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GER Class S69

The Great Eastern Railway (GER) Class S69, also known as 1500 Class, and later classified B12 by the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) is a class of 4-6-0 steam locomotive designed to haul express passenger trains from London Liverpool Street station along the Great Eastern Main Line.[1] Originally they were designed by S. D. Holden, but were much rebuilt, resulting in several subclasses.

GER Class S69
LNER Class B12
B12/4 4-6-0 No. 61504 at Keith Locomotive Depot 1948
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
DesignerS. D. Holden
BuilderStratford Works (51),
Wm. Beardmore & Co. (20),
Beyer, Peacock & Co. (10)
Serial numberWB 135–154,
BP 6487–6496
Build date1911–1921 (71) 1928 (10)
Total produced81
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte4-6-0
 • UIC2′C h2
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Leading dia.3 ft 3 in (0.991 m)
Driver dia.6 ft 6 in (1.981 m)
Wheelbase48 ft 3 in (14.71 m)
Length57 ft 7 in (17.55 m) over buffers
Axle loadB12:15+1320 t (15,650 kg)
B12/3:17 t (17,000 kg)
Adhesive weightB12/1&2: 43 long tons 8 cwt (97,200 lb or 44.1 t)
B12/3: 48 long tons 2 cwt (107,700 lb or 48.9 t)
Loco weightB12/1&2: 62 long tons 19.5 cwt (141,100 lb or 64 t)
B12/3: 69 long tons 5 cwt (155,100 lb or 70.4 t)
Tender weight38 long tons 6 cwt (85,800 lb or 38.9 t)
Fuel typeCoal
Fuel capacity4 long tons 0 cwt (9,000 lb or 4.1 t)
Water cap.3,700 imp gal (16,800 L; 4,440 US gal)
Firebox:
 • Grate area26.5 sq ft (2.46 m2)
Boiler pressure180 psi (1.24 MPa)
Heating surface:
 • Firebox154 sq ft (14.3 m2)
 • Total surface1,919 sq ft (178.3 m2)
CylindersTwo, inside
Cylinder size20 in × 28 in (510 mm × 710 mm)
Performance figures
Tractive effort21,969 lbf (97.72 kN)
Career
Operators
ClassGER: S69,
LNER: B12
Power classBR: 4P3F
Number in class81
NumbersGER/LNER 1946: 1500-1570, LNER: 8500-8580, BR: 61500-61580
Axle load classLNER/BR: RA 4 (B12/3), RA 3 (remainder)
Withdrawn1913 (1), 1945–1961
DispositionOne preserved, remainder scrapped
B12/3 No. 61580 at Grantham 28 March 1956.
No. 8572 preserved

Seventy-one S69 locomotives were built between 1911 and 1921 and numbered 1500–1570. Fifty-one of these were built at the GER's Stratford Works and the remaining 20 by William Beardmore and Company. A further 10 locomotives were built by Beyer, Peacock and Company for the LNER in 1928 and numbered 8571–8580.[2] From 1948 the British Railways numbers were 61500–61580 (with gaps).

Background edit

At the time of their introduction, the "Claud Hamilton" 4-4-0s were becoming outclassed on the heaviest express. Although an enlarged 4-4-0 design was mooted,[3] it was realised that any such design would have too high an axle load for the tracks of the Great Eastern Railway, which had a relatively low restriction. Another design constraint was the short turntables used at the time. This meant that a 4-6-0 design was decided upon, although the design was relatively short compared to similar designs introduced at the same time.

Construction edit

The first locomotive, numbered 1500, was delivered to Ipswich shed in November 1911, and construction continued at Stratford Works up to number 1538 which was delivered, again to Ipswich shed, in June 1915.[4] There was then a brief pause due to wartime restrictions and the next two locomotives, 1539 and 1540, were not delivered until June 1917.[5] A further batch of 20, numbers 1541 to 1560, were constructed by Beardsmore's having works numbers 135 to 154 although running numbers were not in the same order as the works numbers. These were delivered from June 1920 to April 1921 during which time construction continued at Stratford Works with numbers 1561 to 1570 also being delivered in 1920.[6]

