NLR crane tank

NLR crane tank [1]
Type and origin
Power type Steam
Designer Sharp Stewart
Builder Sharp, Stewart & Co.
Serial number 1039
Build date 1858
Total produced 1
Rebuilder Bow Works
Rebuild date 1872
Specifications
Configuration:
  Whyte 0-4-2ST
Gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Driver dia. 3 ft 10 in (1.168 m)
Loco weight 32.30 long tons (32.82 t)
Fuel type Coal
Boiler pressure 120 psi (0.83 MPa)
Cylinders Two
Cylinder size 13 in × 17 in (330 mm × 432 mm)
Performance figures
Tractive effort 6,370 lbf (28.3 kN)
Career
Operators
Withdrawn 1951
Disposition Scrapped

The North London Railway crane tank was a 0-4-2ST steam locomotive crane tank type. Originally built in 1858 as a 0-4-0ST by Sharp Stewart and Company for the North and South Western Junction Railway.[2] It was quickly passed to the North London Railway (NLR) who numbered it 37; they renumbered it 29 in 1861 before placing it on the duplicate lst as 29A in 1872. The same year it was rebuilt into an 0-4-2ST with a steam crane carried by the trailing truck. It was subsequently inherited by the London and North Western Railway (LNWR) in January 1922, who allocated it the number 2896; and then in turn the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) in January 1923. The allocated it the number 7217, but it was June 1926 before it was applied.[2] The LMS placed it on the duplicate list as 27217 in February 1935 before it finally passed to British Railways in 1948. It was allocated the BR number 58865, and renumbered in March 1949. It was the oldest locomotive to be inherited by BR.[3] And when finally withdrawn in 1951, it was the oldest surviving standard gauge engine in service with British Railways. It was scrapped at Derby Works in February 1951.

References

  1. Ian Allan ABC of British Locomotives, 1948 edition, part 3, page 52
  2. 1 2 Baxter 1978, p. 54.
  3. Casserely & Asher 1961, pp. 79, 360.
  • Baxter, Bertram (1978). Baxter, David, ed. British Locomotive Catalogue 1825–1923, Volume 2A: London and North Western Railway and its constituent companies. Ashbourne, Derbyshire: Moorland Publishing Company. ISBN 0-903485-51-6.
  • Casserley, H.C.; Asher, L.L. (1961) [1955]. Locomotives of British Railways. Spring Books.

Further reading

  • Essery and Jenkinson An Illustrated History of LMS Locomotives Volume 2. Absorbed Pre-Group Classes Western and Central Divisions.
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