Classic Steam Trains
Classic Steam Trains
Classic Steam Trains
Xj~
zJ-flASj]
STCAM
'fslE
yjOXLD
This sumptuously
Colin Garratt,
to
show
illustrated
the rich
and
its
is
appearance
added an impetus
to
at the
dawn
the Industrial
all
was
Revolution, which
we now
live.
working
life
has
now
more
its
total
different
locomotives are
known
to
have existed,
to
be found
in
still
some more
offer
countries augmented by
many
an amazing
number
of other
far,
book
train
and
treasured long after the steam age has passed into oblivion.
TRANSPORTATION
MS
LIEN COUNT*
P.M&VS.MIMK
'
wlf
CLASSIC STEAM
TRAINS
STEAM SURVIVORS AROUND
THE WORLD
CLASSIC STEAM
TRAINS
STEAM SURVIVORS AROUND
THE WORLD
4/\
'fa
BE
AM
COLIN GARRATT
LORENZ BOOKS
This edition
Lorenz Books
is
is
www.lorenzbooks.com; infowanness.com
2000, 2003
MD
tel.
NSW
tel.
in
No
(09)
(09)
415 8892
may
A CIP catalogue
electronic, mechanical,
is
13579
10
8642
Artmedia
Contents
FOREWORD
INDUSTRIAL WORKHORSES
12
HEAVY HAULERS
20
FLEET OF FOOT
28
34
40
UNCONVENTIONAL DESIGNS
44
50
PRESERVATION
58
64
Foreword
THE END OF AN ERA
Sitting in the warm afternoon
sunshine in 1999 on the
grassy banks of India's last
steam
main line, between
Wankaner and Morbi, I found it
hard to believe that it was
nearly
fiftieth
over.
all
It
was
my
Left:
One
Railway.
Above.:
An
Mikado on
steam operation in India. The shed labourers empty the coal on to the
ground from the broad-gauge wagons and manually coal the metre
(3'A ft) gauge engines with wicker baskets.
FOREWORD
^H
the world and how, despite having travelled to some fifty countries,
the pictures I have taken are but a blink amid an infinity of
industrial legend.
That our lives are poorer for the passing of such treasures can
hardly be doubted. The disappearance of the steam train has helped
to produce an increasingly colourless and mundane world.
The decline in the significance of rail transport over the last fifty
years has been a massively retrograde step and, of course, another
factor in the disappearance of steam traction. Even if one were to
accept the argument that steam was uneconomic, how can greysuits
throughout the world justify spending countless billions of pounds
on road transportation, a system which is both socially and
Campos
state, Brazil.
FOREWORD
Above
Above: Blacksmith
at the
Sharp
FOREWORD
/,-
fff|
Above right: An
Italian
State
Below
right:
Italian
State
743 Class 2-8-0 No.
301, fitted with a Franco Crosti
boiler, heads the 10.50 goods
train from Pavia to Cremona
through Corteolono on 24 April
Railways
9 76.'
Above: One of
WG
the
in
Left:
ment
to
hastily
a
applied adornindustrial
Chinese
locomotive.
Below
rial service.
rest of
my
days.
Colin Garratt
Milepost 92'/2,
Newton Harcourt
Leicestershire
England
10
FOREWORD
FOREWORD
11
Industrial workhorses
COALFIELDS
The world's first steam locomotives were industrials employed in
British ironworks and collieries. As railways developed beyond
the confines of industry, larger locomotives quickly evolved
with separate types being developed for hauling goods and
passenger trains. industrial locomotives developed as a separate
entity; often hidden away amid the confines of large factories,
they were responsible for moving materials around the plants
and connecting with the main-line railway.
locomotives were used on British coalfields for almost oneand-three-quarter centuries. As early as 1812 an example
appeared in Yorkshire, and a few years later some of George
Stephenson's early locomotives were put to work at the historic
Northumberland coalfield. Coal and steam were the lifeblood of the
Industrial Revolution. During the 19th century, hundreds of
collieries were developed, most of which used steam traction to
convey coal to the main-line railway or to waterways or docks, and
as late as the early 1960s the National Coal Board were ordering new
locomotives. It seemed that the use of steam would last indefinitely
in Britain's coalfields. No one imagined that by the end of the
century not only would steam have vanished but the vast majority
Steam
collier}/.
Opposite:
as
Industrial
service
provides
illustration of
and
train
weights
Pennyveuie mine
sizes
Above
have
colliery
motive power
two centuries.
