Ahistoric fire engine which was first used on the streets of Stamford in 1930 is being lovingly restored by a team of young engineering apprentices. Tucked away in a workshop at Cummins Generator Technologies, in Barnack Road, is a vehicle built by Merryweather & Sons of London.
Over the next two years, a team of 14 apprentices will spend every Thursday working on the fire engine, returning it to full working order.
It will then return to Burghley House, where it had been in storage, and will go on public display as an important part of the town’s heritage – and to inspire other young people to consider a career in engineering.
John Searle, 21, who is currently in the second year of a four-year apprenticeship, said: “Back in 2014, Burghley House approached Cummins and asked if the apprentices would be interested in restoring a 1957 Ransomes tractor which was totally rebuilt. That was so successful that, this year, Burghley asked if we would be take on a much bigger, more complex task.
“We arranged for the fire engine to be delivered to us on the back on a truck. Now it’s in the workshop we have begun the complex process of taking it apart, photographing and cataloguing all the parts and working out what needs fixing or replacing.”
The apprentices have been tasked with completing the work with limited supervision. They have spent hours researching Merryweather fire engines in the library and online, looking for information on their design and construction.
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