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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Newcastle firm British Engines celebrates its 100th anniversary

Inside British Engines' Cramlington facility(Image: British Engines)

When British Engines celebrated its 100th birthday with a party at the Sage Gateshead featuring soul singer Beverley Knight, and the Millennium Bridge lit up in the company’s colours, it was a rare public display from the firm.

While not quite the North East’s best kept secret – British Engines employs more than 1,200 people and is a major presence in the St Peter’s area of Newcastle, among other places – the firm is not one to seek publicity, let alone blow its trumpet. But not many companies can make it to the 100-year mark, and British Engines has done so with a return to profitability after some difficult years, and plans to create 100 new jobs.

As well as its sites in Newcastle’s east end, it also has engineering facilities in South Shields and Cramlington, plus a head office on the Quorum Business Park and a number of overseas offices.

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The company’s beginnings were certainly more modest, with brothers Charles and Harold Lamb – current chairman Alex Lamb’s grandfather and great uncle – setting up with just two employees and three machines to carry out machining work for local businesses. The name British Engines actually pre-dates the company by five years, having been acquired from an inventor whose design for a jet engine never came to fruition. (In all of its 100 years, despite that name, the company has never actually made engines).

Expansion at the firm was followed by tough times during the Great Depression, but the Second World War offered the chance to work with DeHavilland, Rolls Royce and the Ministry of War, supplying parts for engines that went in RAF planes such as the Hurricane and the Lancaster Bombers. The relationship with DeHavilland continued into peacetime, with British Engines becoming an important supplier for the DeHavilland Comet, the world’s first jet airliner.

Despite that success, it would be during the 1950s and ’60s that set British Engines on the way to the company it is today, largely through the work of Harold’s son Graham, who had served an apprenticeship at Vickers Armstrong, and Ron Dodd, who joined as a 15-year-old apprentice and would go on to become managing director. (His son Richard is now CEO).

The two men changed the nature of the company away from short-term sub-contracting to creating products of its own. This led to the establishment of BEL Vales, supplying ultra-high pressure valves firstly to the chemical industry on Teesside but also to the North Sea oil sector and coal mines. Cable company CMP and hydraulics firm Rotary Power followed (and are still a major part of the company today).