After the grouping the LNER ordered a further batch of 10 locomotives from Beyer Peacock of Manchester, and these were delivered with running numbers 8571 to 8580 to Gorton shed. This final batch brought the number of locomotives constructed to 81.[7]

LNER edit

Seventy were still in service at the 1923 grouping, the LNER adding 7000 to the numbers of nearly all the ex-Great Eastern locomotives, including the Class S69 locomotives. A further ten were ordered in 1928 to ease a power shortage caused by the stalled development on a new class of 4-6-0 locomotives, and the cancellation of the planned suburban 2-6-4T tank locomotive due to the adverse press publicity caused by the Sevenoaks derailment of 1927.[8]

All the B12 locomotives were fitted with vacuum ejectors between 1924 and 1929 (the 1928 batch had them from new). Fifty-five locomotives were fitted with ACFI feedwater heaters between 1927 and 1934, but these were removed between 1934 and 1942. The first substantive change was the fitting of Lenz poppet valves to the 1928 batch (from new), and six of the ex-GE locomotives (8516/19/25/32/33/40).[9] These locomotives were then classified as class B12/2. The poppet valves were not a great success and they all reverted to or were converted to piston valve engines between 1931 and 1934.

As newer power became available, the locomotives’ low axleload made them ideal candidates for transfers elsewhere. consequently, between 1931 and 1942, twenty-five locomotives were transferred to Scotland for use on the former Great North of Scotland Railway lines.

Starting in 1932, a programme began of rebuilding the B12 locomotives with larger diameter boilers. The Diagram 99A boilers utilised were 5-foot-6-inch (1,676 mm) diameter, compared with the 5-foot-1+18-inch (1,553 mm) diameter originals. These rebuilt locomotives were classified as class B12/3, and as they had a higher axleload, none of the Scottish-allocated locomotives were included. The last to be rebuilt was 8549 in 1944, leaving 8534 as the last English B12/1; but it was withdrawn the following year without being rebuilt.

As the Scottish locomotives also required new boilers, a new design was started in 1941, based on the old design but with a round-topped firebox and other detail changes. Thirty of these Diagram 25A boilers were manufactured at Doncaster and Stratford between 1942 and 1946. Nine were sent to Inverurie Works for fitting to B12 locomotives, the remainder went to Stratford for fitting to class J20 locomotives. The B12 locomotives fitted with the Diagram 25A boiler (1500/04/05/07/08/11/24/26) were classified as class B12/4.

In the 1942 LNER renumbering scheme, the class was allocated the range 7415–7494, but only eleven (7426/37/49/67/70/72/76/79/82/88/91) were renumbered before the scheme was abandoned due to the war. In the 1946 scheme, the class was allocated the 1500–1580 block(their 1924 numbers with 7000 removed from them), with gaps for the two withdrawn locomotives.

British Railways edit

At nationalisation in 1948, seventy-two locomotives passed to British Railways, who renumbered them 61500–61580. Withdrawals continued, and all were gone by the end of 1961. One engine, LNER No. 8572, has been preserved.

Tables edit

Table of orders and numbers[10]
Year Order Manufacturer Quantity GER Nos. LNER Nos. LNER 1946 Nos. Notes
1911–12 S69 Stratford Works 5 1500–1504 8500–8504 1500–1504
1913 A73 Stratford Works 10 1505–1514 8505, —, 8507–8514 1505, —, 1507–1514 1506 withdrawn after accident at Colchester, 12 July 1913
1913 E75 Stratford Works 5 1515–1519 8515–8519 1515–1519
1914 R75 Stratford Works 10 1520–1529 8520–8529 1520–1529
1914–15 M77 Stratford Works 6 1530–1535 8530–8535 1530–1535
1915–17 B78 Stratford Works 5 1536–1540 8536–8540 1536–1540
1920–21 Wm. Beardmore & Co. 135–154 20 1541–1560 8541–8560 1541–1560
1920 H82 Stratford Works 10 1561–1570 8561–8570 1561–1570
1928 Beyer, Peacock & Co. 6487–6496 10 8571–8580 1571–1580 8572 preserved
Table of withdrawals[9]
Year Quantity in
service at
start of year
Quantity
withdrawn
Locomotive numbers Notes
1945 80 1 8534 Last English B12/1
1946 79 1 1548 Scottish
1947 78 6 1518/22/27/31/44/51 1531/51 Scottish
1948 72 3 1500/09/17 1500 Scottish
1949 69 2 1510/61536 61536 Scottish
1950 67 2 61504/29 Both Scottish
1951 65 5 61503/15/25–26/59 61503/26 Scottish
1952 60 5 61505/11/21/50/60 All Scottish
1953 55 9 61501/07–08/13/24/28/32/43/63 All Scottish; last B12/4s
1954 46 2 61502/39 Last B12/1s, last Scottish B12s
1955 44 2 61523/62
1956 42 0
1957 42 17 61512/19-20/37–38/40–41/45/50/55–57/65/69/74/78–79
1958 25 9 61516/42/47/53–54/61/64/67/70
1959 16 15 61514/30/33/35/46/49/58/66/68/71/73/75–77/80
1960 1 0
1961 1 1 61572 Preserved

