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Forrester single (locomotive)

Swiftsure was first of eight or more similar locomotives with a single pair of driving wheels built by George Forrester and Company (Forresters) from 1834. The tank variant was the first passenger tank engine to enter service in the world.

Swiftsure/Vauxhall type
Vauxhall (1834)
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
BuilderGeorge Forrester and Company
Build date1834
RebuilderD&KR
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte2-2-0
Leading dia.3 ft 0 in (0.91 m)
Driver dia.4 ft 8+12 in (1.435 m)
Boiler pressure50 lbf/in2 (0.34 MPa)
Cylinders2 (horizontal)
Cylinder size11 in × 16 in (279 mm × 406 mm)
Career
NicknamesBoxers
First run1834
Details refer to D&KR locomotives as built.[1]

They have been claimed to be the first locomotives to use outside horizontal cylinders[a] and also the first to use 4 eccentric cranks. The use of outside cylinders on a short wheelbases with no wheel balances resulted in an oscillating movement at speed, resulting in a nickname of "Boxers" and most being rebuilt from 2-2-0 to incorporate trailing axle becoming configured as 2-2-2.

Locomotives were supplied to the Liverpool and Manchester Railway (L&MR), Dublin and Kingstown (D&KR), London and Greenwich (L&GR), Birmingham and Gloucester (B&GR), and a few other minor railways.

History Edit

George Forrester's Vauxhall Foundry had been established in Liverpool by 1827, taking over a disused cotton mill. The location was about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) from the L&MR's Edge Hill Workshops and was also convenient to the docks. The L&MR had started operating in 1830, becoming the first example of successfully operating railway in the world and the model upon which the next generation of railways used as a study example for their own projects. While most L&MR locomotives in the early 1830s were supplied by Robert Stephenson and Company of Newcastle that company was unable to supply demand and other suppliers were entering the market.[citation needed] Forrester's had first become with the proposal to construct locomotives in response to a tender invitation by the L&MR in May 1831 but pulled out following a misunderstanding with the L&MR's secretary Henry Booth, the tender being satisfied by Bee and Liver from Edward Bury and Experiment from Robert Sharp.[2] Forresters, along with other firms, did however perform some locomotive component construction or repair work for the L&MR in the early 1830s.[3]

Origins Edit

The D&KR had started their procurement for tendering for locomotives in August 1833 approaching nine firms with a requirement for six locomotives to be delivered in perfect working order by 1 May 1834; the seven who replied all commenting on the short timescale.[4] The D&KR engaged John Urpeth Rastrick as consultant to visit the prospective builders and he returned with a specification which matched an improved Experiment locomotive from Sharp Brothers of Manchester.[4] D&KR engineers Vignoles and Bergin has concerns over the vertical cylinders and other aspects of 'Experiment and Sharp Brothers design and the D&KR board of directors asked the locomotive manufacturers to submit their own proposals; Liverpools's Edward Bury, favoured by some of the D&KR's Quaker board, being eliminated at his stage over insistence of use of an inside-cylinder design with a crank axle which was not favoured by D&KR engineers.[4]

 
Valve Gear of Forrester's Swiftsure locomotive (built 1834)

In December 1833, with time running short to get locomotives built for their planned start of operations the D&KR board finally placed based an order for three locomotives from Sharp Brothers that were to become the Hibernia type, and three from George Forrester. They would have originally preferred to have placed all six with one manufacturer for parts commonality however ability to complete the build in the needed timescale had become a priority and degrees of uncertainty about both designs may have been a factor.[5] Forrester had not built any locomotive prior to the D&KR order,[6] so winning the order may seem unexpected. Forrester did have some advantages: Liverpool base at convenient to the L&MR and their workshops; Good communications with regular steam packet to Dublin; previous component build work for the L&MR; amiable relations with the customer; and a reputation for good workmanship, though that may have gained later.[citation needed] The design may have been evolved with the collaboration of or intention to satisfy Vignoles and Bergin. Snell claims Vignoles obtained a set of drawings from Dodds, albeit Snell also claims Dodds influence was not present until later D&KR engines. While seemingly not involved in the design the employment of Alexander Allan from Stephenson's would have been a help. It is also the case Forrester was given the Stephenson locomotive Milo by the L&MR in 1834 with a view to a repair quote; the L&MR eventually accepting Milo was uneconomic to repair leaving Forrester to scrap Milo and with the L&MR proving Swiftsure as a replacement early in 1834 — the precise dates are unclear and it was possibly too late in the year to reverse engineer any of Milo's features into the Forrester design.[citation needed]

D&KR officials often did spot visits to Forresters during their locomotives' construction and were generally well received by Forresters, their spot checks at Sharps sometimes gave indication of staff problems and absenteeism.[7]

The company first began to produce railway locomotives in 1834.[6] The locomotives constructed in that year were Swiftsure for the L&MR; with Vauxhall, Dublin and Kingstown for the D&KR which was to begin operations in December of that year. Swiftsure was a locomotive built by Forresters of the Vauxhall Foundry in Liverpool which entered service for the L&MR in 1834 as No. 36.[8]

