Tom Varley

Tom Varley
OccupationCaravan park operator
Known forPreserving steam wagons
SpouseSusan
ChildrenDavid, Terence, Catherine

Tom Varley was a collector, restorer and preserver of steam-powered road vehicles, known for the Tom Varley Collection, a steam museum mostly of steam wagons, "a lasting legacy of which [British steam road enthusiasts] can be proud".[1]

His business was in running Todber Caravan Park at Gisburn, in the high Pennines of Lancashire.[2] The steam museum was housed in a barn alongside the caravans.[3] The collection was best known from its frequent appearances at steam rallies through the 1970s and '80s. Varley's wagons were recognisable from their fine paintwork and signwriting, each named and prefixed Pendle ....

Six of his rarer, and often unique survivors, were re-imported from Australia before restoration.[4]

Tom Varley died December 12, 1990. His contribution to the preservation of steam vehicles in the UK has been widely recognised.[1]

  1. ^ a b Derek Rayner (2003). Steam Wagons. Shire. p. Foreword. ISBN 9780747805519. Dedicated to the late Tom Varley, whose personal devotion to the acquisition of rare and unique steam wagons – sometimes from far and distant lands – and their subsequent restoration has left British steam road enthusiasts a lasting legacy of which they can be proud.
  2. ^ "Memories of Gisburn".
  3. ^ "Glorious Gisburn". Old Glory (8): 11–12. May–June 1990.
  4. ^ "List of known exported engines" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 March 2011.