After Wood's death in 1820, the company became
Fenton, Murray and Jackson. In 1824 the company supplied a 60
hp beam engine to the commissioners of
Deeping Fen as one of two erected at
Pode Hole. The other engine was supplied by the
Butterley Company as were the scoop wheels for both. Although the Butterley engine was purchased outright (for £3,300), it appears that the Fenton and Murray engine was not. The accounts for 1825 showed a payment of only £127/6/- for the Fenton engine. It was not uncommon for beam engines to be leased, purchased 'on terms', or paid for in other novel ways such as a share of the earnings. The engine was named
Kesteven and worked until 1925. From 1831, work began building engines to
Robert Stephenson's designs, both
2-2-0 "
Planets" and
2-2-2 "Patentees", many of them under subcontract. Many were exported, and twenty of
Daniel Gooch's
Firefly class for the
Great Western Railway. By 1840, they were turning out up to twenty engines a year. The company's name appears on cast iron bollards still in situ at
Victoria Lock (built 1843) on the
River Shannon in
Ireland as Fenton, Murray and Jackson Engineers of Leeds. However, by 1843, the boom was over and the company closed down. ==References==