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Wikipedia

2-8-0

Under the Whyte notation for the classification of steam locomotives, 2-8-0 represents the wheel arrangement of two leading wheels on one axle, usually in a leading truck, eight powered and coupled driving wheels on four axles, and no trailing wheels. In the United States and elsewhere, this wheel arrangement is commonly known as a Consolidation, after the Lehigh and Mahanoy Railroad’s Consolidation, the name of the first 2-8-0.[1]

2-8-0 (Consolidation)
Front of locomotive at left
Lehigh and Mahanoy Railroad's Consolidation of 1866, the first 2-8-0 built
Equivalent classifications
UIC class1D, 1'D
French class140
Turkish class45
Swiss class4/5
Russian class1-4-0
First known tank engine version
First use1907
CountryGerman South West Africa
LocomotiveSouth West African 2-8-0T
RailwayLüderitzbucht Eisenbahn
DesignerOrenstein & Koppel
BuilderOrenstein & Koppel
First known tender engine version
First usec. 1864
CountryUnited States of America
RailwayPennsylvania Railroad
DesignerJohn P. Laird
BuilderJohn P. Laird
Evolved from0-8-0
Evolved to2-8-2
BenefitsBetter stability through curves
DrawbacksPoor steaming and limited speed.
First known "True type" version
First use1866
CountryUnited States of America
LocomotiveConsolidation
RailwayLehigh and Mahanoy Railroad
DesignerAlexander Mitchell
BuilderBaldwin Locomotive Works
Evolved from0-8-0
Evolved to2-8-2

The notation 2-8-0T indicates a tank locomotive of this wheel arrangement, the "T" suffix indicating a locomotive on which the water is carried in side-tanks mounted on the engine rather than in an attached tender.

The Consolidation represented a notable advance in locomotive power. After 1875, it became "the most popular type of freight locomotive in the United States and was built in greater quantities than any other single wheel arrangement."[2]

Overview

Of all the locomotive types that were created and experimented with in the 19th century, the 2-8-0 was a relative latecomer.[3]

The first locomotive of this wheel arrangement was possibly built by the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR). Like the first 2-6-0s, this first 2-8-0 had a leading axle that was rigidly attached to the locomotive's frame, rather than on a separate truck or bogie. To create this 2-8-0, PRR master mechanic John P. Laird modified an existing 0-8-0, the Bedford, between 1864 and 1865.

The 2-6-0 Mogul type, first created in the early 1860s, is often considered as the logical forerunner to the 2-8-0. However, a claim is made that the first true 2-8-0 engine evolved from the 0-8-0 and was ordered by the United States' Lehigh and Mahanoy Railroad, which named all its engines. The name given to the new locomotive was Consolidation, the name that was later almost globally adopted for the type. According to this viewpoint, the first 2-8-0 order by Lehigh dates to 1866 and antedates the adoption of the type by other railways and coal and mountain freight haulers.[3]

From its introduction in 1866 and well into the early 20th century, the 2-8-0 design was considered to be the ultimate heavy-freight locomotive. The 2-8-0's forte was starting and moving "impressive loads at unimpressive speeds" and its versatility gave the type its longevity. The practical limit of the design was reached in 1915, when it was realised that no further development was possible with a locomotive of this wheel arrangement.[3]

Usage

As in the United States, the 2-8-0 was also a popular type in Europe, again largely as a freight hauler. The type was also used in Australia, New Zealand, and Southern Africa.

Australia

The 2-8-0 locomotive was used extensively throughout Australia. It served on the 5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm) broad gauge, 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge and 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) narrow gauge and was employed mostly as a freight locomotive, although it was often also employed in passenger service in Victoria.[4]

The first Australian locomotive class with this wheel arrangement were the Queensland Railways C13 and C15, built as goods locomotives in 1879 by Baldwin Locomotive Works. Another lot of Consolidation engines consisted of 20 standard-gauge New South Wales Government Railways (NSWGR) J Class engines, which arrived from Baldwin Locomotive Works in 1891. The Js remained in service until 1915, when they were withdrawn. Wartime shortages between 1916 and 1920 had six engines re-entering service after being shopped and fitted with superheaters. The last engine of this class was finally withdrawn in 1934 and all were scrapped by 1937.[4]

The next batch of NSW 2-8-0 locomotives to appear, between 1896 and 1916, was the T class engines. The class was delivered from one local and several overseas builders, 151 locomotives from Beyer, Peacock & Company, 84 from North British Locomotive Company, 10 from Neilson & Company, 30 from Clyde Engineering in Australia, and five from Dübs & Company. During World War II, 14 of these locomotives were equipped with superheaters, which raised their tractive effort from 28,777 lbf (128.0 kN) to 33,557 lbf (149.3 kN).[4]

From 1899, the Victorian Railways (VR) also used a range of broad-gauge 2-8-0 locomotives.

  • The first of these locomotives were the Baldwin-built V class. These engines were built at Phoenix Foundry in Ballarat. By 1930, they had disappeared from the VR.
  • The VR's next type was the 26 C class engines, which saw freight and passenger service.
  • In 1922, a smaller and lighter 2-8-0, the K class, was introduced for branchline freight and later also passenger services.
  • Finally, the VR introduced sixty light 2-8-0 J class engines in 1954. These also worked both freight and passenger services.[4]

The first 2-8-0 engines in private service on the Midland Railway of Western Australia arrived in 1912. These were 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) gauge locomotives. The five in the class operated until 1958. All were gone by 1963.[4]

In 1912, some of the NSWGR T class types were also purchased by the private East Greta Railway, later to become the South Maitland Railway, but these were converted to 2-8-2 tank locomotives. The class proved to be successful throughout its long service life, until being retired from government revenue service in 1973.[4]

During 1916, Commonwealth Railways acquired eight K class for the Trans-Australian Railway.[4]

In 1924, a private coal company, J & A Brown in NSW, obtained three ex-British military Railway Operating Division ROD 2-8-0 locomotives. Brown later ordered another 10 of these locomotives, but only nine of that order arrived in Australia. The last was withdrawn in 1973.[4]

Belgium

To compensate for wartime losses, Belgian railways acquired 300 2-8-0 locomotives in 1946. They were built in North America, 160 by Montreal Locomotive Works in Canada, 60 by the Canadian Locomotive Company, and 80 by the American Locomotive Company in the United States. These machines proved to be very reliable and were used for mixed traffic until the end of the steam era, when number 29.013 hauled the last scheduled steam passenger train from Ath to Denderleeuw on 20 December 1966.[5]

This locomotive survived in preservation and is used on special excursions. On 16 December 2006, number 29.013 re-enacted the last 1966 run on the same route.[6]

Canada

 
CP N-2-c no. 3716 at Canyon View

The Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) N-2-a, b, and c class locomotives were a class of altogether 182 Consolidation type locomotives, built by Montreal Locomotive Works between 1912 and 1914. They were numbered in the range from 3600 to 3799 and were used almost everywhere around the system. The order for these engines came about when CP needed bigger locomotives for their mainline since their current engines were wearing out and were too small for the loads that were being hauled. Most of the class were converted to oil-firing in later years.[7][8]

One of the locomotives, No. 3716, is run and maintained in Summerland, BC as part of the Kettle Valley Steam Railway.[9][10]

Finland

Finland had five tender locomotive classes with a 2-8-0 wheel arrangement, the classes Tk1, Tk2, Tk3, Tv1, and Tv2. The class Tk1s were numbered from 271 to 290 and were nicknamed Amerikan Satikka.

