formerly of the North Eastern Railway in December 1879[5]

The W&TVR extension to Cardigan was completed on 1886-08-31, after the GWR had taken over the joint companies in 1881[6]


Personal life Szlumper married Mary Culliford in 1867 and had one son and two daughters. The family lived at Sandmarsh, Aberystwyth. After Szlumper's retirement from the role of surveyor of Cardiganshire, the family moved to Holmesdale Road in Richmond, Surrey, where he became Mayor twice[7].

A Master Free Mason of the Jubilee Masters Lodge, No. 2712[8], his long term friends included Mary of Teck, the Queen Consort of George V[9].

Szlumper died on 1926-10-27 and is buried in Richmond Cemetery (Section O, grave number 2414)[7]


Projects engineered Barry Railway, 1884-1885 Carmarthen and Cardigan Railway London Underground Lynmouth and Minehead Light Railway, 1896-1898 Lynton and Barnstaple Railway Manchester and Milford Railway Pembroke and Tenby Railway Pethick and Vale of Glamorgan Railway, 1889-1901 Plymouth, Devonport and South Western Junction Railway Pontypridd Caerphilly and Newport Railway North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways Vale of Glamorgan Railway, 1894 Vale of Rheidol Light Railway Whitland & Taf Vale Railway As Szlumper helped plan various lines running from or attaching to/joining with the South Wales Railway, he left in his collection of papers complete Ordnance Survey maps from 1896, in continuous length, showing the proposed routes of the railways from London to Swansea and its connections, and the proposed railway from London to Cardiff and its connections[1]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Boyd J.I.C. - Narrow Gauge Railways In South Caernarvonshire, Volume 1, Oakwood Press 1988
Booker N. - Article in Festiniog Heritage Group Journal No 48, Winter 1996/7
The following refs were retrieved from the Wikipedia entry of Szlumper

  • Archives Network Wales - Szlumper Papers
  • GENUKI: Sheriffs of the County of Cardigan,from The History of Cardiganshire by S R Meyrick (1898 entry)
  • James Cholmeley Russell (1841 - 1912), biography from Martin Cowgill, no longer available online