train at
Abbey Station, Shrewsbury, behind an 1848 Bury, Curtis and Kennedy locomotive In 1842, Bury took Kennedy, Timothy Abraham Curtis and John Vernon as partners, and the company changed its name to
Bury, Curtis and Kennedy. Bury continued as Locomotive Superintendent of the London and Birmingham Railway but a few months after it had become part of the
London and North Western Railway he resigned in March 1847. In February 1848 he was appointed Locomotive Superintendent of the
Great Northern Railway, and in June 1849 became also its general manager. Meanwhile, the firm of Bury, Curtis & Kennedy continued building locomotives, some of advanced design which had a great influence on subsequent practice, such as the s for the L&NWR which led directly to the
Bloomers, as well as one-offs such as the gigantic
Crampton Liverpool for the L&NWR, the most powerful locomotive in the world in 1848. Six locomotives were built in 1848 for the LNWR (Southern Division) with 16 in. x 20 in. cylinders, 5 ft. driving wheels, and 3 ft. trailing wheels. ==Production==