British
typical
Tank
Saddle
Ayrshire.
in
at
The
graphic
how wagon
of
INDUSTRIAL WORKHORSES
locomotive in a British
still
12
right: A
scene
Leicestershire.
typical
at
Like
so
British
Desford,
many
of
An
Gauteng
Afrikaner driver on
South Africa.
coalfield,
MW^MPHMm
'^vS;*^
>y'i
^^^^
r,
jft^B
I'^^l
-".Ttr^JJ b^
.
^Vi
B
^
i
ijrf*^
2v_;
N'il
ffSTWA
HU:
\^&&*l
Industrial workhorses
SUGAR PLANTATIONS
Many of the world's most interesting steam survivors are to be
found in sugar plantation service, notably in cuba, java, india
and the Philippines. Cuba is the last bastion of classic American
steam, while java, once part of the dutch east indies, has an
amazing variety of veterans from legendary german and dutch
builders. Steam survivors in India and the Philippines also reflect
their country's colonial past with british and american
locomotives respectively.
'- =
14
INDUSTRIAL WORKHORSES
Left top: A Hunslet 0-4-2ST hauls cane on the Trangkil Sugar system
in Java. This humble Saddle Tank left Hunslet's works in 1971 and was
the last of tens of thousands of steam locomotives exported from
Britain for service on railways
all
Left bottom: The cane yard at the sugar mill on the Philippine island
One of the company's Dragons, in the form of a 1924
Baldwin 0-6-2ST, acts as works shunter.
of Negros.
at
Pagottan
Mill, Java.
left.
INDUSTRIAL WORKHORSES
15
Industrial workhorses
IRON & STEEL
In 1803, Richard Trevithick, a Cornish mining engineer, built the
world's first steam locomotive at Coalbrookdale Ironworks. It
was not a success, but the following year trevithick produced a
locomotive to work on the pennydarren tramway in south wales
where the engine, taking the place of horses, drew a train of iron
from the works to the canal basin at merthyr, so beginning
steam's auspicious relationship with ironworks service.
iron and steel industry was one of the most demanding of the
The
Industrial Revolution. A vast amount of raw materials had to be
conveyed to, around and out of the complexes, and most establishments were reliant on railways. The dynamism of the complexes,
with their smouldering coke ovens and blast furnaces, was matched
by the locomotives as, spitting smoke, steam and fire, they threaded
their way through the shadowy, grime-laden structures.
As a general rule, six- or eight-wheeled tank engines predominated, especially when clearances between fabrication sheds
were restricted. Some complexes, such as Corby in the English
Midlands, were located on the ironstone bed, and the network of
railways ran deep into the surrounding countryside, bringing ore to
the complex. Corby's locomotives were divided between the mines
and the steel works, and operated from separate running sheds. A
similar situation exists today at Anshan, the iron and steel capital of
China, but there the ore is brought to the complex by a 15XX volt dc
electric circular railway from which branches radiate to the mines.
Interestingly, most of Anshan's fleet of electric locomotives are
much older than the thirty steam locomotives employed within the
complex. Anshan provides a dramatic example of railway operation;
at its height, the complex produced ever 13 million tonnes (tons) of
16
NDUSTRIAL WORKHORSES
make up
and machine
repair shops. Ninety per cent of the ore is locally mined. The other
ten per cent - a different grade for making specific types of steel - is
brought in by main-line railway. The steam locomotives also move
coal, scrap metals, limestone And magnesium in addition to the vast
range of materials needed to keep the complex in good repair.
Anshan continues to be active and this complex, along with others
in
UNITED
**
ATLAS WORKS,
19811903
rare
Anshan complex.
Opposite right: A Glasgow-built
Sharp Stewart 0-6-OST draws a rake
of steel bars at Cosim works near Sao
Paulo, Brazil.
Above
Above
right:
Turkey's
iron and
Karabuk in
coast,
down
with
in
its
full
number
I,
INDUSTRIAL WORKHORSES
17
Industrial workhorses
GOODS CARRIERS
The steam locomotive's pre-eminence as a mover of goods over the
one-and-three-quarter centuries of its existence meant that it
played a vital role in almost all industrial activities and, to this
day, it remains in industrial locations throughout the world,
albeit in ever-dwindling numbers. industrial engines often had a
life than their main-line relations, and some industrials
are in excess of one hundred years old.
longer
INDUSTRIAL WORKHORSES
Far leu: This standard 0-4-OST with 35 cm (14 in) diameter cylinders urns
Andrew Barclay of Kilmarnock, and was one of two identical engines
employed at Goldington power station south of Bedford. Both engines -were
built by
converted
to
The
Left:
(5 ft 6 in)
bum
oil.