 
Class Tk3 No. 1136 in special service from Kouvola to Kotka

The class Tk2s were numbered 407 to 426 and 457 to 470. They were nicknamed Satikka. Three were preserved, No. 407 at Närpes, No. 418 at Junction City, Oregon, in the United States, and No. 419 at Haapamäki. The class Tk3s were numbered 800 to 899, 1100 to 1118, and 1129 to 1170. They were built by Tampella, Lokomo, and Frichs. The class Tv1s were numbered 594 to 617, 685 to 741, 900 to 948, and 1200 to 1211. They were built by Tampella and were nicknamed Jumbo. Four were preserved, No. 609 at Haapamäki, No. 933 at the Veturi museum at Toijala, No. 940 at Lapinlahti and No. 943 at Ylivieska. The class Tv2s were numbered from 618 to 637. They were nicknamed Wilson. Only No. 618 was preserved, also at Haapamäki.

Finland had only one tank locomotive class with a 2-8-0 wheel arrangement, the class M1 consisting of one solitary locomotive numbered 66. It was not preserved.

Germany

The 2-8-0 wheel arrangement enjoyed a brief period of popularity in Germany during the era of the Länderbahnen or State Railways, from about 1840 to 1920, prior to the establishment after the First World War of the Deutsche Reichsbahn, the German National Railways. Under the Deutsche Reichsbahn-Gesellschaft (DRG) classification system, all 2-8-0 locomotives were assigned to class 56 (Baureihe or BR 56), with different types receiving subclassifications. The earliest type was the Prussian G73 of 1893.

Italy

In Italy, the state-controlled railways company Ferrovie dello Stato (FS), after comparing two models of 2-8-0 engine in 1906 (a simple-expansion [simplex] locomotive purchased from Baldwin and a compound type assembled by German and Italian builders) opted for a simplex 2-8-0 as basic power for its freight and mixed trains. Production of such locomotives, classified Gr. 740 in Italy, began in 1911 and stopped four years later when Italy entered the First World War.

Thereafter, Italian industry was devoted to producing military equipment, so FS bought locomotives from North American firms. From 1917 to 1922, American Locomotive Company and Montreal Locomotive Works built 400 2-8-0 locomotives for Italy but only 393 were delivered. The FS classified these engines as Gr. 735 and used them for freight and passenger services. After the war, the supply of Italian-built Gr. 740 resumed. Both Gr. 740 and Gr 735, very similar in performance, remained in service until the end of the 1960s.

Japan

 
JNR Class 9600 No. 9608, oldest surviving example of the class, on static display at Ome Railway Park.

The Baldwin supplied the first three 2-8-0 9000 Class [ja] locomotives for export to Japan in 1893, in use of Hokkaido Colliery and Railway Company, which were taken over Japanese Government Railway under Railway Nationalization Act of 1906.

Among several classes, most successful examples were 770 of JNR Class 9600, built from 1913 to 1926. Some independent shortlines had equivalent locomotives to 9600 both factory-new and secondhand from JNR, the last example was Yubari Colliery and Railway No. 21, built in 1941 by Kawasaki. Despite of obsolescence and early replacement by 2-8-2 D51, 9600s were still widely utilized thanks to high performance and appropriate route availability. The last example, No. 79602, kept longevity until March 1976, making the very final steam traction in service on JNR. No. 79602 was nearly preserved, however, sadly, subsequently destroyed by arson attack at Oiwake MPD.

New Zealand

Several 2-8-0 locomotives were supplied to New Zealand by the Baldwin Locomotive Works of Philadelphia in the United States. Six O Class locomotives were built for the New Zealand Railways in 1885.

The Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company, which operated the Wellington-Manawatu line, had four similar locomotives built by Baldwin, two in 1888, one in 1894 and one in 1896. The WMR locomotives of 1894 and 1896, No. 12 and No. 13, were Vauclain compound locomotives, the first in New Zealand and the first narrow-gauge compounds in the world. While standard gauge compounds usually had the low-pressure cylinder mounted below the high-pressure cylinder on each side, this was often reversed on narrow-gauge locomotives, which had the larger low-pressure cylinders mounted above the high-pressure cylinders to provide greater clearance at platforms.

In 1908, when the WMR was nationalized, these locomotives were classified into three NZR subclasses because of detail differences, the two 1888 locomotives as OB class, the 1894 locomotive as OA class, and the 1896 locomotive as OC class.

North Korea

The Korean State Railway have locally built 500-series (used by rubber recycling plant[11]) and 810 series Japanese built[12] narrow gauge (762mm) 2-8-0 locomotives. The 810 series was likely retired in 2006 and 500-series may still be operating.

Russia

In Russia, the 2-8-0 wheel arrangement was represented by the prerevolutionary Sch (Shuka-pike) class. These two-cylinder compound locomotives without superheaters were declared the standard Russian freight locomotive in 1912, but since they were relatively low-powered, they were only useful on easier lines without steep gradients such as the Saint Petersburg-Moscow route.

South Africa

Five 2-8-0 locomotive classes saw service in South Africa, all of them initially acquired by the Cape Government Railways (CGR), which classified all but two as 8th Class. All of them were variations on the same design, used saturated steam, and had cylinders with overhead slide valves, actuated by inside Stephenson valve gear.[13]

 
SAR Class 8X, circa 1930
  • In 1901 and 1902, the CGR placed 16 Consolidations in service. Designed by H.M. Beatty, chief locomotive superintendent of the CGR from 1896 to 1910, they were ordered from the Schenectady Locomotive Works in the United States and partly delivered by Schenectady in 1901, with the remainder delivered from the newly established American Locomotive Company in 1902. Conceived as mixed-traffic locomotives, they had bar frames and narrow fireboxes. In 1912, when these locomotives were assimilated into the South African Railways (SAR), they were designated Class 8X.[13][14][15][16]
  • In 1902, the CGR also placed a single experimental tandem compound Consolidation in service, based on its Schenectady/ALCO-built 8th Class. Delivered by ALCO in 1902, the locomotive was not classified and was simply referred to as the Tandem Compound. In 1912, it was designated Class Experimental 2 on the SAR.[13][14][15]
  • In 1903, the CGR received a second experimental tandem compound Consolidation from ALCO. It was similar to the earlier one, but with a larger fire grate and an increased heating surface which enhanced its steaming ability. It also remained unclassified and was also simply referred to as a Tandem Compound. In 1912, it was designated Class Experimental 3 on the SAR.[13][14][15]
  • Also in 1903, the CGR received four more Consolidations from Kitson and Company of Hunslet in Leeds. They were very similar to the earlier Schenectady and ALCO-built Consolidations, but with the boiler pitch raised by 2 in (51 mm). Coupled with a shallow firebox, this enabled the grate to be extended out sideways over the fourth set of drivers, resulting in a grate area of 30.9 sq ft (2.871 m2) compared to the 20 sq ft (1.858 m2) of the previous model. In 1912, they were designated Class 8Y on the SAR.[13][14][15]
  • In 1904, the CGR placed its last eight Consolidations in service. These were ordered from the North British Locomotive Company of Glasgow in Scotland and were very similar to the previous four Kitson-built locomotives, but slightly larger in boiler and firegrate area dimensions. In 1912, these eight were designated Class 8Z on the SAR.[13][14][15][17]

While subjecting the Consolidations to exhaustive testing on all types of traffic and under varying conditions, some trouble was experienced with the leading pony truck and it was dropped in favour of a four-wheeled bogie in later orders for more eighth class locomotives. All subsequent Cape eighth class locomotives were therefore built with a 4-8-0 Mastodon wheel arrangement.[13]

South West Africa

In 1907 and 1910, the Staatsbahn Keetmanshoop (Keetmanshoop State Railway) in German South West Africa placed 21 tank locomotives in service. After the first World War, when all railways in the territory came under the administration of the South African Railways in 1922, five locomotives of the batch of 1910 survived. They were not classified or renumbered, but were referred to as the eight-coupled tanks.[14][18]

In 1911, nine tender locomotives were placed in service by the Staatsbahn Lüderitzbucht-Keetmanshoop (Lüderitzbucht-Keetmanshoop State Railway). After the first World War, all nine locomotives came onto the roster of the SAR, where they were referred to as the eight-coupled tenders.[14][18]

Sweden

 
Swedish M3t Steam Turbine Locomotive

The unusual M3t Turbine Steam Locomotive was of this type but also the E2 class and a number of other freight class locomotives where of this type in Sweden.

