Rowland Emett 1906 - 1990 was a draughtsman, artist, cartoonist and most famously a creator of "things" as he called his fanciful machines.
During the 40's; 50's and 60's his work appeared regularly in Punch magazine. He was to become famous in the United States after a feature in Life magazine and many examples of his work are to be found in museums and institutes in that country. Many of his designs were for trains, often drawn by locomotives with odd names and exaggerated features. His Far Tottering and Oyster Creek Railway was re-created for the Festival of Britain of 1951. It continued to operate until 1975.
Many of Emett's designs were actually built and some of these machines work today. One famous creation is the clock in Nottingham's Victoria Centre.
William Heath Robinson 1872 - 1944 was also a cartoonist although his early work was that of a book illustrator.
The term "heath robinson" came to be used during the first world war to describe a makeshift device or repair. Like Emmet, Heath Robinson designed fanciful machines, often to conduct absurd operations such as rejuvinating stale scones or removing warts from the top of ones head. His work appeared in a varieety of magazines as well as being commissioned to illustrate advertising campaigns.
NAVIGATION
- Home
- Manchester in Colour
- High Peak In Colour
- The Village in Colour
- Sale of the Jodrell Estate
- Growing Up In Buxworth
- The Cope Family Ventures in Buxworth
- Stage Carriage
- A Victorian Heroine
- Bugsworth Tales
- The Extraordinary Parish of Taxal
- Errwood Hall
- Memories Of Furness Vale by Brian Fearon
- Our Village's Own Railway
- Journey To The Centre Of The Earth and Other Stories by Cliff Hill
- The Middleton Family
- Some Village Photographs
- The Railway Photography of J. Wallace Sutherland
- Furness Vale Station
- The Auxiliary Hospitals.
- Churches And Chapels
- The Bridges of Furness Vale and Whaley
- Mapping The Village
- Manchester and Derbyshire film scenes
- The History Society Bookshop
- A Postcard From High Peak
- Dr Allen's Casebook
- Some Dove Holes History
- OVER THE HIGH PEAK RAILWAY
- A Holiday Resort - Whaley Bridge and Taxal
- Reuben Wharmby of Furness Vale
- A Computer Generated Village
- East Cheshire Past and Present by J. P. Earwaker (1880)
- Horwich End Gasworks
- Gowhole Sidings
- The 1867 New Mills Train Crash
- The Murder of William Wood
- Waterside
- A Library of books
- Goytside Farm
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