Vickers

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Image:Vickers Armstrong.png Image:Vickers Defense Systems.png Vickers, founded as the Vickers Company in 1828, was a British manufacturer, primarily of military equipment, traditionally based in Barrow-in-Furness. The name Vickers has lasted through until the 20th century, albeit by a series of takeovers and mergers.


Contents

History

Beginnings

Vickers was formed in Sheffield as a steel foundry in 1867. It began life making steel castings, though gradually acquired more businesses, branching out into various sectors. It bought out The Barrow Shipbuilding Company in 1897, also acquiring its subsidiary, the Maxim Nordenfelt Guns And Ammunitions Company [1]. This was followed by the purchase of the car building activities of the Wolseley Sheep-Shearing Machine Company which was set up as the Wolseley Tool and Motor Car Company. By the early twentieth century, Vickers was producing submarines (initially under license from the Holland Torpedo Boat Company, aircraft, battleships and guns, amongst other military equipment.

Vickers-Armstrong was born in 1927 when the company merged with Armstrong Whitworth, which had been formed as an engineering company on Tyneside by W. G. Armstrong. The firm had developed along similar lines to Vickers, expanding into various military sectors.

Corporate change

1955 saw the splitting of the company into three groups, including Vickers Aircraft and the company that would become Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering Ltd. The aircraft design and manufacturing parts of Vickers were merged with the Bristol, English Electric and Hunting aircraft firms into the British Aircraft Corporation in 1960.

Vickers acquired the Swedish ship engineering company Kamewa in 1986. The 1990s saw Vickers Shipbuilding enter a period of diversification, notably with the £340m ($609m) acquisition of Ulstein, the Norwegian shipbuilding group in December 1998.

Acquisition

Vickers was acquired by Rolls-Royce plc in 1999 for £576m ($1.03Bn.) The Vickers marine propulsion product range complemented the Rolls-Royce offering, transforming the group into the global leader in marine power systems.

In 2002 Vickers Defence Systems (which excluded the marine business) was bought by Alvis plc, and became its subsidiary, Alvis Vickers Ltd. In March 2004 the board of Alvis plc approved a £309m takeover bid by a direct competitor in the field of military vehicles, the American General Dynamics. However, on June 4, 2004, BAE Systems outbid the American company, offering £355m, following which the board withdrew its support for the General Dynamics bid. BAE Systems already owned almost 29% of Alvis Vickers. Its last minute bid was seen as a move to prevent a strong rival from gaining a significant foothold in its home market. Following regulatory and majority shareholder approval the BAE Systems offer was declared unconditional on 17th August.

In September 2004 BAE Systems announced the creation of BAE Systems Land Systems, a new company bringing together the BAE subsidiary RO Defence and Alvis Vickers.

Evolution

Although the company was split up in 1955, almost all of these disparate groups are parts of BAE Systems today.

Shipbuilding timeline of the Vickers name

  • 1897: Vickers & Sons bought The Barrow Shipbuilding Company Ltd and Maxim Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunitions Company to become 'Vickers Sons and Maxim Limited'
  • 1911: Name change of the company to Vickers Limited
  • 1927: after merger with Armstrongs, Vickers Armstrongs Limited
  • 1955: the shipbuilding side was called Vickers Armstrongs Shipbuilders & Vickers Armstrongs Engineers
  • 1968: Name change to Vickers Limited Shipbuilding Group
  • 1977: Vickers shipbuilding was nationalised as the Vickers Shipbuilding Group, a member Company of British Shipbuilders, by 1981 it was Vickers Shipbuilding & Engineering Limited, still nationalised.
  • 1986 Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering Ltd as a subsidiary of British Shipbuilders. From 1986 known as VSEL, by 1999 the name completely disappeared as part of BAE Systems joined again with the descendant of the original parent company.

Armaments

Small arms

Vickers manufactured and sold the Maxim machine gun forming a partnership with its inventor. From this they developed the Vickers machine gun which was the standard machine gun of the British Army and Empire and Commonwealth for some 50 years.