Turkey

 
Turkish 8F at the National Railway Museum, Shildon, England

Turkey was a neutral country during the Second World War and to retain Turkish goodwill, Great Britain supplied several locomotives to the Turkish Railways, where they were classified 8F.

Two of these 8F class locomotives were brought back from Turkey early in 2011 and one of them is on display at the National Railway Museum in Shildon, England.

United Kingdom

The 2-8-0 gradually became the standard heavy-freight steam locomotive type in the United Kingdom during the first half of the 20th century, largely replacing the 0-6-0 which had been used in that role since the mid 19th century. The first 2-8-0 to be built in Britain was the Great Western Railway's 2800 Class, with 84 locomotives built between 1903 and 1919, followed by a further 83 of the very similar GWR 2884 Class between 1938 and 1942. In 1904, George Whale of the London and North Western Railway (LNWR) began to rebuild some of his predecessor's Class B 0-8-0 compound locomotives to 2-8-0, classes E and F.

With coal trains increasing in size and scale, the GWR needed to develop a more powerful locomotive to meet these requirements, on what were relatively short haul routes. Thus in 1906, Chief Engineer G.J. Churchward took the basic design of his GWR 2800 Class, and adapted it. After proposing a 2-8-2T design, Churchward developed the UK's first 2-8-0 tank engine, the 4200 class.

 
Preserved GCR Class 8K

In 1911, John G. Robinson of the Great Central Railway (GCR) introduced his very successful GCR Class 8K for heavy freight. 129 of these were originally built by the GCR. During the First World War, the design was adopted by the Ministry of Munitions and it became the standard locomotive of the Railway Operating Division of the Royal Engineers as the ROD 2-8-0. Altogether, 521 of these ROD locomotives were built during the war. After the war, large numbers of these were purchased by the LNWR and GWR, while some were also sold to a private Australian coal company, J&A Brown in New South Wales. Altogether, 273 were purchased by the LNWR during the early 1920s.[4]

Other successful 2-8-0 designs were built in the UK. The classes O1 and O2 were introduced by Nigel Gresley of the Great Northern Railway in 1913 and 1918, respectively, and the Class 7F by Henry Fowler of the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway in 1914. Whilst most British 2-8-0 designs were intended for heavy freight, the GWR 4700 Class were designed for heavy mixed-traffic work, but were initially employed aminly on fast overnight freight trains; later they were used on express excursions in the summer.[19]

The most successful British 2-8-0 class was the Class 8F, designed in 1935 by William Stanier for the London Midland and Scottish Railway. By 1946, 852 had been built. During the Second World War, the War Department originally chose the class 8F as its standard freight locomotive, and large numbers of them saw service overseas, notably in the Middle East.

The class 8F was superseded after 1943 by the cheaper WD Austerity 2-8-0 for war service. A total of 935 of these were built and again, many saw service overseas.

United States

 
Pennsylvania Railroad Consolidation No. 2106, circa 1907
 
Baltimore & Ohio Consolidation No. 2300, circa 1907
 
USATC-S160 5740 locomotive
 
Drawings for Lake Superior and Ishpeming SC-1, circa 1916

In the United States, only a few railroads purchased Consolidation types when Baldwin Locomotive Works first introduced its version. Even the Baltimore & Ohio railroad, which eventually had nearly 180 2-8-0 locomotives in regular service by 1885, did not purchase any of this type until 1873. The Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburgh Railway, which eventually became part of B&O, purchased 15 of this type from Brooks Locomotive Works in 1883.[20]

The 2-8-0 design was given a major boost in 1875, when the Pennsylvania Railroad made it their standard freight locomotive, and 1875 was also when the Erie Railroad began replacing its 4-4-0s in freight service with 2-8-0s. The railroads had found that the 2-8-0 could move trains twice as heavy at half the cost of its predecessors. From a financial standpoint at the time, the choice of the 2-8-0 as new freight locomotive was therefore clear.[20]

The S160 Class of the United States Army Transportation Corps was built by American manufacturers and was designed for use in Europe for heavy freight work during the Second World War. A total of 2,120 of this class was built and they worked on railroads across the world. Production of the 2-8-0 type in the United States totalled more than 23,000 locomotives, of which 12,000 were export versions.[21]

Preservation

Great Northern Railway Consolidation No. 1147 is on display in a park in Wenatchee, Washington.

Great Northern Railway Consolidation No. 1246 is in storage in southern Oregon.

Maine Central class W 2-8-0 locomotives numbered 501 and 519 were officially property of the European and North American Railway (E&NA) as a condition of the lease of that company by the Maine Central Railroad. While all other Maine Central steam locomotives were scrapped when replaced by diesel locomotives, these two survived as a lease obligation until Maine Central purchased E&NA in 1955. The advantages of preservation were recognized by that date, so No. 501 is awaiting restoration to operating condition at the Conway Scenic Railroad and No. 519 was on display at the Steamtown National Historic Site.[22]

Southern Pacific No. 895, a 2-8-0 Consolidation locomotive built by ALCO in 1913 is on static display at Roseland Park in Baytown, Texas. SP No. 895 was retired after 44 years of service and donated by Southern Pacific Railroad to the Robert E. Lee High School Key Club, then towed on temporary tracks to its current location at Roseland Park in April, 1957.

Baltimore & Ohio No. 545 "A.J Cromwell", built in 1888, is preserved at the B&O Railroad Museum in Baltimore, Maryland.

 
Southern Pacific's no. 2562

The Southern Pacific Railroad's locomotive no. SP 2562 was built by the Baldwin Locomotive Works in 1909, serial No. 29064. It is on exhibit in the Arizona Railway Museum in Chandler, Arizona. The locomotive and its tender are listed in the National Register of Historic Places, reference No. 09000511.

The Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railroad's class 759 locomotive No. 761 was built around 1890. When active, it was used on the railroad's mainline between Chicago and the west. No. 761 is plinthed next to the historic Wickenburg, Arizona, train depot that is now the town's visitor center.

Santa Fe class 769 locomotive 769 is currently on static display in Madrid, New Mexico, but is awaiting a future restoration to run on the Santa Fe Southern Railway.[23]

The Colorado & Southern (C&S) narrow-gauge No. 60 is on display in Idaho Springs, Colorado, while C&S No. 71 is in Central City, Colorado.

A Ks1 class 2-8-0, No. 630, is run and maintained in Chattanooga, Tennessee, by the Tennessee Valley Railroad Museum. In 2014, this locomotive participated in the Norfolk Southern 21st Century Steam program.

In 1962, the Arcade & Attica Railroad purchased an ALCO-build locomotive from the Boyne City Railroad in Michigan. The locomotive, now numbered 18, is billed as the last operating steam excursion in New York State.[24]

Three out of the four SC-1 hogs from the Lake Superior and Ishpeming survived being scrapped. Engine No. 33 has been restored by the Hocking Valley Scenic Railway, before being purchased by the Age of Steam Roundhouse in Sugarcreek, Ohio, where it operates today. Engine No. 35 has been on static display at the Illinois Railway Museum in Union, Illinois since 1985.