Accidents and incidents edit

  • On 12 July 1913, locomotive No. 1506 was hauling an express passenger train which collided with GER Class T26 2-4-0 No. 471, at Colchester, Essex due to a signalman's error. Three people were killed and fourteen were injured. The brand new locomotive, only 4 months old, was so severely damaged that only its boiler and tender were salvaged.[11] The remaining parts were cut up at Stratford Works in September of that year.[12] A replacement locomotive was constructed, but this was allocated running number 1535 and number 1506 was not re-used.[13]
  • On 17 January 1931, locomotive No. 8578 was hauling a newspaper train that departed from Thorpe-le-Soken station, Essex against signals. It was in collision with LNER D16 4-4-0 No. 8781, which was undertaking a light engine move, at Great Holland. Two people were killed and two were seriously injured.[14] After this accident the engine was given a general overhaul and received tender No. 20, which has originally built for the GER Decapod when it was converted to an 0-8-0 tender engine.[15]
  • On 10 February 1941, locomotive No. 8556 was hauling a passenger train that overran signals and was in a rear-end collision between Harold Wood and Brentwood, Essex. Seven people were killed and seventeen were seriously injured.[16]
  • On 2 January 1947, locomotive No. 1565 was hauling a passenger train that was run into by an express passenger train at Gidea Park, Essex. The express had overrun signals. Seven people were killed, 45 were hospitalised.[17]

World War II Career edit

An unknown number of B12s were used towards the end of WWII to haul ambulance trains for the US Army.[18] These trains, equipped for working on the Continent or at home, were fitted with the Westinghouse brake. B12s were selected because they had the Westinghouse brake, and were generally acceptable because their low-axle loading gave them a very high route-availability. They operated widely over the network and were fitted with a "vacuum/air proportioning valve" to allow the driver of a local pilot engine (used where double heading was necessary because of gradients) to control the brake throughout the train.

Preservation edit

One B12/3, LNER number 8572 (BR 61572), has survived to preservation on the North Norfolk Railway, the only British inside cylinder 4-6-0 to be preserved.

Models edit

A model of the B12 was brought out in OO gauge by Tri-ang Railways (now Hornby) in 1963. Models produced since 1970 feature a steam "chuff" effect, where in the tender as the wheels turn, a piece of sandpaper is scraped by a piece of metal fixed to one axle. In 2016, Hornby launched a brand new tooling of the B12 in a super detail form with LNER apple green and BR lined black with early and late crest liveries.[19]

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Phillips 1982, p. 3
  2. ^ "S69 Class 4-6-0 1911-1921, 1928". Great Eastern Railway Society. Retrieved 16 April 2008.
  3. ^ Hughes 1988, p. 56
  4. ^ Yeadon 1994, pp. 11–51.
  5. ^ Yeadon 1994, p. 52.
  6. ^ Yeadon 1994, pp. 71–79.
  7. ^ Yeadon 1994, pp. 82–92.
  8. ^ Boddy et al. 1975, p. 51.
  9. ^ a b Boddy et al. 1975, pp. 65–66.
  10. ^ Aldrich 1969, p. 55
  11. ^ Trevena 1981, p. 25
  12. ^ Yeadon 1994, p. 3.
  13. ^ Yeadon 1994, p. 26.
  14. ^ Vaughan 1989, pp. 69–73.
  15. ^ Yeadon 1994, p. 89.
  16. ^ Earnshaw 1991, p. 28
  17. ^ Earnshaw 1991, p. 30
  18. ^ Nock 1971.
  19. ^ "Hornby Shows Final B12 Sample". Hornby Magazine. 2016.