Calcutta
gauge 0-6-2
Port
Trust
used
fleet
of
around
standard
the docks.
1.7
The class
totalled
1945.
Mitsubishi of japan.
Above: A 0.6 m (2 ft) gauge Bagnall 0-4-OST draws a rake of empty clay tubs
out ofLedo brick works on the coalfield in upper Assam, bound for the clay pit.
Right: One of the world's last steam-operated quarries was at Paso de los
Toros in Uruguay, where this 0.6 m (2 ft) gauge Orenstein ami Koppel
0-4-0WT -worked on a half-mile stretch of line for more than fifty years
bringing stone up to the main line for use as track ballast.
NBEHBHSHKaBeBNnEsEESreift
INDUSTRIAL WORKHORSES
19
Heavy haulers
SANKONG BRIDGE
Sankong Bridge
bridge
located between two yards, one of which
The
makes up the formations for the north-bound trains and the
is
Above
Above
forms
shunting movement.
right: Until the late 1980s, hump shunting at Harbin was done by
]F 2-8-2s. These are pure American Light Mikes. Although the last examples
were built in China as late as 1957, they are the descendants of engines delivered
Above
Opposite A China Rail-ways' standard JS Class 2-8-2 Mikado starts a heavy
south-bound freight out of Harbin amid winter temperatures of -30C.
:
from the American Locomotive Company in 1918 for the South Manchurian
Railway. Over 2,000 JFs -were built, but today only a handful remain.
20
HEAVY HAULERS
cA
> .._.--
Heavy haulers
ENGINES ON SHED
One
Left:
twiliglit
CWD
22
HEAVY HAULERS
r^x,^
^^^
^fl
^r~ ^^^^
k1
lv|
|t\
7I'
k.
\\
"
Left:
An
Wankaner,
r}
p^
i|
1
1/
(3
'Aft)
gauge
YG
Class 2-8-2
Mikado
at
washer, seen inside the smokebox, pauses between duties, having just shovelled
a prodigious quantity of char from the smokebox as part of preparing the
engine for
>
'
vv>5
-~- *
its
NEAR LEFT. Another Indian Railways YG 2-8-2 at Wankaner, with the boiler
wash-out in progress. High-powered water jets are coursed through the boiler,
and the tubes are manually scraped through inspection holes to prevent
chemical deposits from furring them up. If left unhealed, these deposits would
greatly impair the engine's steaming capability.
ififflfc&J*,*-
*f5Mi
HEAVY HAULERS
23
Heavy haulers
INDIAN GIANTS
India's magnificent XE Mikados were the most powerful conventional STEAM LOCOMOTIVES EVER TO WORK ON THE SUB-CONTINENT. THEY
were introduced on the 1.7 m (5 ft 6 in) broad-gauge lines, and
were one of the famous x series of standards which were the next
generation from the besa standards of 1903. the xes totalled 58
engines, built by william beardmore of dalmuir on the clyde, and
at the Vulcan Foundry, Newton-le-Willows, Lancashire, for
heavy coal hauls on the east india railway.
However,
this
24
HEAVY HAULERS
'-
*&*%&&**&?-**
>-.--
"P^'mik
-'A--
Above:
January 1989.
Left: XE No. 22523 heads a rake of empty wagons from Ghoradongri thermal
pozoer station to Indian Railways' exchange sidings.
It
and Manikpur colliery in Madhya Pradesh, until 1997, by which time it had
become the last large conventional British steam locomotive left in world
service. This photograph was taken in January 1997.
its Indian Railways number plate missing,
improvised alternative 'was adopted.
a leak
a hastily
to
have
HEAVY HAULERS
25
Heavy haulers
!
CLASSIC FORMS
The evolution of the freight locomotive was dictated by two
primary factors: firstly, the need for increasingly powerful
locomotives to work heavier trains as industries developed and,
secondly, as the 20'fh century dawned, to speed up heavy,
slow-moving trains which were clogging the railway networks. a
further demand for faster freight trains occurred once road
transportation became a threat from the 1920s onwards.
mm
ff^^^^irClw^^- ^
of the
One
was the
to 0-8-0
26
HEAVY HAULERS
Right:
wagons back
to the colliery at
is
the
mew
AWE
station.