In 1991, the Western Maryland Scenic Railroad acquired SC-1 class No. 34. The locomotive was restored to operating condition and cosmetically changed to look like an original Western Maryland 2-8-0. The locomotive was renumbered 734 in honor, so to speak, of the H-7 (701-764) class of 2-8-0 that the Western Maryland harbored and of which none was preserved. Although, it also has an overall appearance of an H-8. As of 2020, Mountain Thunder, as No. 734 is nicknamed, is waiting for a 1,472 day boiler inspection.

In the late 1980s, four ex-LS&I 2-8-0s were purchased by the Grand Canyon Railway based in Williams, Arizona, Nos 18, 19, 20, and 29. Only 29 remains in Williams, undergoing its 1,472-day inspection, while 18 is undergoing a rebuild at the Colebrookdale Railroad in Boyertown Pennsylvania,[25] 19 is on static display in Frisco, Texas, and 20 is on static display in Allan, Texas.

Other preserved Ex-LS&I 2-8-0s include 21, which is being rebuilt in Baraboo, Wisconsin, 22, which is on static display at the Mid-Continent Railway Museum in North Freedom, Wisconsin, 23, which is being rebuilt at the Empire State Railway Museum in Phoenicia, New York, and 24, which is on static display at the National Railroad Museum in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

UPRR No. 561 is on static display along US Highway 81 in Columbus, NE.

UPRR No. 423 is on static display on 10th street in Gering, Ne.

UPRR No. 6072 is on static display at Wyman park in Fort Riley ks.

Baldwin Locomotive Works No. 40, built in December 1925 for the Lancaster and Chester Railroad in South Carolina, and later purchased by the Cliffside Railroad in North Carolina, now pulls scenic excursion trains at the New Hope and Ivyland Railroad in New Hope, Pennsylvania, which opened in August, 1966.

Great Western No. 60, built in August 1937 by the American Locomotive Company in Schenectady, New York, is currently operated on the Black River and Western Railroad in Ringoes, New Jersey. No. 60 originally operated on the Great Western Railway of Colorado.

Baldwin Steam Locomotive No. 1702, built in 1942 for the United States Army, was purchased by the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad (GSMR) of Bryson City, North Carolina, in the mid-1990s for use on its scenic railway excursions. After a decade of service, No. 1702 was retired in 2004. In October 2012, a partnership formed between GSMR and Swain County to provide funding to restore the locomotive. In 2013, a complete restoration was launched and the locomotive returned to service during summer 2016.

 
No. 29 on static display at the Grand Canyon Railway, 2015.

Pennsylvania Railroad 1187, of the class R, later H3, is on display at the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania. This class is described in detail in the book Set Up Running: The Life of a Pennsylvania Railroad Engineman 1904-1949.

The Valley Railroad in Connecticut has one 2-8-0, 97 built in 1923 by the American Locomotive Company’s Cooke Machine Works in Paterson, New Jersey for use in Cuba. It stayed at Cooke until its closure in 1926 and started service on the Birmingham and Southeastern Railroad in Alabama as 200. It ran various excursions on the Vermont Railway and New Haven Railroad in the late 1960s under a private owner. 97 arrived in Essex in 1970 initially operating between 1973 and 2010. It returned to service in October 2018.

Virginia & Truckee No. 29 is currently operational on the Virginia and Truckee Scenic Railroad

Two USATC General Pershing locomotives survive in the United States. Southern Pine Lumber Co. 28 is currently undergoing repair to run again at the Texas State Railroad in Palestine, Texas, and United States Army 101 is on static display at the National Railroad Museum in Green Bay, Wisconsin.[26]

References

  1. ^ White, John H. Jr. (1968). A history of the American locomotive; its development: 1830-1880. New York: Dover Publications, p. 65. ISBN 0-486-23818-0
  2. ^ White, John H. (1979). A History of the American Locomotive: Its Development, 1830-1880. New York: Dover Publications. p. 65. ISBN 0486238180. Retrieved 22 July 2019.
  3. ^ a b c Swengel, F.M. (1967). The American Steam Locomotive: Vol. 1, the Evolution of the Steam Locomotive. Davenport: Midwest Rail Publishing, pp. 16, 102, 134, 186.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Oberg, Leon. (1975). Locomotives of Australia. Sydney: Reed.
  5. ^ "40 jaar Einde stoomtractie". from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2007-12-23.
  6. ^ (Press release) (in Dutch). NMBS. 2003-06-11. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-02-23.
  7. ^ Lavallée, Omer (1985). Canadian Pacific Railway Diagrams and Data: Steam Locomotives. Vol. 1 (2nd ed.). West Hill, Ont.: Railfare Enterprises. pp. 45–46.
  8. ^ Doeksen, Corwin; Doeksen, Gerry (1991). Railways of the West Kootenay. Vol. 1. Montrose, B.C.: Doeksen. p. 56.
  9. ^ Kettle Valley Model Railway - Kettle Valley Consolidations Part 2 2016-10-02 at the Wayback Machine (Accessed on 22 October 2016)
  10. ^ Kettle Valley Model Railway - Kettle Valley Consolidations Part 3 2016-10-22 at the Wayback Machine (Accessed on 22 October 2016)
  11. ^ newslabmedia (15 January 2012). "North-Korean Steam locomotive 5 - Narrow gauge". from the original on 7 June 2014 – via YouTube.
  12. ^ Seiler, Bernd. "Last Steam in North Korea". www.farrail.net. from the original on 2014-09-23.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Holland, D.F. (1971). Steam Locomotives of the South African Railways. Vol. 1: 1859–1910 (1st ed.). Newton Abbott, England: David & Charles. pp. 61–68. ISBN 978-0-7153-5382-0.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g Paxton, Leith; Bourne, David (1985). Locomotives of the South African Railways (1st ed.). Cape Town: Struik. pp. 50, 82, 99, 149. ISBN 0869772112.
  15. ^ a b c d e Classification of S.A.R. Engines with Renumbering Lists, issued by the Chief Mechanical Engineer's Office, Pretoria, January 1912, pp. 9, 12, 15, 35-36 (Reprinted in April 1987 by SATS Museum, R.3125-6/9/11-1000)
  16. ^ South African Railways and Harbours Locomotive Diagram Book, 2’0" & 3’6" Gauge Steam Locomotives, p11, 15 August 1941, as amended
  17. ^ North British Locomotive Company works list, compiled by Austrian locomotive historian Bernhard Schmeiser
  18. ^ a b Dulez, Jean A. (2012). Railways of Southern Africa 150 Years (Commemorating One Hundred and Fifty Years of Railways on the Sub-Continent – Complete Motive Power Classifications and Famous Trains – 1860–2011) (1st ed.). Garden View, Johannesburg, South Africa: Vidrail Productions. p. 35. ISBN 9 780620 512282.
  19. ^ le Fleming, H.M. (February 1962). White, D.E. (ed.). The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway, part nine: Standard Two-Cylinder Classes. RCTS. p. J25. ISBN 0-901115-37-1. OCLC 655827210.
  20. ^ a b Kinert, Reed. (1962). Early American steam locomotives - 1st seven decades: 1830-1900. Seattle, WA: Superior Publishing Company.
  21. ^ American-Rails.com - The 2-8-0 Consolidation Type 2016-11-09 at the Wayback Machine (Accessed on 9 November 2016)
  22. ^ "Pictures of MEC 519" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2013-03-03.
  23. ^ "Parked up and abandoned: AT&SF No. 769". wearerailfans.com. Retrieved 2021-11-27.
  24. ^ "About Us". www.aarailroad.com. Retrieved 2018-12-06.
  25. ^ "Our Equipment". Colebrookdale Railroad. Retrieved 2021-11-27.
  26. ^ "US Army Transportation Corps 2-8-0 "Consolidation" Locomotives in the USA". www.steamlocomotive.com. Retrieved 2021-11-27.

