1920s Locomotives.

1920s Locomotives.
Lord Nelson and Gladstone, May 1927..

Saturday 22 March 2014

111-145 Early locomotives, and in the works.





111. LSWR 446 Class 445, designed by Adams and built by Robert Stephenson & Co around 1883. Peter Smart says:  445 class number 446 at Basingstoke in May 1888 running as a Wordsell Von Borries compound. The cylinder in the view is the LP side and was 24" in diameter. Withdrawn and cut up around 1924. It was moved to the duplicate list around 1908 - the number would then be underlined and later become 0446. Express passenger, 12 were built. 7ft 1in driving wheels. Source:www.railuk.info.

 112. LSWR E298 on the duplicate list (note underlining) just into SR days. Class 298 (3 engines survived into BR). BR No. 30587. 1874 Beattie design, rebuilt by Adams, Urie and Maunsell over time. Survivers ended up in Wentford Bridge China Clay Works, Wadebridge. Now preserved on the Bodmin and Wensford Railway, http://bodminandwensfordrailway.co.uk.


113. The back simply says 'North Devon'. The Victorian engine is called not Greedy as I thought but Creedy. Peter Smart says, The name is Creedy not Greedy. This was a broad gauge Crewe Type loco built for the Exeter & Crediton Railway and delivered on the 16th June 1855. It lasted until April 1877. The photograph is probably taken at Barnstaple, perhaps in 1855.


114. LSWR 409, 330 class, withdrawn 1931. Seen here before it was placed on the duplicate list (i.e. pre-1911).

115. LSWR Vulcan, 0-4-0ST. Built August 1878 by Vulcan foundry and worked Bournemouth to Poole. Sold in 1924 to Taylor Tunnicliffe & Co of Stone, Staffs.


A different view of Vulcan. LSWR brass plate clearly visible. Alongside 278-A (duplicate list) of the Beattie 0-6-0 Class 273. Peter Smart: The Southampton Docks Co enjoyed a close working relationship with the LSWR until the Dock Co was purchased by the Railway in 1st November 1892. The Dock Co's 7 locos then became LSWR property. Vulcan was built by the Vulcan Foundry August 1878 and was given LSWR number 118 in December 1893, renumbered 111 in December 1899, 0111 in April 1904 and finally sold in February 1924.

Peter Smart. 

116. LSWR 457 and later (1920) 734, SR E734 Clausentum, 458 class (458 was Ironside).Peter Smart: Clausentum and Ironside were built by Hawthorn Leslie in July 1890. Clausentum, the Roman Name for Southampton, was numbered by the LSWR 457 in December 1892, became 0457 in May 1908, 734 in January 1914, E734 in March 1924, 734 in September 1936 and finally withdrawn in September 1945.



117. LSWR 345, Beattie 302 class, built by Beyer Peacock, withdrawn 1925. Seen here before placed on the duplicate list (i.e. pre-1911). Peter Smart says:  This is a Beyer Single framed goods built to the order of W.G. Beattie and delivered in August 1876. The loco retains the original Beyer raised firebox and was therefore taken before 1891 when it was rebuilt with Adams boiler. The large rectangular plate on the cab side records the date of construction and the lists the Beattie patents incorporated. Adams was appointed and joined the LSWR on 17th January 1878 and started fitting goods locos with steam brakes in 1881; 345 has brakes in this photograph.

118. LSWR 314, 0298 class. Here as on the duplicate list as 0314 in SR days.

119. A different view of E0314.

120. I tried and failed to read the name on the original, only to find it reproduced very clearly as Sultana. Any further details welcome. Peter Smart says:  Sultana. This is a Falcon class 2-4-0 Number 82, designed by Joseph Beattie and was delivered from Nine Elms Works in January 1866. The photo was taken at Notham in about 1880.


121. LSWR 464 with gleaming new paint.

122. 490

123. B4 Dock Engine  LSWR 176.

124. LSWR 273 - A. Beattie 0273 class with Drummond chimney. The -A designation of the duplicate list seems to have been added in the early 1920s, before the 0 prefix became the norm.