Tanks

The company was also known for its tank designs, starting with the widely used Vickers 6-Ton. It also produced the influential, if never actually produced, Independent A1E1 tank. One of the company's designs was the Valentine, produced in the thousands in World War II.

Recently, a tank carrying the Vickers' name is the British Challenger 2.

Aviation

Vickers (Aviation) Ltd acquired Supermarine in 1935, renaming it Supermarine Aviation Works (Vickers) Ltd. In 1938, it was then incorporated into Vickers-Armstrongs Ltd.

Airships

Vickers Sons and Maxim began work on a rigid airship for the British Admiralty in mid 1909 in a dock at Walney Island, Cumbria, sadly it disintegrated upon its second trip out of a floating hangar on the evening of 23 September, 1911. Further designs and difficulties followed although non-rigid machines including Sea Scouts (popularly called blimps) proved generally less troublesome than the larger rigid examples. Some models featured floating cars slung beneath them. Much experience in mooring techniques and swivelling motors was gathered despite the pressures of wartime. The last airship built at the Walney Island dock was a small non-rigid reconnaissance machine for the Japanese government that first flew on 27 April, 1921. A subsidiary called the Airship Guarantee Company Limited was formed under Sir Dennis Burney from 29 November 1923 (lasting until 30 November 1935) specifically to participate in the building of a massive six-engined commercial airship, the R100 in competition withe ill-fated R101. Their buildings were at Howden in Yorkshire. The R100 flew initially on 16 December, 1929 and achieved some trans-Atlantic flights before scrapping in November 1931 by Elton, Levy and Company.

Military aircraft

Vickers produced one of the first aircraft designed to carry a machine gun, the FB5 (fighting biplane) Gun Bus. It also built the first aircraft to cross the Atlantic Ocean non-stop, a converted World War I RAF Vickers Vimy bomber. (See 1919 in aviation.)

In 1928 Vickers Aviation took over Supermarine, later to be creators of the Spitfire.

In the interwar years, Vickers produced the Wellesley and Wellington, using Barnes Wallis geodetic construction ideas.

Civilian aircraft

Vickers was a pioneer in producing airliners, early examples being converted from Vimy bombers, and went on to manufacture the piston-engined Vickers VC.1 Viking airliner and Varsity military crew trainer, the Viscount and Vanguard turboprop airliners, and the stylish though noisy VC-10 jet airliner, which remains in RAF service as an aerial refuelling tanker. The Valiant V bomber was another Vickers design. The company later shifted its focus to military vehicles and weapons.

There is currently a move by the Campaign Against the Arms Trade to get the National Audit Office to investigate how Government money was used to help AV sell military products to Indonesia.

Other equipment

  • Marine diesel engines eg for S and T-class submarines during WW2
  • Sulzer diesel engines built under licence for railway diesel-electric locomotives.
  • Unique Flying wing aircraft depicted as an advanced Nazi airplane to transport the Ark of the Covenant in the movie "Raiders of the Lost Ark". The plane was transported from England to Tunisia for production of the film.

In fiction

The role of Vickers Armstrong in the Chaco War is parodied as Viking Arms Co. Limited in Tintin's comic-book The Broken Ear.

Notable Vickers products

Vickers vehicles

Vickers arms

Vickers ships

Vickers aircraft

Production in brackets ( )

See also


Lists of Aircraft | Aircraft manufacturers | Aircraft engines | Aircraft engine manufacturers

Airports | Airlines | Air forces | Aircraft weapons | Missiles | Timeline of aviation

References

  • Anon, Vickers, Sons and Maxim Limited: Their Works and Manufactures. (Reprinted from "Engineering") London (1898).
  • Scott, J.D. (1962). Vickers: A History. London: Weidenfield and Nicolson.
A picture of the firm as it was at the end of the 19th century, including numerous plates of the factories and products.

External links

pl:Vickers

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