Bibliography edit

  • Aldrich, C. Langley (1969). The Locomotives of the Great Eastern Railway 1862–1962 (7th ed.). Wickford, Essex: C. Langley Aldrich. OCLC 30278831.
  • Baxter, Bertram (2012). Baxter, David; Mitchell, Peter (eds.). British Locomotive Catalogue 1825–1923, Volume 6: Great Eastern Railway, North British Railway, Great North of Scotland Railway, Midland & Great Northern Joint Railway, remaining companies in the LNER group. Southampton: Kestrel Railway Books. pp. 97–101. ISBN 978-1-905505-26-5.
  • Boddy, M. G.; Brown, W. A.; Fry, E. V.; Hennigan, W.; Hoole, Ken; Manners, F.; Neve, E.; Platt, E. N. T.; Proud, P.; Yeadon, W. B. (March 1975). Fry, E. V. (ed.). Locomotives of the L.N.E.R., Part 2B: Tender Engines—Classes B1 to B19. Lincoln: RCTS. ISBN 0-901115-73-8.
  • Earnshaw, Alan (1991). Trains in Trouble: Vol. 7. Penryn: Atlantic Books. ISBN 0-906899-50-8.
  • Hughes, Geoffery (1988). LNER 4-6-0s At Work. Book Law Publications. ISBN 1-901945-06-5.
  • Nock, O.S. (1971). Britain's Railways at War, 1939–1945. Ian Allan. ISBN 0 7110 0239 8.
  • Phillips, Charles (1982). Essex Steam. King's Lynn: Becknell Books. ISBN 0-907087-10-8.
  • Trevena, Arthur (1981). Trains in Trouble: Vol. 2. Redruth: Atlantic Books. ISBN 0-906899-03-6.
  • Vaughan, Adrian (1989). Obstruction Danger. Wellingborough: Patrick Stephens Limited. ISBN 1-85260-055-1.
  • Yeadon, W.B. (1994). Yeadon's Register of LNER Locomotives - B12 Class. Vol. 7. Oldham: Irwell Press. ISBN 1-871608-48-1.