TK3
2-8-
Below: A Russian
V Class 2-10-2 clearly reveals its American ancestry.
Introduced by the Voroshilovgrad works in 1952, building of these engines zvas
cut short by the decision to abandon steam.
I
HEAVY HAULERS
27
Fleet of foot
FLYERS
These days, steam trains may be regarded as an outdated, plodding FORM OF TRANSPORT, BUT A CENTURY AGO, THREE-FIGURE SPEEDS
were being reached. very few diesels the world over have bettered
steam's top speeds. Almost a hundred years ago, steam trains were
running between london and birmingham in two hours; this
could not be equalled by motorway or highway today, while in
1999 the fastest virgin electric train took one hour thirty
minutes - a gain of just thirty minutes in almost a hundred years.
of the
Mukden.
Right: A North Eastern Railway Zl Atlantic caught on film with
during the early years of the 20th century.
28
FLEET OF FOOT
km
the
monoplane
Fleet of foot
PACIFICS & MIKADOS
pacific will go down in history as the Golden Mean of express
engines. Its reign on the world's railways spanned one hundred
years, and some of the most striking and successful steam locoMOTIVE DESIGNS HAVE BEEN PACIFICS. It HAD A BEAUTIFUL WHEEL
arrangement when combined with large diameter driving wheels.
The
Streamlining added
many
Mikado
was primarily
30
FLEET OF FOOT
a freight
Opposite left: One of Indian Railways' last metre (3V4 ft) gauge YGs heads
Morbi to Wankaner train through the grassy, light-dappled cuttings near
Vaghasia.
FLEET OF FOOT
31
Fleet of foot
A
CENTURY OF EVOLUTION
The evolution of the steam locomotive was dictated by the
CONSTANT DEMAND FOR MORE POWER AND SPEED. In BRITAIN AND AREAS
of Europe, the 2-4-0, which emerged as the principal type of locomotive IN THE 1840S, QUICKLY GREW INTO THE 4-4-0 AND SUBSEQUENTLY
THE 4-6-0. The NEED for increasingly larger fireboxes produced, IN
turn, the Pacific and the Mikado. Traditionally, Pacifics hauled
the fastest expresses, while the passenger-designed Mikados were
ideal for heavy trains on less exacting schedules over routes
which were graded and had axle weight limitations.
32
FLEET OF FOOT
K^
Opposite left: This delightful 4-4-0 was built at Sharp Stewart's works
Glasgow in 1892 for working passenger trains over Brazil's metre (3'/4
gauge Mogiana Railway.
last
cylinder 4-4-0s
inside
the
in
ft)
elassie
express engines of late Victorian Britain - ended their days in the Pakistan
Punjab with the beautiful SPS Class which had 1.9 in (6 ft 2 in) diameter
driving wheels.
Above: The
built by the
last
XC
XB
in
Andhra Pradesh.
Far right: The Indonesian State Railways' B50 Class 2-4-0s were the last
examples of this early passenger wheel arrangement to survive. The first B50s
were built by Sharp Stewart in Manchester in 1880.
FLEET OF FOOT
33
Suburban
&
branch
BEFORE ELECTRIFICATION
eENTRALWOfti&HOPS
192 4
Suburban steam
34
Top
gauge 4-6-0.
a
former
Above
at
at
LMS
Oporto
Vrginmost on the
lid
*V
Ji
fiJ
Suburban
&
branch
BRANCH LINE ENGINES
Locomotives which were suitable for suburban operation were
often ideal for moving on to branch lines once the urban
networks had been electrified. other designs were built for both
purposes. Branch lines were also traditional haunts of downgraded MAIN-LINE ENGINES, WHICH HAD BECOME EITHER TOO OLD OR TOO
WEAK, OR BOTH, FOR THEIR ORIGINAL PURPOSE.
Some
Left:
A Burma
Local
and
safety
Above: The
LB&SCR
valves. Tliese engines were introduced in 1872 to cope with South London's
traffic.
Opposite above: Bullocks bring cotton to Pulgeon Mill as the morning pasto Arvi behind an Indian Railways 0.8 m (2 ft 6 in) gauge
Opposite below left: In a 1948 scene at Chesham, a former Great Central C13
4-4-2T operates the shuttle up the main line to Chalfont and Latimer.
