, housing a 30-inch engine rod of engine at
London Museum of Water & Steam Several Cornish engines are preserved in England. The
London Museum of Water & Steam has the largest collection of Cornish engines in the world. At
Crofton Pumping Station, in
Wiltshire are two Cornish engines, one of which (the 1812
Boulton and Watt) is the "oldest working beam engine in the world still in its original engine house and capable of actually doing the job for which it was installed", that of pumping water to the summit pound of the
Kennet and Avon Canal. Two examples also survive at the
Cornish Mines and Engines museum on the site of
East Pool mine near the town of
Pool, Cornwall. Another example is at
Poldark Mine at Trenear, Cornwall – a Harvey of Hayle Cornish Beam Engine from about 1840–1850, originally employed at Bunny Tin Mine and later at Greensplat China Clay Pit, both near St Austell. It no longer works as a steam engine but is instead moved by a hydraulic mechanism. In use at Greensplat until 1959, it is the last Cornish engine to have worked commercially in Cornwall. It was moved to Poldark in 1972. The
Cruquius pumping station in the
Netherlands contains a Cornish engine with the largest
diameter cylinder ever built for a Cornish engine, at diameter. The engine, which was built by
Harvey & Co in
Hayle, Cornwall, has eight beams connected to the one
cylinder, each beam driving a single pump. The engine was restored to working order between 1985 and 2000, although it is now operated by an oil-filled hydraulic system, since restoration to steam operation was not viable. The 1879 pair of engines preserved at
Dalton Pumping Station in
County Durham were the only Cornish Engines designed to run on
superheated steam. One of the last Cornish engines to be built was installed at the
Dorothea Slate Quarry in 1904, where it remains within its engine house. The
Cornish Engines Preservation Committee, an early
industrial archaeology organisation, was formed in 1935 to preserve the
Levant winding engine. The committee was later renamed for
Richard Trevithick. They acquired another winding engine and two pumping engines. They publish a newsletter, a journal and many books on Cornish engines, the mining industry, engineers, and other industrial archaeological topics. ==See also==