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GER Class Y14

The Great Eastern Railway (GER) Class Y14 is a class of 0-6-0 steam locomotive. The LNER classified them J15.

GER Class Y14
LNER Class J15
No. 65462 with a demonstration freight train
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
DesignerT. W. Worsdell
BuilderStratford Works (270)
Sharp, Stewart & Co. (19)
Build date1883-1913
Total produced289
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte0-6-0
 • UICC n2
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Driver dia.4 ft 11 in (1.499 m)
Length47 ft 3 in (14.40 m)
Loco weight37.1 long tons (37.7 t; 41.6 short tons)
Tender weight30.65 long tons (31.14 t; 34.33 short tons)
Fuel typeCoal
Fuel capacity5 long tons (5.1 t; 5.6 short tons)
Water cap.2,640 imp gal (12,000 L; 3,170 US gal)
Boiler pressure160 psi (1,100 kPa)
CylindersTwo, inside
Cylinder size17+12 in × 24 in (444 mm × 610 mm)
Performance figures
Tractive effort16,940 lbf (75,400 N)
Career
Operators
Class
  • GER: Y14
  • LNER: J15
Power classBR: 1P2F
Axle load classLNER/BR: Route availability 1
Withdrawn1922 - 1962
DispositionOne preserved, remainder scrapped

The Class Y14 was designed by T.W. Worsdell for both freight and passenger duties - a veritable 'maid of all work'. Introduced in July 1883, they were so successful that all the succeeding Locomotive Superintendents continued to build new batches up until 1913 with little design change, the final total being 289.[1] During World War I, 43 of the engines served in France and Belgium.[2]

Background edit

On 10–11 December 1891, the Great Eastern Railway's Stratford Works built one of these locomotives and had it in steam with a coat of grey primer in 9 hours 47 minutes; this remains a world record. The locomotive then went off to run 36,000 miles (58,000 km) on Peterborough to London coal trains before coming back to the works for the final coat of paint. It lasted 40 years and ran a total of 1,127,750 miles (1,814,940 km).[3]

Because of their light weight the locomotives were given the Route Availability (RA) number 1, indicating that they could work over nearly all routes.

Table of orders and numbers[4]
Year Order Manufacturer Quantity GER Nos. LNER Nos. 1946 Nos. Notes
1883 Y14 Stratford Works 10 610–619 7610–7618, —
1884 K15 Stratford Works 20 620–639 7620–7639
1884 Sharp, Stewart & Co. 3146–3164 19 37–41, 119–124, 592–599 7037, 07038–07039, —, 7600, 7119–7124, 7592–7599 41 renumbered 600 in 1912
1885 N16 Stratford Works 10 680–689 7680–7689
1885–86 P17 Stratford Works 10 690–699 7690–7699
1886 M18 Stratford Works 10 800–809 7609, 7801–7809 800 renumbered 609 in 1892
1886–87 X18 Stratford Works 10 810–819 7810–7819 5350
1887 D20 Stratford Works 10 820–829 7820–7829 5351–5353
1887–88 U20 Stratford Works 10 527–536 7527–7536 5354–5356
1888 R21 Stratford Works 10 537–541, 830–834 7537–7541, 7830–7834 5357–5360
1889 T22 Stratford Works 10 835–844 7835–7844 5361–5364
1889 P23 Stratford Works 10 845–854 7845–7854 5365–5372
1889 T23 Stratford Works 10 855–864 7855–7864 5373–5375
1889 Y23 Stratford Works 10 865–874 7865–7874 5376–5381
1890 U25 Stratford Works 10 875–884 7875–7884 5382–5388
1890 Y25 Stratford Works 10 885–894 7885–7894 5389–5394
1891 L28 Stratford Works 10 895–904 7895–7904 5395–5400
1891 N28 Stratford Works 10 905–914 7905–7914 5401–5407
1891 P28 Stratford Works 10 915–924 7915–7924 5408–5414
1891–92 S28 Stratford Works 10 925–934 7925–7934 5414–5421
1892 X28 Stratford Works 10 936–945 7936–7945 5422–5427
1899 I45 Stratford Works 10 507–516 7507–7516 5428–5435
1899 S45 Stratford Works 10 517–526 7517–7526 5436–5439
1899 X45 Stratford Works 10 640–649 7640–7649 5440–5449
1906 A60 Stratford Works 10 552–561 7552–7561 5450–5459
1912 B70 Stratford Works 10 562–571 7562–7571 5460–5469
1913 G73 Stratford Works 10 542–551 7542–7551 5470–5479

