Age, Biography and Wiki

Alan Pegler was born on 16 April, 1920, is a British railway preservationist (1920–2012). Discover Alan Pegler's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 92 years old?

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Age 92 years old
Zodiac Sign Aries
Born 16 April, 1920
Birthday 16 April
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Date of death 2012
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Alan Pegler Height, Weight & Measurements

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Alan Pegler Net Worth

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Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Timeline

1920

Alan Francis Pegler OBE, FRSA (16 April 1920 – 18 March 2012) was a British businessman, entrepreneur, and railway preservationist.

Born in London on 16 April 1920, he was the great grandson of Alfred Pegler, founder of the Northern Rubber Company based in Retford, and son of Francis Egerton Pegler.

His mother, Enid, was the daughter of amateur golfer Frederick Schomberg Ireland, the subject of Bernard Darwin's book, Green Memories.

Raised in the Nottinghamshire village of Sutton cum Lound, he was educated at Hydneye House School, Sussex, and Radley College near Oxford.

His uncle was Stephen Pegler.

Pegler gained his Private Pilot Licence aged 17 at Radley, and spent much of his time chasing LNER expresses along the East Coast Main Line.

Accepted into Jesus College, Cambridge, to study law, the outbreak of World War II meant that he was instead commissioned into the Fleet Air Arm, training to fly Blackburn Skua fighter/dive-bombers.

However, a serious illness resulted in his being invalided out to join the Royal Observer Corps.

Upset at not being assigned to active duty, he applied to become an intelligence officer for the Royal Air Force, where he accepted that, as his Fleet Air Arm commission was not recognised, he would have to start again in the ranks.

By the end of World War II, he was again a commissioned officer in the RAF Photographic Recognition department.

Post-war, he was again accepted into Jesus College, Cambridge, but after a year his father became ill.

1921

Resultantly, he returned home to run the family business, Northern Rubber, having been made a director of the firm on his 21st birthday.

1950

He then became an underwriter at Lloyd's in the 1950s, from which he earned a reasonable fortune of his own.

1951

From 1951, Pegler began to run railway enthusiasts excursions, under the NRC banner.

In 1951, Pegler was approached by friends to buy and clear the outstanding debt on the derelict Ffestiniog Railway, which having opened in 1832 ran from the slate quarries at Blaenau Ffestiniog 13 mi to the seaport town of Porthmadog.

1954

Lent £3,000 by his father, he obtained control in June 1954, and was appointed the company's Chairman.

Preserved trains first ran over a short section in 1954, but after a diversion to avoid the new Ffestiniog Power Station reservoir, the line was fully reopened to passengers in 1982.

A few years later it was carrying 200,000 passengers, the second largest Welsh tourist attraction after Caernarvon Castle.

Many saw this as the result of Pegler's drive and ability to inspire others with his unquenchable enthusiasm for fulfilling his dream.

1955

Through these efforts in 1955 he was directly appointed by Sir Brian Robertson to the British Transport Commission's Eastern area board.

1959

As a result, in 1959 he was on the footplate of the LNER Class A4 Sir Nigel Gresley as it broke the postwar steam speed record by hitting 112 mph south of Grantham.

1961

In 1961, he received £70,000 for his share holding when Northern Rubber was sold to Pegler's Valves, a company started by his grandfather.

1962

In 1962, British Railways announced that they would scrap the Flying Scotsman.

A group called "Save Our Scotsman" were unable to raise the £3,000 scrap value of the locomotive that would prevent this.

Pegler stepped in and bought the locomotive outright, with the political support of Prime Minister Harold Wilson.

He spent the next few years spending large amounts of money having the locomotive restored at the Doncaster Works, and then persuaded the British Railways Board to let him run enthusiasts' specials.

The Flying Scotsman was at that time the only steam locomotive running on mainline British Railways.

1969

In 1969, Prime Minister Wilson agreed to support Pegler via the Trade Department, running the locomotive in the United States and Canada to support British exports.

To comply with American railway regulations, it was fitted with a cowcatcher, bell, buckeye couplers and an American-style chime whistle.

Starting in Boston, Massachusetts, the tour ran into immediate problems, with some states seeing the locomotive as a fire hazard, and thereby raising costs through the need for diesel-headed-haulage through them.

1970

However, the train ran from Boston to New York, Washington and Dallas in the first year; from Texas to Wisconsin and finishing in Montreal in 1970; and from Toronto to San Francisco in 1971: a total of 15400 mi. In 1970 Edward Heath's Conservative Party ousted Wilson's Labour government, and withdrew financial support from the tour, leading Pegler to fund the tour himself during 1970.

1971

Pegler worked his passage home from San Francisco to England on a P&O cruise ship in 1971, giving lectures about trains and travel.

1972

By the end of the Flying Scotsman tour in 1972, the money had run out and Pegler was declared bankrupt at a cost of £132,000 in debt, with the locomotive in storage in U.S. Army Sharpe Depot to keep it away from unpaid creditors.

Declared bankrupt in the High Court in 1972, he rented a room above a fish and chips shop opposite Paddington Station.

1973

In 1973, in a rescue mission, the Flying Scotsman was sold to rail enthusiast Sir William McAlpine, who returned it to the UK.

From 1973, Pegler was again employed by P&O for two seasons giving his popular lectures.

1974

He obtained a discharge from his bankruptcy in December 1974.

Pegler then took up acting, gaining his Equity trade union card by playing Henry VIII in a theatre restaurant in St Katharine Docks.

2012

Pegler, who remained fully involved with the railway until his death in 2012, was appointed OBE in the 2006 New Year Honours in recognition of his contribution.

Pegler first saw LNER Class A3 4472 Flying Scotsman in Wembley at the 1924 British Empire Exhibition.