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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Tees_Cottage_Pumping_Station
rdf:type
yago:Device103183080 geo:SpatialThing yago:WikicatPreservedStationarySteamEngines yago:Machine103699975 yago:PhysicalEntity100001930 dbo:Station yago:WikicatPreservedBeamEngines yago:External-combustionEngine103307573 yago:Engine103287733 yago:Whole100003553 yago:Motor103789946 yago:Instrumentality103575240 yago:HeatEngine103507963 yago:Artifact100021939 yago:Object100002684 yago:SteamEngine104309049
rdfs:label
Tees Cottage Pumping Station
rdfs:comment
Tees Cottage Pumping Station is a Victorian pumping station complex at Broken Scar on the A67 near Low Coniscliffe just west of Darlington. The site dates from 1849, and was built to provide drinking water for Darlington and the surrounding area. It is a scheduled monument housing two completely original pumping engines in fully working order: a 1904 beam engine, built by Teasdale Brothers of Darlington, which is still steamed using its original 1902 Lancashire boilers; and a rare 1914 two-cylinder gas internal-combustion engine, the largest such engine surviving in Europe. Both engines can be seen in operation on certain weekends through the year, using their original pumps to pump water from the River Tees.
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dbc:Preserved_beam_engines dbc:Buildings_and_structures_in_the_Borough_of_Darlington dbc:Water_supply_pumping_stations
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dbo:abstract
Tees Cottage Pumping Station is a Victorian pumping station complex at Broken Scar on the A67 near Low Coniscliffe just west of Darlington. The site dates from 1849, and was built to provide drinking water for Darlington and the surrounding area. It is a scheduled monument housing two completely original pumping engines in fully working order: a 1904 beam engine, built by Teasdale Brothers of Darlington, which is still steamed using its original 1902 Lancashire boilers; and a rare 1914 two-cylinder gas internal-combustion engine, the largest such engine surviving in Europe. Both engines can be seen in operation on certain weekends through the year, using their original pumps to pump water from the River Tees.
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