under, whyte, notation, classification, steam, locomotives, represents, wheel, arrangement, leading, wheels, axle, usually, leading, truck, eight, powered, coupled, driving, wheels, four, axles, trailing, wheels, united, states, elsewhere, this, wheel, arrange. Under the Whyte notation for the classification of steam locomotives 2 8 0 represents the wheel arrangement of two leading wheels on one axle usually in a leading truck eight powered and coupled driving wheels on four axles and no trailing wheels In the United States and elsewhere this wheel arrangement is commonly known as a Consolidation after the Lehigh and Mahanoy Railroad s Consolidation the name of the first 2 8 0 1 2 8 0 Consolidation Front of locomotive at leftLehigh and Mahanoy Railroad s Consolidation of 1866 the first 2 8 0 builtEquivalent classificationsUIC class1D 1 DFrench class140Turkish class45Swiss class4 5Russian class1 4 0First known tank engine versionFirst use1907CountryGerman South West AfricaLocomotiveSouth West African 2 8 0TRailwayLuderitzbucht EisenbahnDesignerOrenstein amp KoppelBuilderOrenstein amp KoppelFirst known tender engine versionFirst usec 1864CountryUnited States of AmericaRailwayPennsylvania RailroadDesignerJohn P LairdBuilderJohn P LairdEvolved from0 8 0Evolved to2 8 2BenefitsBetter stability through curvesDrawbacksPoor steaming and limited speed First known True type versionFirst use1866CountryUnited States of AmericaLocomotiveConsolidationRailwayLehigh and Mahanoy RailroadDesignerAlexander MitchellBuilderBaldwin Locomotive WorksEvolved from0 8 0Evolved to2 8 2The notation 2 8 0T indicates a tank locomotive of this wheel arrangement the T suffix indicating a locomotive on which the water is carried in side tanks mounted on the engine rather than in an attached tender The Consolidation represented a notable advance in locomotive power After 1875 it became the most popular type of freight locomotive in the United States and was built in greater quantities than any other single wheel arrangement 2 Contents 1 Overview 2 Usage 2 1 Australia 2 2 Belgium 2 3 Canada 2 4 Finland 2 5 Germany 2 6 Italy 2 7 Japan 2 8 New Zealand 2 9 North Korea 2 10 Russia 2 11 South Africa 2 12 South West Africa 2 13 Sweden 2 14 Turkey 2 15 United Kingdom 2 16 United States 2 16 1 Preservation 3 ReferencesOverview EditOf all the locomotive types that were created and experimented with in the 19th century the 2 8 0 was a relative latecomer 3 The first locomotive of this wheel arrangement was possibly built by the Pennsylvania Railroad PRR Like the first 2 6 0s this first 2 8 0 had a leading axle that was rigidly attached to the locomotive s frame rather than on a separate truck or bogie To create this 2 8 0 PRR master mechanic John P Laird modified an existing 0 8 0 the Bedford between 1864 and 1865 The 2 6 0 Mogul type first created in the early 1860s is often considered as the logical forerunner to the 2 8 0 However a claim is made that the first true 2 8 0 engine evolved from the 0 8 0 and was ordered by the United States Lehigh and Mahanoy Railroad which named all its engines The name given to the new locomotive was Consolidation the name that was later almost globally adopted for the type According to this viewpoint the first 2 8 0 order by Lehigh dates to 1866 and antedates the adoption of the type by other railways and coal and mountain freight haulers 3 From its introduction in 1866 and well into the early 20th century the 2 8 0 design was considered to be the ultimate heavy freight locomotive The 2 8 0 s forte was starting and moving impressive loads at unimpressive speeds and its versatility gave the type its longevity The practical limit of the design was reached in 1915 when it was realised that no further development was possible with a locomotive of this wheel arrangement 3 Usage EditAs in the United States the 2 8 0 was also a popular type in Europe again largely as a freight hauler The type was also used in Australia New Zealand and Southern Africa Australia Edit The 2 8 0 locomotive was used extensively throughout Australia It served on the 5 ft 3 in 1 600 mm broad gauge 4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gauge and 3 ft 6 in 1 067 mm narrow gauge and was employed mostly as a freight locomotive although it was often also employed in passenger service in Victoria 4 The first Australian locomotive class with this wheel arrangement were the Queensland Railways C13 and C15 built as goods locomotives in 1879 by Baldwin Locomotive Works Another lot of Consolidation engines consisted of 20 standard gauge New South Wales Government Railways NSWGR J Class engines which arrived from Baldwin Locomotive Works in 1891 The Js remained in service until 1915 when they were withdrawn Wartime shortages between 1916 and 1920 had six engines re entering service after being shopped and fitted with superheaters The last engine of this class was finally withdrawn in 1934 and all were scrapped by 1937 4 The next batch of NSW 2 8 0 locomotives to appear between 1896 and 1916 was the T class engines The class was delivered from one local and several overseas builders 151 locomotives from Beyer Peacock amp Company 84 from North British Locomotive Company 10 from Neilson amp Company 30 from Clyde Engineering in Australia and five from Dubs amp Company During World War II 14 of these locomotives were equipped with superheaters which raised their tractive effort from 28 777 lbf 128 0 kN to 33 557 lbf 149 3 kN 4 From 1899 the Victorian Railways VR also used a range of broad gauge 2 8 0 locomotives The first of these locomotives were the Baldwin built V class These engines were built at Phoenix Foundry in Ballarat By 1930 they had disappeared from the VR The VR s next type was the 26 C class engines which saw freight and passenger service In 1922 a smaller and lighter 2 8 0 the K class was introduced for branchline freight and later also passenger services Victorian Railways J class No J 515 Finally the VR introduced sixty light 2 8 0 J class engines in 1954 These also worked both freight and passenger services 4 The first 2 8 0 engines in private service on the Midland Railway of Western Australia arrived in 1912 These were 3 ft 6 in 1 067 mm gauge locomotives The five in the class operated until 1958 All were gone by 1963 4 In 1912 some of the NSWGR T class types were also purchased by the private East Greta Railway later to become the South Maitland Railway but these were converted to 2 8 2 tank locomotives The class proved to be successful throughout its long service life until being retired from government revenue service in 1973 4 During 1916 Commonwealth Railways acquired eight K class for the Trans Australian Railway 4 In 1924 a private coal company J amp A Brown in NSW obtained three ex British military Railway Operating Division ROD 2 8 0 locomotives Brown later ordered another 10 of these locomotives but only nine of that order arrived in Australia The last was withdrawn in 1973 4 Belgium Edit To compensate for wartime losses Belgian railways acquired 300 2 8 0 locomotives in 1946 They were built in North America 160 by Montreal Locomotive Works in Canada 60 by the Canadian Locomotive Company and 80 by the American Locomotive Company in the United States These machines proved to be very reliable and were used for mixed traffic until the end of the steam era when number 29 013 hauled the last scheduled steam passenger train from Ath to Denderleeuw on 20 December 1966 5 This locomotive survived in preservation and is used on special excursions On 16 December 2006 number 29 013 re enacted the last 1966 run on the same route 6 Canada Edit CP N 2 c no 3716 at Canyon View The Canadian Pacific Railway CP N 2 a b and c class locomotives were a class of altogether 182 Consolidation type locomotives built by Montreal Locomotive Works between 1912 and 1914 They were numbered in the range from 3600 to 3799 and were used almost everywhere around the system The order for these engines came about when CP needed bigger locomotives for their mainline since their current engines