External links edit

  • The S.D. Holden B12 (GER Class S69 / "1500"s) 4-6-0s — LNER Encyclopedia

class, great, eastern, railway, class, also, known, 1500, class, later, classified, london, north, eastern, railway, lner, class, steam, locomotive, designed, haul, express, passenger, trains, from, london, liverpool, street, station, along, great, eastern, ma. The Great Eastern Railway GER Class S69 also known as 1500 Class and later classified B12 by the London and North Eastern Railway LNER is a class of 4 6 0 steam locomotive designed to haul express passenger trains from London Liverpool Street station along the Great Eastern Main Line 1 Originally they were designed by S D Holden but were much rebuilt resulting in several subclasses GER Class S69 LNER Class B12B12 4 4 6 0 No 61504 at Keith Locomotive Depot 1948Type and originPower typeSteamDesignerS D HoldenBuilderStratford Works 51 Wm Beardmore amp Co 20 Beyer Peacock amp Co 10 Serial numberWB 135 154 BP 6487 6496Build date1911 1921 71 1928 10 Total produced81SpecificationsConfiguration Whyte4 6 0 UIC2 C h2Gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeLeading dia 3 ft 3 in 0 991 m Driver dia 6 ft 6 in 1 981 m Wheelbase48 ft 3 in 14 71 m Length57 ft 7 in 17 55 m over buffersAxle loadB12 15 13 20 t 15 650 kg B12 3 17 t 17 000 kg Adhesive weightB12 1 amp 2 43 long tons 8 cwt 97 200 lb or 44 1 t B12 3 48 long tons 2 cwt 107 700 lb or 48 9 t Loco weightB12 1 amp 2 62 long tons 19 5 cwt 141 100 lb or 64 t B12 3 69 long tons 5 cwt 155 100 lb or 70 4 t Tender weight38 long tons 6 cwt 85 800 lb or 38 9 t Fuel typeCoalFuel capacity4 long tons 0 cwt 9 000 lb or 4 1 t Water cap 3 700 imp gal 16 800 L 4 440 US gal Firebox Grate area26 5 sq ft 2 46 m2 Boiler pressure180 psi 1 24 MPa Heating surface Firebox154 sq ft 14 3 m2 Total surface1 919 sq ft 178 3 m2 CylindersTwo insideCylinder size20 in 28 in 510 mm 710 mm Performance figuresTractive effort21 969 lbf 97 72 kN CareerOperatorsGreat Eastern Railway London and North Eastern Railway British RailwaysClassGER S69 LNER B12Power classBR 4P3FNumber in class81NumbersGER LNER 1946 1500 1570 LNER 8500 8580 BR 61500 61580Axle load classLNER BR RA 4 B12 3 RA 3 remainder Withdrawn1913 1 1945 1961DispositionOne preserved remainder scrappedB12 3 No 61580 at Grantham 28 March 1956 No 8572 preservedSeventy one S69 locomotives were built between 1911 and 1921 and numbered 1500 1570 Fifty one of these were built at the GER s Stratford Works and the remaining 20 by William Beardmore and Company A further 10 locomotives were built by Beyer Peacock and Company for the LNER in 1928 and numbered 8571 8580 2 From 1948 the British Railways numbers were 61500 61580 with gaps Contents 1 Background 2 Construction 3 LNER 4 British Railways 5 Tables 6 Accidents and incidents 7 World War II Career 8 Preservation 9 Models 10 References 10 1 Notes 10 2 Bibliography 11 External linksBackground editAt the time of their introduction the Claud Hamilton 4 4 0s were becoming outclassed on the heaviest express Although an enlarged 4 4 0 design was mooted 3 it was realised that any such design would have too high an axle load for the tracks of the Great Eastern Railway which had a relatively low restriction Another design constraint was the short turntables used at the time This meant that a 4 6 0 design was decided upon although the design was relatively short compared to similar designs introduced at the same time Construction editThe first locomotive numbered 1500 was delivered to Ipswich shed in November 1911 and construction continued at Stratford Works up to number 1538 which was delivered again to Ipswich shed in June 1915 4 There was then a brief pause due to wartime restrictions and the next two locomotives 1539 and 1540 were not delivered until June 1917 5 A further batch of 20 numbers 1541 to 1560 were constructed by Beardsmore s having works numbers 135 to 154 although running numbers were not in the same order as the works numbers These were delivered from June 1920 to April 1921 during which time construction continued at Stratford Works with numbers 1561 to 1570 also being delivered in 1920 6 After the grouping the LNER ordered a further batch of 10 locomotives from Beyer Peacock of Manchester and these were delivered with running numbers 8571 to 8580 to Gorton shed This final batch brought the number of locomotives constructed to 81 7 LNER editSeventy were still in service at the 1923 grouping the LNER adding 7000 to the numbers of nearly all the ex Great Eastern