BBC News
watch One-Minute World News
Last Updated: Thursday, 10 May 2007, 15:09 GMT 16:09 UK
Scrap steam engine to go on show
The steam engine
The engine would normally be belted up to a threshing machine
A 19th Century steam engine sold as scrap in the 1950s has been restored.

The rare engine was one of the first objects collected by the University of Reading's Museum of English Rural Life (Merl) when it was founded in 1951.

The 1877 single cylinder horse-drawn engine was bought from a farm near Banbury, Oxfordshire, for the scrap metal price of just £3 a tonne.

Recently restored over several months, the engine will go on show from 23 May at the London Road museum.

Roy Brigden, from Merl, said: "There are few steam engines left in original condition as many of them are privately owned and restored to full working order so they can be taken to steam rallies.

"This horse-driven steam engine represents a Victorian technology that was fast disappearing in the 1950s.

"When the museum took it into its collection, it was probably considered to be quite old-fashioned at the time, but its age and the fact that it is close to its original condition makes it even more rare today."

Once on show, the engine will be belted up to a threshing machine drum to demonstrate how it would have been used in a farm.




SEE ALSO
£11m revamp donors visit museum
14 Nov 05 |  Berkshire
Doors set to open on rural museum
30 Jun 05 |  Berkshire
Rural museum backers raise £11m
08 Apr 05 |  Berkshire
Rural museum selected for award
11 May 05 |  Berkshire
Country museum makes cash appeal
03 Aug 04 |  Berkshire

RELATED INTERNET LINKS
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites



FEATURES, VIEWS, ANALYSIS
Beijing told to mind its manners during Olympics
The hunt for the corpses of Mexico's 'disappeared'
Pope's visit brings pageantry - and public atonement

PRODUCTS & SERVICES

Americas Africa Europe Middle East South Asia Asia Pacific