were wearing out and were too small for the loads that were being hauled Most of the class were converted to oil firing in later years 7 8 One of the locomotives No 3716 is run and maintained in Summerland BC as part of the Kettle Valley Steam Railway 9 10 Finland Edit Finland had five tender locomotive classes with a 2 8 0 wheel arrangement the classes Tk1 Tk2 Tk3 Tv1 and Tv2 The class Tk1s were numbered from 271 to 290 and were nicknamed Amerikan Satikka Class Tk3 No 1136 in special service from Kouvola to Kotka The class Tk2s were numbered 407 to 426 and 457 to 470 They were nicknamed Satikka Three were preserved No 407 at Narpes No 418 at Junction City Oregon in the United States and No 419 at Haapamaki The class Tk3s were numbered 800 to 899 1100 to 1118 and 1129 to 1170 They were built by Tampella Lokomo and Frichs The class Tv1s were numbered 594 to 617 685 to 741 900 to 948 and 1200 to 1211 They were built by Tampella and were nicknamed Jumbo Four were preserved No 609 at Haapamaki No 933 at the Veturi museum at Toijala No 940 at Lapinlahti and No 943 at Ylivieska The class Tv2s were numbered from 618 to 637 They were nicknamed Wilson Only No 618 was preserved also at Haapamaki Finland had only one tank locomotive class with a 2 8 0 wheel arrangement the class M1 consisting of one solitary locomotive numbered 66 It was not preserved Germany Edit The 2 8 0 wheel arrangement enjoyed a brief period of popularity in Germany during the era of the Landerbahnen or State Railways from about 1840 to 1920 prior to the establishment after the First World War of the Deutsche Reichsbahn the German National Railways Under the Deutsche Reichsbahn Gesellschaft DRG classification system all 2 8 0 locomotives were assigned to class 56 Baureihe or BR 56 with different types receiving subclassifications The earliest type was the Prussian G73 of 1893 Italy Edit In Italy the state controlled railways company Ferrovie dello Stato FS after comparing two models of 2 8 0 engine in 1906 a simple expansion simplex locomotive purchased from Baldwin and a compound type assembled by German and Italian builders opted for a simplex 2 8 0 as basic power for its freight and mixed trains Production of such locomotives classified Gr 740 in Italy began in 1911 and stopped four years later when Italy entered the First World War Thereafter Italian industry was devoted to producing military equipment so FS bought locomotives from North American firms From 1917 to 1922 American Locomotive Company and Montreal Locomotive Works built 400 2 8 0 locomotives for Italy but only 393 were delivered The FS classified these engines as Gr 735 and used them for freight and passenger services After the war the supply of Italian built Gr 740 resumed Both Gr 740 and Gr 735 very similar in performance remained in service until the end of the 1960s Japan Edit JNR Class 9600 No 9608 oldest surviving example of the class on static display at Ome Railway Park The Baldwin supplied the first three 2 8 0 9000 Class ja locomotives for export to Japan in 1893 in use of Hokkaido Colliery and Railway Company which were taken over Japanese Government Railway under Railway Nationalization Act of 1906 Among several classes most successful examples were 770 of JNR Class 9600 built from 1913 to 1926 Some independent shortlines had equivalent locomotives to 9600 both factory new and secondhand from JNR the last example was Yubari Colliery and Railway No 21 built in 1941 by Kawasaki Despite of obsolescence and early replacement by 2 8 2 D51 9600s were still widely utilized thanks to high performance and appropriate route availability The last example No 79602 kept longevity until March 1976 making the very final steam traction in service on JNR No 79602 was nearly preserved however sadly subsequently destroyed by arson attack at Oiwake MPD New Zealand Edit Several 2 8 0 locomotives were supplied to New Zealand by the Baldwin Locomotive Works of Philadelphia in the United States Six O Class locomotives were built for the New Zealand Railways in 1885 The Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company which operated the Wellington Manawatu line had four similar locomotives built by Baldwin two in 1888 one in 1894 and one in 1896 The WMR locomotives of 1894 and 1896 No 12 and No 13 were Vauclain compound locomotives the first in New Zealand and the first narrow gauge compounds in the world While standard gauge compounds usually had the low pressure cylinder mounted below the high pressure cylinder on each side this was often reversed on narrow gauge locomotives which had the larger low pressure cylinders mounted above the high pressure cylinders to provide greater clearance at platforms In 1908 when the WMR was nationalized these locomotives were classified into three NZR subclasses because of detail differences the two 1888 locomotives as OB class the 1894 locomotive as OA class and the 1896 locomotive as OC class North Korea Edit The Korean State Railway have locally built 500 series used by rubber recycling plant 11 and 810 series Japanese built 12 narrow gauge 762mm 2 8 0 locomotives The 810 series was likely retired in 2006 and 500 series may still be operating Russia Edit In Russia the 2 8 0 wheel arrangement was represented by the prerevolutionary Sch Shuka pike class These two cylinder compound locomotives without superheaters were declared the standard Russian freight locomotive in 1912 but since they were relatively low powered they were only useful on easier lines without steep gradients such as the Saint Petersburg Moscow route South Africa Edit Five 2 8 0 locomotive classes saw service in South Africa all of them initially acquired by the Cape Government Railways CGR which classified all but two as 8th Class All of them were variations on the same design used saturated steam and had cylinders with overhead slide valves actuated by inside Stephenson valve gear 13 SAR Class 8X circa 1930 In 1901 and 1902 the CGR placed 16 Consolidations in service Designed by H M Beatty chief locomotive superintendent of the CGR from 1896 to 1910 they were ordered from the Schenectady Locomotive Works in the United States and partly delivered by Schenectady in 1901 with the remainder delivered from the newly established American Locomotive Company in 1902 Conceived as mixed traffic locomotives they had bar frames and narrow fireboxes In 1912 when these locomotives were assimilated into the South African Railways SAR they were designated Class 8X 13 14 15 16 In 1902 the CGR also placed a single experimental tandem compound Consolidation in service based on its Schenectady ALCO built 8th Class Delivered by ALCO in 1902 the locomotive was not classified and was simply referred to as the Tandem Compound In 1912 it was designated Class Experimental 2 on the SAR 13 14 15 SAR Class Experimental 2 In 1903 the CGR received a second experimental tandem compound Consolidation from ALCO It was similar to the earlier one but with a larger fire grate and an increased heating surface which enhanced its steaming ability It also remained unclassified and was also simply referred to as a Tandem Compound In 1912 it was designated Class Experimental 3 on the SAR 13 14 15 Also in 1903 the CGR received four more Consolidations from Kitson and Company of Hunslet in Leeds They were very similar to the earlier Schenectady and ALCO built Consolidations but with the boiler pitch raised by 2 in 51 mm Coupled with a shallow firebox this enabled the grate to be extended out sideways over the fourth set of drivers resulting in a grate area of 30 9 sq ft 2 871 m2 compared to the 20 sq ft 1 858 m2 of the previous model In 1912 they were designated Class 8Y on the SAR 13 14 15 SARClass 8Z In 1904 the CGR placed its last eight Consolidations in service These were ordered from the North British Locomotive Company of Glasgow in Scotland and were very similar to the previous four Kitson built locomotives but slightly larger in boiler and firegrate area dimensions In 1912 these eight were designated Class 8Z on the SAR 13 14 15 17 While