locomotives including the Class S69 locomotives A further ten were ordered in 1928 to ease a power shortage caused by the stalled development on a new class of 4 6 0 locomotives and the cancellation of the planned suburban 2 6 4T tank locomotive due to the adverse press publicity caused by the Sevenoaks derailment of 1927 8 All the B12 locomotives were fitted with vacuum ejectors between 1924 and 1929 the 1928 batch had them from new Fifty five locomotives were fitted with ACFI feedwater heaters between 1927 and 1934 but these were removed between 1934 and 1942 The first substantive change was the fitting of Lenz poppet valves to the 1928 batch from new and six of the ex GE locomotives 8516 19 25 32 33 40 9 These locomotives were then classified as class B12 2 The poppet valves were not a great success and they all reverted to or were converted to piston valve engines between 1931 and 1934 As newer power became available the locomotives low axleload made them ideal candidates for transfers elsewhere consequently between 1931 and 1942 twenty five locomotives were transferred to Scotland for use on the former Great North of Scotland Railway lines Starting in 1932 a programme began of rebuilding the B12 locomotives with larger diameter boilers The Diagram 99A boilers utilised were 5 foot 6 inch 1 676 mm diameter compared with the 5 foot 1 1 8 inch 1 553 mm diameter originals These rebuilt locomotives were classified as class B12 3 and as they had a higher axleload none of the Scottish allocated locomotives were included The last to be rebuilt was 8549 in 1944 leaving 8534 as the last English B12 1 but it was withdrawn the following year without being rebuilt As the Scottish locomotives also required new boilers a new design was started in 1941 based on the old design but with a round topped firebox and other detail changes Thirty of these Diagram 25A boilers were manufactured at Doncaster and Stratford between 1942 and 1946 Nine were sent to Inverurie Works for fitting to B12 locomotives the remainder went to Stratford for fitting to class J20 locomotives The B12 locomotives fitted with the Diagram 25A boiler 1500 04 05 07 08 11 24 26 were classified as class B12 4 In the 1942 LNER renumbering scheme the class was allocated the range 7415 7494 but only eleven 7426 37 49 67 70 72 76 79 82 88 91 were renumbered before the scheme was abandoned due to the war In the 1946 scheme the class was allocated the 1500 1580 block their 1924 numbers with 7000 removed from them with gaps for the two withdrawn locomotives British Railways editAt nationalisation in 1948 seventy two locomotives passed to British Railways who renumbered them 61500 61580 Withdrawals continued and all were gone by the end of 1961 One engine LNER No 8572 has been preserved Tables editTable of orders and numbers 10 Year Order Manufacturer Quantity GER Nos LNER Nos LNER 1946 Nos Notes1911 12 S69 Stratford Works 5 1500 1504 8500 8504 1500 15041913 A73 Stratford Works 10 1505 1514 8505 8507 8514 1505 1507 1514 1506 withdrawn after accident at Colchester 12 July 19131913 E75 Stratford Works 5 1515 1519 8515 8519 1515 15191914 R75 Stratford Works 10 1520 1529 8520 8529 1520 15291914 15 M77 Stratford Works 6 1530 1535 8530 8535 1530 15351915 17 B78 Stratford Works 5 1536 1540 8536 8540 1536 15401920 21 Wm Beardmore amp Co 135 154 20 1541 1560 8541 8560 1541 15601920 H82 Stratford Works 10 1561 1570 8561 8570 1561 15701928 Beyer Peacock amp Co 6487 6496 10 8571 8580 1571 1580 8572 preservedTable of withdrawals 9 Year Quantity inservice atstart of year Quantitywithdrawn Locomotive numbers Notes1945 80 1 8534 Last English B12 11946 79 1 1548 Scottish1947 78 6 1518 22 27 31 44 51 1531 51 Scottish1948 72 3 1500 09 17 1500 Scottish1949 69 2 1510 61536 61536 Scottish1950 67 2 61504 29 Both Scottish1951 65 5 61503 15 25 26 59 61503 26 Scottish1952 60 5 61505 11 21 50 60 All Scottish1953 55 9 61501 07 08 13 24 28 32 43 63 All Scottish last B12 4s1954 46 2 61502 39 Last B12 1s last Scottish B12s1955 44 2 61523 621956 42 0 1957 42 17 61512 19 20 37 38 40 41 45 50 55 57 65 69 74 78 791958 25 9 61516 42 47 53 54 61 64 67 701959 16 15 61514 30 33 35 46 49 58 66 68 71 73 75 77 801960 1 0 1961 1 1 61572 PreservedAccidents and incidents editOn 12 July 1913 locomotive No 1506 was hauling an express passenger train which collided with GER Class T26 2 4 0 No 471 at Colchester Essex due to a signalman s error Three people were killed and fourteen were injured The brand new locomotive only 4 months old was so severely