  
        
      English Electric
      
      The English Electric Company was formed in 1918 and, during that year and 
      1919, acquired control of Dick, Kerr & Co of Preston, England, Willans & 
      Robinson of Rugby , England, and the Phoenix Dynamo Manufacturing Company 
      of Bradford. It also purchased the Stafford Works of Siemens Bros. Dynamo 
      Works Ltd. Dick, Kerr had, in 1917, acquired the United Electric Car 
      Company makers of trams in Preston. As part of the reorganisation the 
      traction activities of the company were concentrated at Preston, 
      Lancashire and continued there until 1930 when the manufacture of 
      electrical equipment was transferred to Bradford, Yorkshire. Tramcars, bus 
      bodies and rolling stock were, however, retained at Preston.  
       
      By the late 1920s the company was in a parlous financial state and a 
      complex financial reorganisation, apparently backed by American 
      Westinghouse interests, was required to save the company. The man most 
      associated with the company, George Nelson, became managing director in 
      1930. During the 1930s the company became associated with the 
      electrification of the Southern Railway of England's system, which gave it 
      a strong position in the traction market.  
       
      English Electric made a substantial contribution to the British war effort 
      during the Second World War. It took over, in 1942, Napiers the 
      aero-engine company, and this helped establish the company's aircraft 
      division. As well as the company's traditional markets in heavy electrical 
      engineering, the post-war era saw developments in aircraft, along with the 
      railway traction business and a foray into domestic markets through the 
      acquisition of the Marconi Company in 1946. Further important companies 
      acquired in 1955 included Vulcan Foundry, and Robert Stephenson and 
      Hawthorns, all with substantial railway engineering pedigrees.  
       
      The early 1960s saw the company rationalise, under government pressure, 
      its aircraft division. This was to become part of the new British Aircraft 
      Corporation. In 1960 English Electric attempted a takeover of one of the 
      other major British electrical companies, GEC. This failed but the rest of 
      the decade saw the merger first of GEC with the British AEI company in 
      1967, and then in 1968, in the face of a bid for EE from the Plessey 
      Company, the takeover of English Electric by the new GEC conglomerate.
       
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