Accidents and incidents edit

  • On 25 September 1900, locomotive No. 522 suffered a boiler explosion at Westerfield, Suffolk. Both crew members of the locomotive, driver John Barnard and fireman William MacDonald, were killed.[5][6]
  • On 20 January 1915, locomotive No. 629 was hauling a freight train that collided with the rear of a passenger train, hauled by GER Class T26 2-4-0 No. 446, at County School railway station, Norfolk. [7][8]
  • On 7 January 1927, locomotive No. 7613 was hauling a freight train that was in collision with a lorry at Roudham Heath, Norfolk, on the Breckland Line due to errors by the crossing keeper. The lorry driver was killed.[9]
  • On 4 October 1929, locomotive No. 7938 was hauling a freight train that departed against a danger signal at Tottenham, London and was subsequently stopped foul of a junction. Both crew abandoned the locomotive before a northbound mail train, hauled by LNER Class B17 4-6-0 No. 2808 Gunton, collided with the rear of the freight. 18 people were injured.[10]
  • In the late 1950s, No. 65475 had to be rerailed by crane due to an unknown cause and location.[11]
  • On 17 November 2018, locomotive No. 564 struck a vehicle on a level crossing near Sheringham in Norfolk.[12] The driver of the Mercedes involved in the collision ignored the warning lights at the crossing and proceeded through into the path of the oncoming locomotive, which was travelling at around 10 mph at the time. The collision reportedly occurred at around 11:30 AM.

Notable features edit

As built all the locomotives had a stovepipe chimney; this was replaced in LNER days by a cast chimney with a small lip. The original Worsdell and early Holden series had three-ring boilers with the steam dome placed in the middle. Also the Worsdell boilers had a flat grate, however from 1890 Holden developed a boiler with a sloping grate and a two-ring telescopic barrel with the dome located well forward. The advantage of the dome position was a short 5½ inch steam pipe which limited pressure drop between the boiler and the cylinders. This boiler was adopted as standard and persisted on all Great Eastern Locomotives down to 1898; from then on it was perpetuated on the smaller locomotives as long as these remained essentially in their original configuration - which could be down to the 1960s.[2]

As with all Great Eastern classes, the Y14 had a cab with a low wooden roof covered with canvas sealed by a coat of lead paint. This was replaced in LNER days by a higher arched sheet metal roof. Some engines had special side window cabs for service on the exposed Brightlingsea and Colne Valley branches.[2]

Allocations edit

On 1 January 1923 there were 272 J15 locomotives in existence. They were allocated as follows:[13]

  • Cambridge: 48
  • Colchester: 14
  • Ipswich: 32
  • King's Lynn: 5
  • Lincoln: 3
  • Lowestoft: 7
  • March: 17
  • Norwich: 36
  • Parkeston: 2
  • Peterborough East: 19
  • Stratford: 91
  • Yarmouth: 4

In 1942 during World War II, six locomotives were drafted into to assist with coal traffic in South Yorkshire with three allocated to Mexborough engine shed and three to Barnsley engine shed.[14]

On 1 January 1948 when British Railways was formed, there were 127 J15 locomotives in existence.[15]

Unusually, in 1957 a couple of the class were allocated to Aylesbury and worked freight trains on the former Great Western Railway branch from Princes Risborough to Watlington before being withdrawn in 1958.[16]

In film edit

In September 1936 locomotives 7541 and 7835 were withdrawn by the LNER and sold to London Film Productions for their film Knight Without Armour. The two locomotives were moved to Denham film studios and underwent cosmetic modification to look more Russian as that was where the film was set. The locomotives were then sold to the War Department and worked on the Shropshire and Montgomeryshire Railway as WD221 and WD212. During their war service both were involved in incidents and returned to Stratford in 1944 and subsequently scrapped.[17]