Stretton claims Swiftsure to be the first locomotive built by the company, though others have stated that this might not be the case.[9][10][11] However information from Mr Alexander Allan (engineer at Forresters) published in 1883 pointed to an error in a publication in The Engineer in 1881[12] where the Swiftsure was listed at built in 1835. He pointed out that Swiftsure was the first locomotive, being built 'early in 1834', and he attended it on trials, etc; he also went to Dublin late in 1834 with the three locomotives for the Dublin and Kingstown Railway ('of the same size and design as the Swiftsure'), and was responsible for their care while under the Forrester's maintenance contract. The confusion may have arisen because Swiftsure worked from the Liverpool end of the L&MR in 1834, before being transferred to the Manchester end of the line in 1835.[8] Swiftsure had a pair of trailing wheels added in 1836, and was in regular service until 1842.[13]

Design Edit

The type were the first locomotives to use outside cylinders and also the first outside and inside frames, though the later was not appreciated at the time and only adopted some ten years later.[14] The combination of outside frames on a short 2-2-0 wheelbase with unbalanced driving wheels led to an oscillating motion and led to the nickname of "Boxers".[14][additional citation(s) needed] Many locomotives eventually were fitted with a trailing axle to become a 2-2-2T to help reduce the problem.

Liverpool and Manchester Edit

Swiftsure entered service on the L&MR as a 2-2-0 in October 1834 with two outside 11 in × 18 in (279 mm × 457 mm) cylinders,[b] for a price of £860.[15][c] It was noted as being involved in a collision with at Parkside on 11 November 1934 with the consequence that a labourer was crushed between wagons of the stationary between the wagons of the stationary luggage train.[d] The labourer was later to die of his injuries and the "occasional engineman" charge of Swiftsure was held responsible for entering a watering stop at more than 6 miles per hour (9.7 km/h) and was sanctioned by losing his turn on the promotion list.[17] Swiftsure was involved in a further incident in July 1835 whilst descending the incline at Whiston, Merseyside when a train of five silk wagons caught fire; the train took several hundred yards to stop and some wagons were only detached with difficulty. The L&MR was ultimately advised to pay £3,000 damages for the high value load on the basis they had not adequately displayed notices that the owners should have insured it.[18] Swiftsure was involved in several experiments during its service life. In November 1836 the L&MR performed a coal burning trial involving Swiftsure and several other locomotives, the results being generally unsuccessful with Swiftsure's firebox damaged by excessive heat.[19] Locomotives at this period were forced to use the more expensive and sometimes problematic coke in order to fulfill the requirement to "consume their own smoke"; it took several years for the technology to use coal successfully in locomotives to evolve.[20]

Dublin and Kingstown Edit

The Forresters' locomotives for the D&KR became known as Vauxhall, Dublin and Kingstown; the names being those of the manufacturing foundry and the termini of the line.

The first of the D&KR locomotives[e] ran sufficiently well on tests on the L&MR that it was permitted by their superintendent Manchester to take charge of the first class train to Liverpool on 27 June 1834. The journey was completed in 1 hour 17 minutes with several D&KR people on board including James Pim, Thomas Flemming Bergin, Vignoles and other directors.[7]

Vauxhall along with Hibernia were transported to Dublin on the same sailing before being hauled through the streets on temporary tracks.[7] Murray says there is a legend Vauxhall was the first locomotive to reach the D&KR's tracks, making it Ireland's first steam locomotive.[21]

The first recorded service of the invited members of the public being transported was a special preview trip to Martello Tower and Booterstown by Vauxhall on 4 October 1834. The honour of the first trial run over the entire length of the line fell to Forresters Hibernia on 9 October 1834 with Vauxhall doing a trip later in the day.[citation needed]

The honour of the first scheduled train in Ireland fell to Sharp's locomotive Hibernia at 09:00 17 December 1834; this being the famously celebrated inaugural run. While Forrester's Vauxhall ran the next service and both continued running trips throughout the day. The D&KR commenced its full scheduled service in January 1835.

Maintenance of the class was at the Serpentine Road "engine hospital" with one section reserved for Forrester locomotives with their man Alexander Allan on site for one year per the purchase contract.[7]

The D&KR began requesting quotes for two more engines in February 1835; Vignoles' earlier suggestion eight locomotives would be required proving more accurate in practice than consuktant Rastrick's suggest only four would be necessary.[22] On 28 March 1835 the motive power situation became desperate when Forrester locomotive's Vauxhall and Dublin were in collision, with requests to England for spare tenders.[7] Murray claims the D&KR had begun to consider tank engines carry their own coke and water had begun to be considered from February due to the operational inconvenience of having to separate the locomotive and tender so each could be turned independently on the D&KR's 10 feet (3.0 m) turntables, the latter at least being manually pushed.[22] The order for two 2-2-0T locomotives's was put in Forrester's, in the event these were named Comet and Victoria, with Murray claiming these were "the first tank engines to work on any public railway".[23]