125. LSWR 273-A, of the 273 class, on the duplicate list. See 124.

126. LSWR 0278, 0-6-0. Another 0273 Class, this time with stovepipe chimney and 0 prefix.

127. LSWR 50, 46 Class 4-4-2

I assume that many of these works shots were from a bought collection - there is remarkably little activity going on!

128. This composite records the building of Class E14 LSWR 335 in 1907.



129. Peter Smart says: Photo 129 & 130 Drummond 4-6-0 number 335 under construction at Nine Elms in 1907. By December 1914 this engine had been rebuilt (cannibalised, even) into a Urie H15, of which there are pictures below. This frame has the chalkmark 'e14' visible.




130.

131. These seem to be devices for increasing water heating capacity, a Drummond water-tube firebox. Peter Smart: Photo 131. The is E14 4-6-0 number 335 nearing completion at Nine Elms in 1907.

A different view of E14 class, E225.



132. A shot earlier in its manufacture. Peter Smart: Photo 132 lower. The boiler of number 335 being built at Nine Elms in 1907 showing the headers for the firebox cross water tubes, note that these tubes were inclined so the front group on the other side were higher at the front where as in this view the rear group is higher.

133. E335 as a Class E14 when first displayed and photographed in 1907:


135. The same engine was rebuilt (or rather 'recycled') as a H15 in December 1914. This picture shows a superheater so may be a little later.

135. LSWR E335 as a Class H15 with superheater.

and in Southern days

136. This is a finished version of the water-tubes  firebox before 1912, when ithis LBSCR engine was converted back to the standard form. Photo archived by the Bluebell Railway. Peter Smart: The 4-4-0 is a LBSCR engine which has the Drummond type cross water tubes, presumably fitted under some patent agreement between the two railways. This loco had a much smaller boiler than 335! Geoff says: 'Bessborough' was a B4, and entered service with the Drummond water-tube firebox in June 1902. Head Code is Victoria and Brighton via Through Line (aka 'Quarry'). Date no later than June 1910 when the boards were simplified. 




137. With thanks from Peter Smart: Photos 137 and 138 are mock ups to show the differences between the Drummond water tube boiler and the standard fire tube boiler. In 137 holes can be seen for additional fire tubes in both the front tube plate and the firebox tube plate. Holes can also be seen in the firebox sides for the dross water tubes.


138.

139. 343 was a  Class K10. This is reproduced from a tiny picture from a montage.Peter Smart:  Photo 139. K10 number 343 fitted with the experimental water tube boiler shown in Photo 137. The K10 was new in December 1901 and built with this boiler. The loco was fitted with a standard fire tube boiler in December 1902 with the loco having completed a mere 4641 miles in the experimental form. The montage also contained photo 137. Question: is this the spark arrester behind the conical smokebox door?
Peter Smart says (many thanks): Stephen asked, is this the Drummond spark arrester behind a conical smoke box door? The layout certainly has some similarities but I think the baffles here are more to do with the water tube boiler which seems to have a very large free gas area. I have looked several times at the door and cannot make up my mind about it being conical. I tend to think it is not.

The full montage of the water-pipe boiler: numbers are difficult to read even with an eyeglass, but seem to be: top left 683 (date around 1897, note SWR and conical door, the only engine without the water tubes), top centre K10 343, top right Class L11 166, bottom left L11 409, bottom centre K10 343, and bottom right K10 395.

140. Wrecks... Peter Smart notes: L12 number 421 and Beyer Peacock double framed goods No 0351. At Nine Elms in the aftermath of the Salisbury accident on 30 June 1906. The top montage has two pictures of 421 working, with 5 crash aftermath pictures, including the three below.


141. The remains of LSWR L12 421.

421 from the other end

142. LSWR 0351 wreck from the Salisbury crash.

143. Peter Smart: I believe this to be the new Boiler Shop at Eastleigh Works.



144. Peter Smart:  This is a large shed and I think it may well be Eastleigh.



145. Peter Smart: . Beyer single framed goods number 303, built to the order of W.G.Beattie and delivered in July 1874. It was rebuilt by Adams in 1886, duplicated in December 1900 and withdrawn in November 1921. It would appear that the photo was taken before December 1900 (i.e before being on the duplicate list).