damaged that only its boiler and tender were salvaged 11 The remaining parts were cut up at Stratford Works in September of that year 12 A replacement locomotive was constructed but this was allocated running number 1535 and number 1506 was not re used 13 On 17 January 1931 locomotive No 8578 was hauling a newspaper train that departed from Thorpe le Soken station Essex against signals It was in collision with LNER D16 4 4 0 No 8781 which was undertaking a light engine move at Great Holland Two people were killed and two were seriously injured 14 After this accident the engine was given a general overhaul and received tender No 20 which has originally built for the GER Decapod when it was converted to an 0 8 0 tender engine 15 On 10 February 1941 locomotive No 8556 was hauling a passenger train that overran signals and was in a rear end collision between Harold Wood and Brentwood Essex Seven people were killed and seventeen were seriously injured 16 On 2 January 1947 locomotive No 1565 was hauling a passenger train that was run into by an express passenger train at Gidea Park Essex The express had overrun signals Seven people were killed 45 were hospitalised 17 World War II Career editAn unknown number of B12s were used towards the end of WWII to haul ambulance trains for the US Army 18 These trains equipped for working on the Continent or at home were fitted with the Westinghouse brake B12s were selected because they had the Westinghouse brake and were generally acceptable because their low axle loading gave them a very high route availability They operated widely over the network and were fitted with a vacuum air proportioning valve to allow the driver of a local pilot engine used where double heading was necessary because of gradients to control the brake throughout the train Preservation editOne B12 3 LNER number 8572 BR 61572 has survived to preservation on the North Norfolk Railway the only British inside cylinder 4 6 0 to be preserved Models editA model of the B12 was brought out in OO gauge by Tri ang Railways now Hornby in 1963 Models produced since 1970 feature a steam chuff effect where in the tender as the wheels turn a piece of sandpaper is scraped by a piece of metal fixed to one axle In 2016 Hornby launched a brand new tooling of the B12 in a super detail form with LNER apple green and BR lined black with early and late crest liveries 19 References editNotes edit Phillips 1982 p 3 S69 Class 4 6 0 1911 1921 1928 Great Eastern Railway Society Retrieved 16 April 2008 Hughes 1988 p 56 Yeadon 1994 pp 11 51 Yeadon 1994 p 52 Yeadon 1994 pp 71 79 Yeadon 1994 pp 82 92 Boddy et al 1975 p 51 a b Boddy et al 1975 pp 65 66 Aldrich 1969 p 55 Trevena 1981 p 25 Yeadon 1994 p 3 Yeadon 1994 p 26 Vaughan 1989 pp 69 73 Yeadon 1994 p 89 Earnshaw 1991 p 28 Earnshaw 1991 p 30 Nock 1971 Hornby Shows Final B12 Sample Hornby Magazine 2016 Bibliography edit Aldrich C Langley 1969 The Locomotives of the Great Eastern Railway 1862 1962 7th ed Wickford Essex C Langley Aldrich OCLC 30278831 Baxter Bertram 2012 Baxter David Mitchell Peter eds British Locomotive Catalogue 1825 1923 Volume 6 Great Eastern Railway North British Railway Great North of Scotland Railway Midland amp Great Northern Joint Railway remaining companies in the LNER group Southampton Kestrel Railway Books pp 97 101 ISBN 978 1 905505 26 5 Boddy M G Brown W A Fry E V Hennigan W Hoole Ken Manners F Neve E Platt E N T Proud P Yeadon W B March 1975 Fry E V ed Locomotives of the L N E R Part 2B Tender Engines Classes B1 to B19 Lincoln RCTS ISBN 0 901115 73 8 Earnshaw Alan 1991 Trains in Trouble Vol 7 Penryn Atlantic Books ISBN 0 906899 50 8 Hughes Geoffery 1988 LNER 4 6 0s At Work Book Law Publications ISBN 1 901945 06 5 Nock O S 1971 Britain s Railways at War 1939 1945 Ian Allan ISBN 0 7110 0239 8 Phillips Charles 1982 Essex Steam King s Lynn Becknell Books ISBN 0 907087 10 8 Trevena Arthur 1981 Trains in Trouble Vol 2 Redruth Atlantic Books ISBN 0 906899 03 6 Vaughan Adrian 1989 Obstruction Danger Wellingborough Patrick Stephens Limited ISBN 1 85260 055 1 Yeadon W B 1994 Yeadon s Register of LNER Locomotives B12 Class Vol 7 Oldham Irwell Press ISBN 1 871608 48 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to GER Class S69 LNER Class B12 The S D Holden B12 GER Class S69 1500 s 4 6 0s LNER Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title GER Class S69 amp oldid 1178987889, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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