All five Forrester D&KR singles were converted to six wheel tank engines by 1841, the conversion being relatively simple with the fitting of water tanks under the boiler and extending the footplate to incorporate a coke stage and the addition of a trailing axle.[24]

London and Greenwich Edit

The London and Greenwich Railway began a public service on the 2+12 miles (4.0 km) section between Spa Road and Deptford in February 1836.[25] Locomotives in use at this point were two Planet type of the 2-2-0 configuration. Royal William was supplied by William Marshall & Sons.[f] Lowe also finds alternative sources indicating No. 1 was supplied by Charles Tayleur and Company which had links to Stephenson and this was as a set of parts and assembled on site. That source also indicates Marshalls were previously Braithwaites until 1839, (Whishaw 1842) and Venus supplied by the L&MR possibly as a hire to replace an esoteric 0-2-0 rotary steam engine supplied by Earl Dundonald. Victoria from Forresters became the third operational engine in May 1836 for the sum of £1,010 10s 0d.[26] The L&GR had initially ordered locomotives from Stephenson's and Burys however neither actually supplied.[g] Forrester's second engine Walter[h] arrived in December 1836 in time for the extension to London Bridge station, becoming the sixth operational engine, Royal William having acquired three sister locomotives in the interim.[26] Victoria and Walter with their 2-2-0WT configuration and acquired the nickname "Boxers" for the typical yawing motion of type. Trials in 1837 revealed that Walter was more powerful than Royal William. Both were converted to tender locomotives, possibly in an effort to reduce the yawing. They were painted green, acquiring the numbers five and six respectively and possibly losing their names from the 1840s.[citation needed]

Victoria had a trailing axle added in 1841 to become a 2-2-0, before becoming a pumping engine at Bricklayers Arms from December 1845 and was finally acquired by C. Tomkins at Reading for scrap for £110. Walter was never fitted with a trailing axle. It saw service at Redhill repair shops from January 1846 followed by an assignment to the Gomshall sandpits from 1853 until it was scrapped along with Victoria.[27]

Birmingham and Gloucester Edit

The Birmingham and Gloucester Railway possessed four Forrester 2-2-2s:[28] the Cheltenham, the Worcester, the Bromsgrove and the Tewkesbury.[29] They had been ordered by Edward Bury soon after his appointment as locomotive advisor and agent and two arrived in November 1838 and were used on construction.[30] They proved more reliable than the American Norris engines and were allocated to the important mail services.[31] With their 2-2-2 wheel arrangement they were totally unsuited and never intended for climbing the steep Lickey Incline and for this ascent they were assisted by the Norris Type A Extra bank engines.[31]

Other railways Edit

Parliamentary papers published in 1842 seem to yield examples of other railways using 2-2-0 and 2-2-2 Forrester engines.[32] The Preston and Wyre Railway (P&WR) had a Forrester 2-2-0 it sued for light goods, ballasting work, and occasional special passenger trains. Its other engine was a 2-2-2 goods and its passenger services were generally worked by another railway. The P&WR was aware their six-wheeled locomotive seemed to cause far less track wear than several other four wheel locomotives used on the railway, but that there 4 wheel Forrester could negotiate some curves the six wheel could not.[33][i] The Grand Junction Railway had between one and three Forrester engines 2-2-2 engines based on the information they had three locomotives with outside cylinders with one different from the other two.[34] The Manchester, Bolton & Bury Canal Navigation and Railway (MB&CNR) had two Forrester 2-2-0s and eight 0-4-0s from Edward Bury and William Fairbairn with a preference to go for Bury's engine if more were needed.[35]

Legacy Edit

The class was to form the basis for later locomotives built by the D&KR for itself starting with the Princess in 1939.[36] The locomotives Alexander Allan went on design for the Grand Junction Railway and London and North Western Railway (including the Crewe type (locomotive)) showed influences from Forrester practice.[37]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Outside cylinders means the cylinders were placed outside of the wheels. It is possible some earlier engines may have had outside cylinders. Dodd's Star of 1833 and possibly one other may have a claim.
  2. ^ The date seems surprisingly late in the year if (Thomas 1980, pp. 162–163) is correct.
  3. ^ Dawson states the L&MR ordered Swiftsure in November 1834 for £860 as a replacement for Milo. and was delivered in spring 1834, with a Forrester D&KR engine running trials earlier in July 1834 on the L&MR.[16]
  4. ^ Freight or goods trains were termed luggage trains in this period.
  5. ^ It would probably be reasonably assumed this was Vauxhall but it is not named as such in the source.
  6. ^ (Thomas 1986) locates Marshall & Sons at Tipton while (Lowe 2014, pp. 458–459) indicates Gravesend.
  7. ^ (Lowe 2014, pp. 458–459) says Bury subcontracted to Forrester (both factories were in the Liverpool docks area) while Stephenson had links to Charles Tayleur.[citation needed]
  8. ^ Forrester's had named the locomotive William but the L&GR renamed it Walter to avoid a clash, presumably after their director George Walter.
  9. ^ The P&WR included docks where sharp curves might be found.

References Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ Lyons 2015, p. 81.
  2. ^ Thomas 1980, p. 157.
  3. ^ Thomas 1980, p. 162.
  4. ^ a b c Murray 1981, pp. 173–174.
  5. ^ Murray 1981, pp. 172–174.
  6. ^ a b Lowe 2014, pp. 176–177.
  7. ^ a b c d e Murray 1981, p. 177.
  8. ^ a b "Links in the History of the Locomotive No. XIII". The Engineer: 150. 23 February 1883.
  9. ^ Stretton 1892, pp. 54–56.
  10. ^ Stretton 1903, pp. 62–63.
  11. ^ Pangborn 1894, pp. n105–n106.
  12. ^ "Links in the History of the Locomotive No. X". The Engineer. 18 March 1881.
  13. ^ "Links in the History of the Locomotive No. XIV". The Engineer: 160. 2 March 1883.
  14. ^ a b Nock 1975, pp. 7–9.
  15. ^ Thomas 1980, pp. 162–163.
  16. ^ Dawson 2021, p. 150.
  17. ^ Thomas 1980, pp. 210.
  18. ^ Thomas 1980, p. 206.
  19. ^ Thomas 1980, pp. 175–176.
  20. ^ Thomas 1980, p. 175.
  21. ^ Murray 1981, p. 182.
  22. ^ a b Murray 1981, p. 178.
  23. ^ Murray 1981, p. 179.
  24. ^ Murray 1981, p. 183.
  25. ^ Thomas 1986, p. 50.
  26. ^ a b Thomas 1986, pp. 176−177.
  27. ^ Thomas 1986, p. 191.
  28. ^ Various 1842, p. 202.
  29. ^ Whishaw 1842, p. 30.
  30. ^ Long & Awdry 1987, p. 131.
  31. ^ a b Long & Awdry 1987, p. 169–170.
  32. ^ Various 1842.
  33. ^ Various 1842, pp. 219–220.
  34. ^ Various 1842, pp. 211–212.
  35. ^ Various 1842, pp. 205–206.
  36. ^ Murray 1981, pp. 181, 190.
  37. ^ Lowe 2014, p. 177.

Sources Edit

  • Barlow, Peter (1837). A Treatise on the Strength of Timber, Cast Iron, Malleable Iron, and Other Materials with Rules for Application in Architecture, Construction of Suspension Bridges, Railways, Etc. London: John Weale. OCLC 258491612.
  • Bergin, T. F. (27 October 1841). "Dublin and Kingstown Railway No. 29". Letter to Lords of the Privy Council for Trade. pp. 213–214.
  • Dawson, Anthony (2021). Locomotives of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. Yorkshire: Pen & Sword Transport. ISBN 9781526763983. OCLC 1190858980.
  • Lowe, James W. (2014) [1975]. British Steam Locomotives Builders. Pen & Sword Transport. pp. 245–259. ISBN 978-1-47382-289-4. OCLC 889509628.
  • Long, P. J.; Awdry, W. V. (1987). The Birmingham and Gloucester Railway. Gloucester: Alan Sutton. ISBN 0862993296. OCLC 18588406. OL 2468738M.
  • Lyons, Garrett (15 October 2015). Steaming to Kingstown and Sucking Up to Dalkey: The Story of the Dublin and Kingstown Railway. Dublin: Londubh Books. ISBN 978-1907535772.
  • Murray, Kevin (1981). Ireland's First Railway. Dublin: Irish Railway Record Society. ISBN 0-904078-07-8.
  • Nock, O. S. (August 1975). Locomotion. Routledge & Kegan Paul PLC. ISBN 978-0710082220. OCLC 21980980. OL 5253681M.
  • Pangborn, Joseph Gladding (1894). The world's rail way, historical, descriptive, illustrative. New York: Winchell Printing Company. OCLC 983256626.
  • Patterson, Edward Mervyn (2003) [1962]. The Great Northern Railway (Ireland). Railway History. Vol. OL67. Usk: Oakwood. ISBN 9780853616023. OCLC 53393781.
  • Saunders (18 October 1834). "The Dublin and Kingstown Railway". Mechanics Magazine. London: J. Cunningham. 22 (584): 47 – via googlebooks.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  • Snell, S (1921). A Story of Railway Pioneers — being an account of the inventions and works of Isaac Dodds and his son Thomas Weatherburn Dodds. London: Selwyn & Blount, Ltd. OCLC 1085335383. OL 7035758M.
  • Stretton, Clement Edwin (1892). The Locomotive Engine and Its Development: A popular treatise on the gradual improvements made in railway engines between 1803 and 1892 (1 ed.). London: Crosby Lockwood. OCLC 503789724.
  • Stretton, Clement Edwin (1903). The Locomotive Engine and Its Development: A popular treatise on the gradual improvements made in railway engines between 1803 and 1903 (6 ed.). London: Crosby Lockwood. OCLC 265878314. OL 20443807M.
  • Thomas, Ronald H. G. (1980). The Liverpool & Manchester Railway. London: Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-0537-6.
  • Thomas, Ronald H. G. (1986) [1972]. London's First Railway: The London and Greenwich. Batsford. ISBN 9780713454147. OCLC 915881410. OL 6395959W.
  • Various (1842). "Railway Correspondence". Letter to Lords of the Privy Council for Trade.
  • Whishaw, Francis (1842) [1840]. The Railways of Great Britain and Ireland practically described and illustrated (2nd ed.). London: John Weale (1840 publisher - Simpkin, Marshall & Co.). OCLC 36383414.