subjecting the Consolidations to exhaustive testing on all types of traffic and under varying conditions some trouble was experienced with the leading pony truck and it was dropped in favour of a four wheeled bogie in later orders for more eighth class locomotives All subsequent Cape eighth class locomotives were therefore built with a 4 8 0 Mastodon wheel arrangement 13 South West Africa Edit DSWA eight coupled tank In 1907 and 1910 the Staatsbahn Keetmanshoop Keetmanshoop State Railway in German South West Africa placed 21 tank locomotives in service After the first World War when all railways in the territory came under the administration of the South African Railways in 1922 five locomotives of the batch of 1910 survived They were not classified or renumbered but were referred to as the eight coupled tanks 14 18 In 1911 nine tender locomotives were placed in service by the Staatsbahn Luderitzbucht Keetmanshoop Luderitzbucht Keetmanshoop State Railway After the first World War all nine locomotives came onto the roster of the SAR where they were referred to as the eight coupled tenders 14 18 Sweden Edit Swedish M3t Steam Turbine Locomotive The unusual M3t Turbine Steam Locomotive was of this type but also the E2 class and a number of other freight class locomotives where of this type in Sweden Turkey Edit Turkish 8F at the National Railway Museum Shildon England Turkey was a neutral country during the Second World War and to retain Turkish goodwill Great Britain supplied several locomotives to the Turkish Railways where they were classified 8F Two of these 8F class locomotives were brought back from Turkey early in 2011 and one of them is on display at the National Railway Museum in Shildon England United Kingdom Edit The 2 8 0 gradually became the standard heavy freight steam locomotive type in the United Kingdom during the first half of the 20th century largely replacing the 0 6 0 which had been used in that role since the mid 19th century The first 2 8 0 to be built in Britain was the Great Western Railway s 2800 Class with 84 locomotives built between 1903 and 1919 followed by a further 83 of the very similar GWR 2884 Class between 1938 and 1942 In 1904 George Whale of the London and North Western Railway LNWR began to rebuild some of his predecessor s Class B 0 8 0 compound locomotives to 2 8 0 classes E and F With coal trains increasing in size and scale the GWR needed to develop a more powerful locomotive to meet these requirements on what were relatively short haul routes Thus in 1906 Chief Engineer G J Churchward took the basic design of his GWR 2800 Class and adapted it After proposing a 2 8 2T design Churchward developed the UK s first 2 8 0 tank engine the 4200 class Preserved GCR Class 8K In 1911 John G Robinson of the Great Central Railway GCR introduced his very successful GCR Class 8K for heavy freight 129 of these were originally built by the GCR During the First World War the design was adopted by the Ministry of Munitions and it became the standard locomotive of the Railway Operating Division of the Royal Engineers as the ROD 2 8 0 Altogether 521 of these ROD locomotives were built during the war After the war large numbers of these were purchased by the LNWR and GWR while some were also sold to a private Australian coal company J amp A Brown in New South Wales Altogether 273 were purchased by the LNWR during the early 1920s 4 GNR Class O2 Other successful 2 8 0 designs were built in the UK The classes O1 and O2 were introduced by Nigel Gresley of the Great Northern Railway in 1913 and 1918 respectively and the Class 7F by Henry Fowler of the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway in 1914 Whilst most British 2 8 0 designs were intended for heavy freight the GWR 4700 Class were designed for heavy mixed traffic work but were initially employed aminly on fast overnight freight trains later they were used on express excursions in the summer 19 The most successful British 2 8 0 class was the Class 8F designed in 1935 by William Stanier for the London Midland and Scottish Railway By 1946 852 had been built During the Second World War the War Department originally chose the class 8F as its standard freight locomotive and large numbers of them saw service overseas notably in the Middle East The class 8F was superseded after 1943 by the cheaper WD Austerity 2 8 0 for war service A total of 935 of these were built and again many saw service overseas United States Edit Pennsylvania Railroad Consolidation No 2106 circa 1907 Baltimore amp Ohio Consolidation No 2300 circa 1907 USATC S160 5740 locomotive Drawings for Lake Superior and Ishpeming SC 1 circa 1916 In the United States only a few railroads purchased Consolidation types when Baldwin Locomotive Works first introduced its version Even the Baltimore amp Ohio railroad which eventually had nearly 180 2 8 0 locomotives in regular service by 1885 did not purchase any of this type until 1873 The Buffalo Rochester and Pittsburgh Railway which eventually became part of B amp O purchased 15 of this type from Brooks Locomotive Works in 1883 20 The 2 8 0 design was given a major boost in 1875 when the Pennsylvania Railroad made it their standard freight locomotive and 1875 was also when the Erie Railroad began replacing its 4 4 0s in freight service with 2 8 0s The railroads had found that the 2 8 0 could move trains twice as heavy at half the cost of its predecessors From a financial standpoint at the time the choice of the 2 8 0 as new freight locomotive was therefore clear 20 The S160 Class of the United States Army Transportation Corps was built by American manufacturers and was designed for use in Europe for heavy freight work during the Second World War A total of 2 120 of this class was built and they worked on railroads across the world Production of the 2 8 0 type in the United States totalled more than 23 000 locomotives of which 12 000 were export versions 21 Preservation Edit Great Northern Railway Consolidation No 1147 is on display in a park in Wenatchee Washington Great Northern Railway Consolidation No 1246 is in storage in southern Oregon Maine Central class W 2 8 0 locomotives numbered 501 and 519 were officially property of the European and North American Railway E amp NA as a condition of the lease of that company by the Maine Central Railroad While all other Maine Central steam locomotives were scrapped when replaced by diesel locomotives these two survived as a lease obligation until Maine Central purchased E amp NA in 1955 The advantages of preservation were recognized by that date so No 501 is awaiting restoration to operating condition at the Conway Scenic Railroad and No 519 was on display at the Steamtown National Historic Site 22 Southern Pacific No 895 a 2 8 0 Consolidation locomotive built by ALCO in 1913 is on static display at Roseland Park in Baytown Texas SP No 895 was retired after 44 years of service and donated by Southern Pacific Railroad to the Robert E Lee High School Key Club then towed on temporary tracks to its current location at Roseland Park in April 1957 Baltimore amp Ohio No 545 A J Cromwell built in 1888 is preserved at the B amp O Railroad Museum in Baltimore Maryland Southern Pacific s no 2562 The Southern Pacific Railroad s locomotive no SP 2562 was built by the Baldwin Locomotive Works in 1909 serial No 29064 It is on exhibit in the Arizona Railway Museum in Chandler Arizona The locomotive and its tender are listed in the National Register of Historic Places reference No 09000511 The Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad s class 759 locomotive No 761 was built around 1890 When active it was used on the railroad s mainline between Chicago and the west No 761 is plinthed next to the historic Wickenburg Arizona train depot that is now the town s visitor center Santa Fe class 769 locomotive 769 is currently on static display in Madrid New Mexico but is awaiting a future restoration to run on the Santa Fe Southern Railway 23 The Colorado amp Southern C amp S narrow gauge No 60 is on display in Idaho Springs