Opposite below right: This CNL7 4-6-0, No. 767, pictured at Lockport Penua
on 13 October 1941, is equipped with a Wooten firebox for consuming
low-grade anthracite coal.
36
37
Suburban
&
branch
INDIAN BYWAYS
The Indian sub-continent was blessed with an incomparable network of branch and country railways. Many of the smaller
rural lines were 0.8 m (2 ft 6 in) gauge and were worked by an
incredible array of vintage locomotives, almost all of which
were British-built. These railways were the lifelines of many
rural communities and connected to longer distance metre
(3V4FT) or broad-gauge networks.
38
3
Opposite top: Cabside number plate of a metre (3 Aft) gauge Bombay Baroda
and Central India Railway P Class 4-6-0, built by Schwartzkopff in 1931.
Above
right:
Burdwan
to
in
3,
a 0.8 in (2 ft 6 in)
gauge
Right: Passengers waiting at Sorta station for train "643 down", which
Pulgaon for Arm daily at 08.00.
left
39
Top
(5
One
left:
ft
in)
of Argentina's 1.7
Stoke-on-Trent.
States
Army
Transportation Corps
Above
right: The
classified
Right:
XK2
An
number
USATC
War
II,
(USATC)
takes on water
World War
II
0-6-OTs,
by China Railways.
early French
Opposite: These hvo former Great Indian Peninsular Railway bankers were
pushing trains up the Ghats out of Bombay. They are seen here at the
Hindalco Aluminium smeller in Renukut. On the right is an 0-8-4T North
British of Glasgow 1920 and, left, a 2-8-4T North British of Glasgow, 1907.
built for
40
'
roll
other side and on into the sidings. Pushing heavy rakes of wagons
up a steep gradient was no task for four- or six-wheeled engines and
humpers in Britain were often 0-8-2 or 0-8-4, with ten- or twelvewheeled examples appearing in North America. Banking engines
Mx
42
"^
it
]
*:
;
;
>
>
'
Above: Asmara
loco shed
Breda 0-4-0 Well Tanks.
in Eritrea
with
Alco.
Left:
An
built
by
0-4-0 Camel
Baldwin's in
Reading Railroad,
on 7
May
is
Back shunter
1902 for the
seen at Rutherford
1939.
(1 ft 6
built
built
in
in)
between
1896 for
Brazil's 1.6
43
Unconventional designs
ARTICULATEDS
The Fairlie, Kitson Meyer and Garratt were articulated variants
from the conventional steam locomotive and were necessary where
relatively powerful engines were needed to haul heavy trains over
tracks which were tightly curved, steeply graded or lightly laid.
They operated in many parts of the world, especially the Garratt,
which was most associated with the rough terrain of africa, where
the world's last examples can still be found in service.
Robert
Fairlie patented a double-bogied, double boiler locomotive which became an important articulated type from its
conception in 1863 up to World War I. The majority of the engines
took the form of 0-4-4-OTs or 0-6-6-OTs. One advantage was a firebox
unrestricted by frames and wheels, but the amount of coal and
water which could be carried was limited, especially as the designs,
GMA
4-8-2+2-8-4
left: A brace of South African Railways' mighty
Garratts departs from City View with freight on 18 June 1974. The water tank
between the locomotives spreads the axle weight enabling these powerful
Above
engines
to
Above
Below
left:
Below right: The Fairlie was an early form of articulated. Some of the first
double Fairlie locomotives ivorked on the 0.6 m (lft ll'A in) gauge Ffestiniog
Railway in North Wales, the first ones appearing as early as 1869.
Opposite: The
on
44
last
UNCONVENTIONAL DESIGNS
its
days
at Taltal
(2 ft) to 1.7
(5 ft 6 in).
Unconventional designs
RARE SURVIVORS
The
loco-
high
The
Fireless
evolved
was
to
fulfil
in
"
46
-.
"''"
mm
UNCONVENTIONAL DESIGNS
it
ideal
for
surviving
o/f/ie world's
Sentinels
is
be
to
in
Company
on
the
Philippine island
of Negros.
Above
and
operated
Lartigue's monorail system which
vehicles
double-eugined
used
straddling a trestle rail. The system
Ballybunnion
Railway
Baldwin-built
right: A
0-4-0 Fireless of 1917 operates at
Bolivia Sugar Mill in Cuba.