forrester, single, locomotive, swiftsure, first, eight, more, similar, locomotives, with, single, pair, driving, wheels, built, george, forrester, company, forresters, from, 1834, tank, variant, first, passenger, tank, engine, enter, service, world, swiftsure,. Swiftsure was first of eight or more similar locomotives with a single pair of driving wheels built by George Forrester and Company Forresters from 1834 The tank variant was the first passenger tank engine to enter service in the world Swiftsure Vauxhall typeVauxhall 1834 Type and originPower typeSteamBuilderGeorge Forrester and CompanyBuild date1834RebuilderD amp KRSpecificationsConfiguration Whyte2 2 0Leading dia 3 ft 0 in 0 91 m Driver dia 4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 m Boiler pressure50 lbf in2 0 34 MPa Cylinders2 horizontal Cylinder size11 in 16 in 279 mm 406 mm CareerNicknamesBoxersFirst run1834Details refer to D amp KR locomotives as built 1 They have been claimed to be the first locomotives to use outside horizontal cylinders a and also the first to use 4 eccentric cranks The use of outside cylinders on a short wheelbases with no wheel balances resulted in an oscillating movement at speed resulting in a nickname of Boxers and most being rebuilt from 2 2 0 to incorporate trailing axle becoming configured as 2 2 2 Locomotives were supplied to the Liverpool and Manchester Railway L amp MR Dublin and Kingstown D amp KR London and Greenwich L amp GR Birmingham and Gloucester B amp GR and a few other minor railways Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Design 1 3 Liverpool and Manchester 1 4 Dublin and Kingstown 1 5 London and Greenwich 1 6 Birmingham and Gloucester 1 7 Other railways 2 Legacy 3 Notes 4 References 4 1 Footnotes 4 2 SourcesHistory EditGeorge Forrester s Vauxhall Foundry had been established in Liverpool by 1827 taking over a disused cotton mill The location was about 1 5 miles 2 4 km from the L amp MR s Edge Hill Workshops and was also convenient to the docks The L amp MR had started operating in 1830 becoming the first example of successfully operating railway in the world and the model upon which the next generation of railways used as a study example for their own projects While most L amp MR locomotives in the early 1830s were supplied by Robert Stephenson and Company of Newcastle that company was unable to supply demand and other suppliers were entering the market citation needed Forrester s had first become with the proposal to construct locomotives in response to a tender invitation by the L amp MR in May 1831 but pulled out following a misunderstanding with the L amp MR s secretary Henry Booth the tender being satisfied by Bee and Liver from Edward Bury and Experiment from Robert Sharp 2 Forresters along with other firms did however perform some locomotive component construction or repair work for the L amp MR in the early 1830s 3 Origins Edit The D amp KR had started their procurement for tendering for locomotives in August 1833 approaching nine firms with a requirement for six locomotives to be delivered in perfect working order by 1 May 1834 the seven who replied all commenting on the short timescale 4 The D amp KR engaged John Urpeth Rastrick as consultant to visit the prospective builders and he returned with a specification which matched an improved Experiment locomotive from Sharp Brothers of Manchester 4 D amp KR engineers Vignoles and Bergin has concerns over the vertical cylinders and other aspects of Experiment and Sharp Brothers design and the D amp KR board of directors asked the locomotive manufacturers to submit their own proposals Liverpools s Edward Bury favoured by some of the D amp KR s Quaker board being eliminated at his stage over insistence of use of an inside cylinder design with a crank axle which was not favoured by D amp KR engineers 4 Valve Gear of Forrester s Swiftsure locomotive built 1834 In December 1833 with time running short to get locomotives built for their planned start of operations the D amp KR board finally placed based an order for three locomotives from Sharp Brothers that were to become the Hibernia type and three from George Forrester They would have originally preferred to have placed all six with one manufacturer for parts commonality however ability to complete the build in the needed timescale had become a priority and degrees of uncertainty about both designs may have been a factor 5 Forrester had not built any locomotive prior to the D amp KR order 6 so winning the order may seem unexpected Forrester did have some advantages Liverpool base at convenient to the L amp MR and their workshops Good communications with regular steam packet to Dublin previous component build work for the L amp MR amiable relations with the customer and a reputation for good workmanship though that may have gained later citation needed The design may have been evolved with the collaboration of or intention to satisfy Vignoles and Bergin Snell claims Vignoles obtained a set of drawings from Dodds albeit Snell also claims Dodds influence was not present until later D amp KR engines While seemingly not involved in the design the employment of Alexander Allan from Stephenson s would have been a help It is also the case Forrester was given the Stephenson locomotive Milo by the L amp MR in 1834 with