Colorado while C amp S No 71 is in Central City Colorado A Ks1 class 2 8 0 No 630 is run and maintained in Chattanooga Tennessee by the Tennessee Valley Railroad Museum In 2014 this locomotive participated in the Norfolk Southern 21st Century Steam program In 1962 the Arcade amp Attica Railroad purchased an ALCO build locomotive from the Boyne City Railroad in Michigan The locomotive now numbered 18 is billed as the last operating steam excursion in New York State 24 Three out of the four SC 1 hogs from the Lake Superior and Ishpeming survived being scrapped Engine No 33 has been restored by the Hocking Valley Scenic Railway before being purchased by the Age of Steam Roundhouse in Sugarcreek Ohio where it operates today Engine No 35 has been on static display at the Illinois Railway Museum in Union Illinois since 1985 In 1991 the Western Maryland Scenic Railroad acquired SC 1 class No 34 The locomotive was restored to operating condition and cosmetically changed to look like an original Western Maryland 2 8 0 The locomotive was renumbered 734 in honor so to speak of the H 7 701 764 class of 2 8 0 that the Western Maryland harbored and of which none was preserved Although it also has an overall appearance of an H 8 As of 2020 Mountain Thunder as No 734 is nicknamed is waiting for a 1 472 day boiler inspection In the late 1980s four ex LS amp I 2 8 0s were purchased by the Grand Canyon Railway based in Williams Arizona Nos 18 19 20 and 29 Only 29 remains in Williams undergoing its 1 472 day inspection while 18 is undergoing a rebuild at the Colebrookdale Railroad in Boyertown Pennsylvania 25 19 is on static display in Frisco Texas and 20 is on static display in Allan Texas Other preserved Ex LS amp I 2 8 0s include 21 which is being rebuilt in Baraboo Wisconsin 22 which is on static display at the Mid Continent Railway Museum in North Freedom Wisconsin 23 which is being rebuilt at the Empire State Railway Museum in Phoenicia New York and 24 which is on static display at the National Railroad Museum in Green Bay Wisconsin UPRR No 561 is on static display along US Highway 81 in Columbus NE UPRR No 423 is on static display on 10th street in Gering Ne UPRR No 6072 is on static display at Wyman park in Fort Riley ks Baldwin Locomotive Works No 40 built in December 1925 for the Lancaster and Chester Railroad in South Carolina and later purchased by the Cliffside Railroad in North Carolina now pulls scenic excursion trains at the New Hope and Ivyland Railroad in New Hope Pennsylvania which opened in August 1966 Great Western No 60 built in August 1937 by the American Locomotive Company in Schenectady New York is currently operated on the Black River and Western Railroad in Ringoes New Jersey No 60 originally operated on the Great Western Railway of Colorado Baldwin Steam Locomotive No 1702 built in 1942 for the United States Army was purchased by the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad GSMR of Bryson City North Carolina in the mid 1990s for use on its scenic railway excursions After a decade of service No 1702 was retired in 2004 In October 2012 a partnership formed between GSMR and Swain County to provide funding to restore the locomotive In 2013 a complete restoration was launched and the locomotive returned to service during summer 2016 No 29 on static display at the Grand Canyon Railway 2015 Pennsylvania Railroad 1187 of the class R later H3 is on display at the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania This class is described in detail in the book Set Up Running The Life of a Pennsylvania Railroad Engineman 1904 1949 The Valley Railroad in Connecticut has one 2 8 0 97 built in 1923 by the American Locomotive Company s Cooke Machine Works in Paterson New Jersey for use in Cuba It stayed at Cooke until its closure in 1926 and started service on the Birmingham and Southeastern Railroad in Alabama as 200 It ran various excursions on the Vermont Railway and New Haven Railroad in the late 1960s under a private owner 97 arrived in Essex in 1970 initially operating between 1973 and 2010 It returned to service in October 2018 Virginia amp Truckee No 29 is currently operational on the Virginia and Truckee Scenic RailroadTwo USATC General Pershing locomotives survive in the United States Southern Pine Lumber Co 28 is currently undergoing repair to run again at the Texas State Railroad in Palestine Texas and United States Army 101 is on static display at the National Railroad Museum in Green Bay Wisconsin 26 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2 8 0 locomotives White John H Jr 1968 A history of the American locomotive its development 1830 1880 New York Dover Publications p 65 ISBN 0 486 23818 0 White John H 1979 A History of the American Locomotive Its Development 1830 1880 New York Dover Publications p 65 ISBN 0486238180 Retrieved 22 July 2019 a b c Swengel F M 1967 The American Steam Locomotive Vol 1 the Evolution of the Steam Locomotive Davenport Midwest Rail Publishing pp 16 102 134 186 a b c d e f g h i Oberg Leon 1975 Locomotives of Australia Sydney Reed 40 jaar Einde stoomtractie Archived from the original on 2007 09 28 Retrieved 2007 12 23 Herstelde stoomlocomotief type 29 zaterdag terug in Belgie Press release in Dutch NMBS 2003 06 11 Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 02 23 Lavallee Omer 1985 Canadian Pacific Railway Diagrams and Data Steam Locomotives Vol 1 2nd ed West Hill Ont Railfare Enterprises pp 45 46 Doeksen Corwin Doeksen Gerry 1991 Railways of the West Kootenay Vol 1 Montrose B C Doeksen p 56 Kettle Valley Model Railway Kettle Valley Consolidations Part 2 Archived 2016 10 02 at the Wayback Machine Accessed on 22 October 2016 Kettle Valley Model Railway Kettle Valley Consolidations Part 3 Archived 2016 10 22 at the Wayback Machine Accessed on 22 October 2016 newslabmedia 15 January 2012 North Korean Steam locomotive 5 Narrow gauge Archived from the original on 7 June 2014 via YouTube Seiler Bernd Last Steam in North Korea www farrail net Archived from the original on 2014 09 23 a b c d e f g Holland D F 1971 Steam Locomotives of the South African Railways Vol 1 1859 1910 1st ed Newton Abbott England David amp Charles pp 61 68 ISBN 978 0 7153 5382 0 a b c d e f g Paxton Leith Bourne David 1985 Locomotives of the South African Railways 1st ed Cape Town Struik pp 50 82 99 149 ISBN 0869772112 a b c d e Classification of S A R Engines with Renumbering Lists issued by the Chief Mechanical Engineer s Office Pretoria January 1912 pp 9 12 15 35 36 Reprinted in April 1987 by SATS Museum R 3125 6 9 11 1000 South African Railways and Harbours Locomotive Diagram Book 2 0 amp 3 6 Gauge Steam Locomotives p11 15 August 1941 as amended North British Locomotive Company works list compiled by Austrian locomotive historian Bernhard Schmeiser a b Dulez Jean A 2012 Railways of Southern Africa 150 Years Commemorating One Hundred and Fifty Years of Railways on the Sub Continent Complete Motive Power Classifications and Famous Trains 1860 2011 1st ed Garden View Johannesburg South Africa Vidrail Productions p 35 ISBN 9 780620 512282 le Fleming H M February 1962 White D E ed The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway part nine Standard Two Cylinder Classes RCTS p J25 ISBN 0 901115 37 1 OCLC 655827210 a b Kinert Reed 1962 Early American steam locomotives 1st seven decades 1830 1900 Seattle WA Superior Publishing Company American Rails com The 2 8 0 Consolidation Type Archived 2016 11 09 at the Wayback Machine Accessed on 9 November 2016 Pictures of MEC 519 PDF National Park Service Retrieved 2013 03 03 Parked up and abandoned AT amp SF No 769 wearerailfans com Retrieved 2021 11 27 About Us www aarailroad com Retrieved 2018 12 06 Our Equipment Colebrookdale Railroad Retrieved 2021 11 27 US Army Transportation Corps 2 8 0 Consolidation Locomotives in the USA www steamlocomotive com Retrieved 2021 11 27 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2 8 0 amp oldid 1116349983, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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