Above
'HtlRf^;
'''-
of Rodley.
UNCONVENTIONAL DESIGNS
47
Unconventional designs
STEAM TRAMS
The Snowdon Mountain Railway, with its rack and pinion, made a
marked contrast to the steam brake engines which plied the santos
Jundiai in Brazil. The steam tram proper, though similar in
appearance, had a totally different function from either of these.
it was used to work around streets and docks. the steam railcar the forerunner of today's ubiquitous diesel multiple units - was
employed on branch lines and cross-country routes in the 1920s
AND 1930s.
Some
mountain and
hill
railways continue to
be steam worked, and
in recent years new
locomotives
have
been built for them.
Some systems, like
the Snowdon, have
used steam since the
lines were opened in
the last century. It is sad
that
the
unique steam
48
UNCONVENTIONAL DESIGNS
Opposite above: The historic 0.8 m (2 ft 7'/? in) gauge Snowdon Mountain
Railway in Wales opened in 1896. Here, locomotive No. 8 "Eryri", a 0-4-2T
built by Swiss Locomotive Works ofWinterthur in 1923, begins the steep climb
to
Clogwyn
station.
Opposite Leet: The last steam tram in the world to remain in service lingers at a
Paraguayan sugar mill. Built by Borsig of Berlin in 1910, the veteran originally
worked through the streets of Buenos Aries, the capital of neighbouring Argentina.
Above: A unique
Left:
One
the Sudan.
lies
in
UNCONVENTIONAL DESIGNS
49
and
introduced
0-6-0
in
0-4-0 was an
The
rapidly overtaken
early
by the
Right: This veteran 0-4-0 named "Mersey" works at Hathua Sugar Mill in
northern India, and is one of the world's oldest steam survivors, having been
built In/ Sharp Stewart in 1873.
50
this
a successful
WG
Left:
A China Railways
in a
compound
life
the network's
52
'
..i*?' ^We&^sLZ'.i*
.-
53
ON FOUR CONTINENTS
These pictures indicate the great diversity of mixed-traffic
engines, which embraced a wide range of wheel arrangements.
Many railways throughout the world operated mixed trains,
especially on secondary and branch lines, where schedules were
slow and the collection and setting down of freight wagons, plus
whatever shunting was necessary, was performed while the
passengers waited.
Left: This Belgian 2-6-0T, used for mixed-traffic work on secondary routes,
built In/ John Cockerill at Seraing, Belgium.
was
Above:
&
train.
train to
proceed
54
55
FAMOUS DESIGNS
The
test.
One
of
to the
56
moving parts of
British
Railways
principal mixed-traffic
(6 ft)
57
Preservation
SAVED FROM THE CUTTER'S TORCH
and America lead the world
Britain
di
exhibit at
Paterson
in
New
jersey -
is
a priun
Railway
58
PRESERVATION
is
probably the
It
was
LNER.
Opposite: The former Midland Railway roundhouse at Barrow Hill near Chesterfield featuring
standard Midland 0-6-0 shunting tanks along
with one of the ubiquitous 4F 0-6-0s and an
L&Y
Dock Tank.
Preservation
RESTORING THE ORIGINALS
Canada, Australia and South Africa all have thriving steam
PRESERVATION ORGANIZATIONS, COVERING A WIDE RANGE OF ENGINES. In
the third world, countries are more interested in looking
forward, and there is not the wherewithal to spend on preserving
the past. a few, such as slerra leone, have abandoned railways
altogether; others, such as ghana, have destroyed their steam
age virtually without trace. paradoxically, eritrea, one of the
world's poorest nations, is actively rebuilding its abandoned rail-
way
60
PRESERVATION
classic
American 4-4-0 in
mixed
the
form of Canadian
Opposite right: The magic of steam in South Africa is caught in tliis study of
double-headed Class 24 2-8-4 Berkshires departing from Miller with the Indian
Ocean Limited special on 28 April 1991.
to
mum
PRESERVATION
61
Preservation
BUILDING REPLICAS
One
of the most exciting aspects of contemporary railway preserIS THE BUILDING OF REPLICA LOCOMOTIVES TO COMPENSATE FOR
HISTORIC TYPES WHICH NO LONGER EXIST. ALTHOUGH THIS PRACTICE IS NOT
NEW, IT IS PLAYING AN INCREASINGLY BIG PART IN THE PRESERVATION
ethos. The building of a British LNER Al Class Pacific at
Darlington is by far the most advanced project to date, and has
captured the imagination of enthusiasts the world over. when
completed, the new al will act as an important catalyst for new
schemes which will bring both variety and vitality to the
preservation movement in general.
