Doncaster, UK – 29 April 2026: Today the Gresley Society was delighted to welcome the Civic Mayor for the City of Doncaster, Councillor Tim Needham, and his mayoress to inspect the exhibition “Sir Nigel Gresley: 150 Years of Innovation, Speed and Elegance” at the Danum Gallery, Library and Museum in Doncaster, marking the 150th anniversary of the birth of Sir Nigel Gresley on 19 June 1876.
Running from 4 April to 30 May 2026, the exhibition “Sir Nigel Gresley: 150 Years of Innovation, Speed and Elegance” takes visitors on a comprehensive journey through the life and achievements of Britain’s foremost steam locomotive engineer. It explores his early apprenticeships at Crewe and Horwich Works, his rise through the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway, and his pivotal roles as Locomotive Engineer of the Great Northern Railway and later Chief Mechanical Engineer of the London & North Eastern Railway. Gresley designed nearly 1,300 locomotives across more than twenty classes, including the world-famous Flying Scotsman, Mallard – holder of the steam speed record at 126 mph – and Green Arrow, together with revolutionary articulated coaching stock and streamlined trains that brought luxury, comfort and high-speed glamour to Britain’s railways.
The display features key photographs and artefacts from the Gresley Society and the Doncaster Grammar School Railway Collection (DGSRC). It is enhanced by the Danum’s permanent Rail Heritage Centre, where two Doncaster-built locomotives take centre stage: Ivatt class C1 ‘Atlantic’ No. 251 and Gresley class V2 ‘Prarie’ Green Arrow, which celebrates its 90th anniversary in June 2026. Displayed alongside these locomotives are rare nameplates from Gresley classes A4 ‘Pacific’ Silver King, P2 ‘Mikado’ Cock o’ the North, B17 Doncaster Rovers and V4 ‘Prarie’ Bantam Cock from the DGSRC.
The exhibition forms a centrepiece of the Gresley Society’s year-long 150th anniversary celebrations, supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund. Part of the exhibition will become a permanent display in new ‘Gresley Cabinet’ in the Rail Heritage Centre.