a view to a repair quote the L amp MR eventually accepting Milo was uneconomic to repair leaving Forrester to scrap Milo and with the L amp MR proving Swiftsure as a replacement early in 1834 the precise dates are unclear and it was possibly too late in the year to reverse engineer any of Milo s features into the Forrester design citation needed D amp KR officials often did spot visits to Forresters during their locomotives construction and were generally well received by Forresters their spot checks at Sharps sometimes gave indication of staff problems and absenteeism 7 The company first began to produce railway locomotives in 1834 6 The locomotives constructed in that year were Swiftsure for the L amp MR with Vauxhall Dublin and Kingstown for the D amp KR which was to begin operations in December of that year Swiftsure was a locomotive built by Forresters of the Vauxhall Foundry in Liverpool which entered service for the L amp MR in 1834 as No 36 8 Stretton claims Swiftsure to be the first locomotive built by the company though others have stated that this might not be the case 9 10 11 However information from Mr Alexander Allan engineer at Forresters published in 1883 pointed to an error in a publication in The Engineer in 1881 12 where the Swiftsure was listed at built in 1835 He pointed out that Swiftsure was the first locomotive being built early in 1834 and he attended it on trials etc he also went to Dublin late in 1834 with the three locomotives for the Dublin and Kingstown Railway of the same size and design as the Swiftsure and was responsible for their care while under the Forrester s maintenance contract The confusion may have arisen because Swiftsure worked from the Liverpool end of the L amp MR in 1834 before being transferred to the Manchester end of the line in 1835 8 Swiftsure had a pair of trailing wheels added in 1836 and was in regular service until 1842 13 Design Edit The type were the first locomotives to use outside cylinders and also the first outside and inside frames though the later was not appreciated at the time and only adopted some ten years later 14 The combination of outside frames on a short 2 2 0 wheelbase with unbalanced driving wheels led to an oscillating motion and led to the nickname of Boxers 14 additional citation s needed Many locomotives eventually were fitted with a trailing axle to become a 2 2 2T to help reduce the problem Liverpool and Manchester Edit Swiftsure entered service on the L amp MR as a 2 2 0 in October 1834 with two outside 11 in 18 in 279 mm 457 mm cylinders b for a price of 860 15 c It was noted as being involved in a collision with at Parkside on 11 November 1934 with the consequence that a labourer was crushed between wagons of the stationary between the wagons of the stationary luggage train d The labourer was later to die of his injuries and the occasional engineman charge of Swiftsure was held responsible for entering a watering stop at more than 6 miles per hour 9 7 km h and was sanctioned by losing his turn on the promotion list 17 Swiftsure was involved in a further incident in July 1835 whilst descending the incline at Whiston Merseyside when a train of five silk wagons caught fire the train took several hundred yards to stop and some wagons were only detached with difficulty The L amp MR was ultimately advised to pay 3 000 damages for the high value load on the basis they had not adequately displayed notices that the owners should have insured it 18 Swiftsure was involved in several experiments during its service life In November 1836 the L amp MR performed a coal burning trial involving Swiftsure and several other locomotives the results being generally unsuccessful with Swiftsure s firebox damaged by excessive heat 19 Locomotives at this period were forced to use the more expensive and sometimes problematic coke in order to fulfill the requirement to consume their own smoke it took several years for the technology to use coal successfully in locomotives to evolve 20 Dublin and Kingstown Edit The Forresters locomotives for the D amp KR became known as Vauxhall Dublin and Kingstown the names being those of the manufacturing foundry and the termini of the line The first of the D amp KR locomotives e ran sufficiently well on tests on the L amp MR that it was permitted by their superintendent Manchester to take charge of the first class train to Liverpool on 27 June 1834 The journey was completed in 1 hour 17 minutes with several D amp KR people on board including James Pim Thomas Flemming Bergin Vignoles and other directors 7 Vauxhall along with Hibernia were transported to Dublin on the same sailing before being hauled through the streets on temporary tracks 7 Murray says there is a legend Vauxhall was the first locomotive to reach the D amp KR s tracks making it Ireland s first steam locomotive 21 The first recorded service of the invited members of the public being transported was a special preview trip to Martello Tower and Booterstown by Vauxhall on 4 October 1834 The honour of the first trial run over the entire length of the line fell to Forresters Hibernia on 9 October 1834 with Vauxhall doing a trip later in the day citation needed The honour of the first scheduled train in Ireland fell to Sharp s locomotive Hibernia at 09 00 17 December 1834 this being the