vation
62
PRESERVATION
the
rise
in
the
is seen here on its original track at the Ellicott City terminus of the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.
replica
Right: The 0.9 m (3 ft) gauge Isle of Man steam railway is a major attraction
on the island and one of the most -widely promoted preserved railways in the
world. The line operates with some of the original locomotives in the form of
2-4-0Ts, -which came from Beyer Peacock's works in Gorton, Manchester. The
example shown here is No. 4 "Loch", built in 1874.
PRESERVATION
63
Eritrea, 52,
34
Texas 2-10-4, 6
26,27
60
2-10-4, 6, 26
logging industry, 46
4-4-2T, 37
Germany, 36, 56
goods carriers, 18-19
iron
and
Australia, 60
54, 58
builders:
Armstrong Whitworth, 50
Baldwin,
restoration, 60-1
15, 43,
Mikado,
0-4-2ST, 15, 48
0-4-4-4-0, 26, 34,
52
Hunslet, 15, 19
Mikado WG 2-8-2, 52
Mikado YG 2-8-2, 6, 6,
0-6-2, 18
15, 17,
19
0-6-4T, 39
0-6-6-0,
9-10, 22, 30
Mikado XE,
42
0-8-0, 26,
25
Canada, 60
2-6-4, 34,
42
Virgin, 28
Wankaner-Morbi
line, India, 6,
Pacific replica, 62
Pacific
2-8-4, 41,
Stephenson, George, 12
"Locomotion," 58
Pacific "Mallard," 30
27
38,54
Cuba, 14-15, 47
36
63
54
2-6-2,8,16,34,52, 56
Burma, 36
36
8-10, 30-1
P2, 24
0-10-0,15,26,42
24,
8, 34,
24, 24-5
PI 2-10-0, 24
26
0-8-4T, 41
17, 32-3,
39,50
William Beardmore,
16-17, 20, 52
road transport,
12,56
0-6-2ST, 15, 42
Koppel,
51,59
Orenstein and
Garratt, 12,44,44
47
62
47
Forney engines, 34
39,42
6, 12,
Big Boys, 26
Fireless, 46,
19,40,40,43,50
Philippines, 14-15, 47
Atlantic, 29
Ledo, India, 18
locomotives:
0-4-0,
Paraguay, 49
Patagonia, 36
American Light
Mike JF 2-8-2, 20
0-4-0ST,
Bagnall, 18, 19
China,
55
Britain, 12, 16, 24, 26, 30, 32, 34, 42, 48,
Java, 14-15, 48
49
Brazil, 47,
North America,
4-8-0, 26
56
60
YP
4-6-2, 8-9
Picture Credits:
92'/> except those listed below:
Martin Pemble/ Milepost 92'/2 pages 2, 44tl, 45, 53, 60br; Lady Gretton page 12;
Ted Smart page 28; Arthur Mace/ Milepost 92M page 34t, 56r, rear jacket centre, end papers;
Ron Ziel pages 361, 37br, 43bl, 54tr, 601, 61 1; John R. Jones page 48t; Brian Soloman/ Milepost 92'/2 pages 58tr, 63tl;
Leon Oberg/Milepost 92'/2page 61br; Brian Burchell/Milepost 92V front jacket; Fred Kerr/ Milepost 92'/2page 59
STEAM
SIC AROUND
THE WORLD
IVORS FROM
documenting the
has pursued
last
To
some 50 hooks on
great
demand
He
travel.
theater
multi-vision presentation
Colin Garratt
library
photography and
railways,
is
also in
is
made
and photographers
12-projector
92 'A picture
kepn
to
home
and enable
equipment
in his
RS professional
his
photography: Canon
reversal film
and
work
is
help
to
to
be
lenses, Agfa
Gitzo tripods.
line.
50 years ago.
Lorhnz Books
an imprint of
Annkss Publishing Limited
Jacket printed
in
Singapore
J^>"
trains
from
*
Expert text describes the timeless beauty and magic of the steam
i
engine,
its
its
momentous
*as>
*''\yfllr;
SB
J|
/,
diversity,
it
is
alike.
ISBN 0-7548-1177-8