Sunday 16 March 2014

95-110. A curious roll of film 2.

Another batch - again, observations for captions gratefully received.
95. Now you see them, now you don't...  Two photos of 330, with human attendants, and without. I am told one has appeared in Steam World recently accredited to Rail Archive Stephenson.


96. Presumably:  98/30098 (but never wore BR number), Adams/Drummond Class B4 built Nine Elms 30.11.1893, withdrawn 1949, served in Southampton Docks. Thanks to http://www.railuk.info.

97. 102 Granville (30102), Class B4 Adams/Drummond as picture 96. Served mostly at Eastleigh Works. Withdrawn 30/9/1963 and sold to Butlins, Ayr for display. Bought by Bressingham in 1971 and preserved. It is pictured here around the 1920s or earlier.

98. LSWR 448 - Class P14. The number was taken by an N15 by 1944, Sir Tristram, one of the second batch of Arthurs which are said to have replaced G14s.  The original LSWR 448 was Adams Class 445, moved to the duplicate list around 1911 to be replaced with P14s (are these the same as G14?). P14s were withdrawn and broken up in 1925, a testament to their ineffectiveness. Peter Smart notes:  The P14 and G14 classes were similar with detail only differences, the earlier G14s (all built 1908,) were built at Nine Elms and the P14s at Eastleigh in 1910/11. 

99. LSWR 445 Class T14. Mostly the T14s worked on the Bournemouth and Salisbury routes. They were nicknamed 'Paddleboxes' or 'Paddleboats' because their wheel casings resembles a paddle steamer. These casings were generally an operational nuisance.

100. LSWR 449 Class P14. Peter Smart says: I think that this photo was taken long before scrapping in 1925.It is outside Eastleigh Works in December 1910 or early in January 1911.


101. LSWR 449.Peter Smart says: Photo 101 shows 449 after rebuilding with a superheated boiler and and was the only P14 so treated. It was this loco that was modified by Maunsell with cranks set at 135 degrees for the Lord Nelson tests. 

 102. LSWR 443 Class T14 when new, 1911-12.

103. LSWR 443 Class T14 again

104. LSWR 453 Class G14 when new. Peter Smart says:  Photo 104 &105, LSWR G14 number 453 at Nine Elms when first rolled out in shops grey with black and white lining for the official photographs as first of the class in April 1908.

105. LSWR 453 again. Five G14s were built in 1908, and all were substantially rebuilt to become the second batch of N15s, King Arthurs, bearing the same numbers.


106. T9 No. 773 on ceremonial duty. Geoff Smith says (thanks! I am so impressed!):
 I believe 773 is conveying Kitchener from Southampton to Waterloo after the South African War. Other specials conveyed Redvers Buller and Joseph Chamberlain, with an appropriately lettered disc below the chimney. Geoff continues: A C.H.Eden picture (in LSWR Album - Bradley - pub Ian Allen) of the Kitchener train at Southampton identifies the T9 as 773 and the date 12th July 1902 . He adds: 'The Times' of 14th July confirms the engine and says it "carried in front a portrait of Lord Kitchener surrounded by laurel leaves and surmounted with a capital 'K' in gold". Changed to a GWR engine at Basingstoke, thence to Paddington. Doesn't seem to have been reported in The Railway Magazine. The portrait can be clearly seen.


This card is also in the collection

and a close-up

107. LSWR 463, before a D15 took this number.

108. LSWR 463 as a Class D15. Peter Smart says:   The photo was taken at Nine Elms in March 1912 when the loco was first rolled out. It is in shops or photographic grey, fully lined out in black and white for it official photograph as the first of the D15 class.

108B. LSWR 463, again. Peter Smart:  D15 number 463 at Eastleigh after fitting of a superheated boiler in October 1916. Note the extended smoke box which is cylindrical and rests on a separate saddle.

109. LSWR 421 Class L12 decorated for a state visit. (Geoff Smith)


110. LSWR 464  D15 number 464 when first superheated in May 1915, photographed at Eastleigh in the Works yard.