famously celebrated inaugural run While Forrester s Vauxhall ran the next service and both continued running trips throughout the day The D amp KR commenced its full scheduled service in January 1835 Maintenance of the class was at the Serpentine Road engine hospital with one section reserved for Forrester locomotives with their man Alexander Allan on site for one year per the purchase contract 7 The D amp KR began requesting quotes for two more engines in February 1835 Vignoles earlier suggestion eight locomotives would be required proving more accurate in practice than consuktant Rastrick s suggest only four would be necessary 22 On 28 March 1835 the motive power situation became desperate when Forrester locomotive s Vauxhall and Dublin were in collision with requests to England for spare tenders 7 Murray claims the D amp KR had begun to consider tank engines carry their own coke and water had begun to be considered from February due to the operational inconvenience of having to separate the locomotive and tender so each could be turned independently on the D amp KR s 10 feet 3 0 m turntables the latter at least being manually pushed 22 The order for two 2 2 0T locomotives s was put in Forrester s in the event these were named Comet and Victoria with Murray claiming these were the first tank engines to work on any public railway 23 All five Forrester D amp KR singles were converted to six wheel tank engines by 1841 the conversion being relatively simple with the fitting of water tanks under the boiler and extending the footplate to incorporate a coke stage and the addition of a trailing axle 24 London and Greenwich Edit The London and Greenwich Railway began a public service on the 2 1 2 miles 4 0 km section between Spa Road and Deptford in February 1836 25 Locomotives in use at this point were two Planet type of the 2 2 0 configuration Royal William was supplied by William Marshall amp Sons f Lowe also finds alternative sources indicating No 1 was supplied by Charles Tayleur and Company which had links to Stephenson and this was as a set of parts and assembled on site That source also indicates Marshalls were previously Braithwaites until 1839 Whishaw 1842 and Venus supplied by the L amp MR possibly as a hire to replace an esoteric 0 2 0 rotary steam engine supplied by Earl Dundonald Victoria from Forresters became the third operational engine in May 1836 for the sum of 1 010 10s 0d 26 The L amp GR had initially ordered locomotives from Stephenson s and Burys however neither actually supplied g Forrester s second engine Walter h arrived in December 1836 in time for the extension to London Bridge station becoming the sixth operational engine Royal William having acquired three sister locomotives in the interim 26 Victoria and Walter with their 2 2 0WT configuration and acquired the nickname Boxers for the typical yawing motion of type Trials in 1837 revealed that Walter was more powerful than Royal William Both were converted to tender locomotives possibly in an effort to reduce the yawing They were painted green acquiring the numbers five and six respectively and possibly losing their names from the 1840s citation needed Victoria had a trailing axle added in 1841 to become a 2 2 0 before becoming a pumping engine at Bricklayers Arms from December 1845 and was finally acquired by C Tomkins at Reading for scrap for 110 Walter was never fitted with a trailing axle It saw service at Redhill repair shops from January 1846 followed by an assignment to the Gomshall sandpits from 1853 until it was scrapped along with Victoria 27 Birmingham and Gloucester Edit The Birmingham and Gloucester Railway possessed four Forrester 2 2 2 s 28 the Cheltenham the Worcester the Bromsgrove and the Tewkesbury 29 They had been ordered by Edward Bury soon after his appointment as locomotive advisor and agent and two arrived in November 1838 and were used on construction 30 They proved more reliable than the American Norris engines and were allocated to the important mail services 31 With their 2 2 2 wheel arrangement they were totally unsuited and never intended for climbing the steep Lickey Incline and for this ascent they were assisted by the Norris Type A Extra bank engines 31 Other railways Edit Parliamentary papers published in 1842 seem to yield examples of other railways using 2 2 0 and 2 2 2 Forrester engines 32 The Preston and Wyre Railway P amp WR had a Forrester 2 2 0 it sued for light goods ballasting work and occasional special passenger trains Its other engine was a 2 2 2 goods and its passenger services were generally worked by another railway The P amp WR was aware their six wheeled locomotive seemed to cause far less track wear than several other four wheel locomotives used on the railway but that there 4 wheel Forrester could negotiate some curves the six wheel could not 33 i The Grand Junction Railway had between one and three Forrester engines 2 2 2 engines based on the information they had three locomotives with outside cylinders with one different from the other two 34 The Manchester Bolton amp Bury Canal Navigation and Railway MB amp CNR had two Forrester 2 2 0 s and eight 0 4 0 s from Edward Bury and William Fairbairn with a preference to go for Bury s engine if more were needed 35 Legacy EditThe class was to form the basis for later locomotives built by the D amp KR for itself starting with the Princess in 1939 36 The locomotives Alexander Allan went on design for the Grand Junction Railway and London and North Western Railway including the Crewe type locomotive showed influences from Forrester practice 37 Notes Edit Outside cylinders means the cylinders were placed outside of the wheels It is possible some earlier engines may have had outside cylinders Dodd s Star of 1833 and possibly one other may have a claim The date seems surprisingly late in the year if Thomas 1980 pp 162 163 is correct Dawson states the L amp MR ordered Swiftsure in November 1834 for 860 as a replacement for Milo and was delivered in spring 1834 with a Forrester D amp KR engine running trials earlier in July 1834 on the L amp MR 16 Freight or goods trains were termed luggage trains in this period It would probably be reasonably assumed this was Vauxhall but it is not named as such in the source Thomas 1986 locates Marshall amp Sons at Tipton while Lowe 2014 pp 458 459 indicates Gravesend Lowe 2014 pp 458 459 says Bury subcontracted to Forrester both factories were in the Liverpool docks area while Stephenson had links to Charles Tayleur citation needed Forrester s had named the locomotive William but the L amp GR renamed it Walter to avoid a clash presumably after their director George Walter The P amp WR included docks where sharp curves might be found References EditFootnotes Edit Lyons 2015 p 81 Thomas 1980 p 157 Thomas 1980 p 162 a b c Murray 1981 pp 173 174 Murray 1981 pp 172 174 a b Lowe 2014 pp 176 177 a b c d e Murray 1981 p 177 a b Links in the History of the Locomotive No XIII The Engineer 150 23 February 1883 Stretton 1892 pp 54 56 Stretton 1903 pp 62 63 Pangborn 1894 pp n105 n106 Links in the History of the Locomotive No X The Engineer 18 March 1881 Links in the History of the Locomotive No XIV The Engineer 160 2 March 1883 a b Nock 1975 pp 7 9 Thomas 1980 pp 162 163 Dawson 2021 p 150 Thomas 1980 pp 210 Thomas 1980 p 206 Thomas 1980 pp 175 176 Thomas 1980 p 175 Murray 1981 p 182 a b Murray 1981 p 178 Murray 1981 p 179 Murray 1981 p 183 Thomas 1986 p 50 a b Thomas 1986 pp 176 177 Thomas 1986 p 191 Various 1842 p 202 Whishaw 1842 p 30 Long amp Awdry 1987 p 131 a b Long amp Awdry 1987 p 169 170 Various 1842 Various 1842 pp 219 220 Various 1842 pp 211 212 Various 1842 pp 205 206 Murray 1981 pp 181 190 Lowe 2014 p 177 Sources Edit Barlow Peter 1837 A Treatise on the Strength of Timber Cast Iron Malleable Iron and Other Materials with Rules for Application in Architecture Construction of Suspension Bridges Railways Etc London John Weale OCLC 258491612 Bergin T F 27 October 1841 Dublin and Kingstown Railway No 29 Letter to Lords of the Privy Council for Trade pp 213 214 Dawson Anthony 2021 Locomotives of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway Yorkshire Pen amp Sword Transport ISBN 9781526763983 OCLC 1190858980 Lowe James W 2014 1975 British Steam Locomotives Builders Pen amp Sword Transport pp 245 259 ISBN 978 1 47382 289 4 OCLC 889509628 Long P J Awdry W V 1987 The Birmingham and Gloucester Railway Gloucester Alan Sutton ISBN 0862993296 OCLC 18588406 OL 2468738M Lyons Garrett 15 October 2015 Steaming to Kingstown and Sucking Up to Dalkey The Story of the Dublin and Kingstown Railway Dublin Londubh Books ISBN 978 1907535772 Murray Kevin 1981 Ireland s First Railway Dublin Irish Railway Record Society ISBN 0 904078 07 8 Nock O S August 1975 Locomotion Routledge amp Kegan Paul PLC ISBN 978 0710082220 OCLC 21980980 OL 5253681M Pangborn Joseph Gladding 1894 The world s rail way historical descriptive illustrative New York Winchell Printing Company OCLC 983256626 Patterson Edward Mervyn 2003 1962 The Great Northern Railway Ireland Railway History Vol OL67 Usk Oakwood ISBN 9780853616023 OCLC 53393781 Saunders 18 October 1834 The Dublin and Kingstown Railway Mechanics Magazine London J Cunningham 22 584 47 via googlebooks a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint url status link Snell S 1921 A Story of Railway Pioneers being an account of the inventions and works of Isaac Dodds and his son Thomas Weatherburn Dodds London Selwyn amp Blount Ltd OCLC 1085335383 OL 7035758M Stretton Clement Edwin 1892 The Locomotive Engine and Its Development A popular treatise on the gradual improvements made in railway engines between 1803 and 1892 1 ed London Crosby Lockwood OCLC 503789724 Stretton Clement Edwin 1903 The Locomotive Engine and Its Development A popular treatise on the gradual improvements made in railway engines between 1803 and 1903 6 ed London Crosby Lockwood OCLC 265878314 OL 20443807M Thomas Ronald H G 1980 The Liverpool amp Manchester Railway London Batsford ISBN 0 7134 0537 6 Thomas Ronald H G 1986 1972 London s First Railway The London and Greenwich Batsford ISBN 9780713454147 OCLC 915881410 OL 6395959W Various 1842 Railway Correspondence Letter to Lords of the Privy Council for Trade Whishaw Francis 1842 1840 The Railways of Great Britain and Ireland practically described and illustrated 2nd ed London John Weale 1840 publisher Simpkin Marshall amp Co OCLC 36383414 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Forrester single locomotive amp oldid 1145781780, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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