Another member of the class appeared in the 1954 film Happy Ever After disguised as an Irish locomotive.[18]

Preservation edit

 
65462 at Sheringham

Number 564/7564/65462 is preserved on the North Norfolk Railway and owned by the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway Society.[19] In 2002 the locomotive reached the end of a major overhaul and was painted in LNER (numbered 7564) and BR black numbered 65462) liveries for the duration of its boiler ticket. It originally operated in these liveries when classified as a J15 in LNER and BR days. Following withdrawal from service in 2013, the locomotive received another overhaul (completed 2015) where it was outshopped in GER lined blue and sporting its original number of 564 and representing its days when classified as a Y14.

65469 was originally a candidate for preservation, but it was scrapped.[20]

Models edit

Hornby produces a ready-to-run model of the J15 in 00 gauge (4 mm) in BR (with the rebuilt high-arched cab roof) and LNER liveries (both as-built and high-arch cab roofs).[21] Also in 00 gauge, there are kits from Alan Gibson and Nu-Cast. Finley and Smith produce a 3 mm kit. A 7mm (O gauge) kit is made by Connoisseur Models.

References edit

  1. ^ Locomotives of the Great Eastern Railway
  2. ^ a b c The Class J15 (GER Class Y14) 0-6-0 Locomotives
  3. ^ Allen 1961, p. 110.
  4. ^ Baxter 2012, pp. 51–52, 67–72.
  5. ^ Freestone, Jill; Smith, Richard W (1998). Ipswich Engines and Ipswich Men. Ipswich: Under Stoke History group. ISBN 0-9532257-0-4.
  6. ^ Lt-Col. P. G. von Donop, R.E. / Board of Trade (13 November 1900). "Great Eastern Railway" (PDF). Retrieved 25 July 2017.
  7. ^ Von Donop, P. G. (1915). Report on Accident at County School station, 1915 (PDF). H.M.R.I.
  8. ^ "J15 7629". BRDatabase.
  9. ^ Lt. Col A H Mount / Board of Trade (7 January 1927). "London and North Eastern Railway" (PDF). Retrieved 10 April 2016.
  10. ^ Earnshaw 1990, p. 16.
  11. ^ Atterbury, Paul. (2012). Paul Atterbury's railway collection. Newton Abbot, United Kingdom: David & Charles / F & W Media. ISBN 978-1-4463-0202-6. OCLC 794708326.
  12. ^ "Car collides with train on North Norfolk railway line". 19 November 2018.
  13. ^ Yeadon, W B (1996). LNER Locomotive Allocations 1st January 1923 (The first day). Challenger Publications. ISBN 1-899624-19-8.
  14. ^ James, H N (July 1975). "Great Eastern Wanderers Part 8". Ipswich Transport Journal (132): 19.
  15. ^ "Steam Loco Class Information Class J15 Details". RailUK. Retrieved 8 November 2010.
  16. ^ Great Eastern Railway Society Journal No 84 - letter and photograph from Dick Riley (October 1995)
  17. ^ Walker, Peter (July 2017). "Classic Camera". Great Eastern Journal. 171: 2.
  18. ^ James, H N (July 1975). "Great Eastern Wanderers Part 8". Ipswich Transport Journal (132): 19.
  19. ^ Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway Society – Home
  20. ^ "65462 (GER 564, LNER 7564, LNER 5462 & BR 65462)". Preserved British Steam Locomotives. 10 July 2017. Retrieved 16 December 2019.
  21. ^ . National Model Rail. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  • Allen, Cecil J. (1961) [1955]. The Great Eastern Railway. London: Ian Allan.
  • 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. ISBN 978-1-905505-26-5.
  • Fry, E. V., ed. (September 1966). Locomotives of the L.N.E.R., Part 5: Tender Engines—Classes J1 to J37. Kenilworth: RCTS. ISBN 0-901115-12-6.
  • Earnshaw, Alan (1990). Trains in Trouble: Vol. 6. Penryn: Atlantic Books. ISBN 0-906899-37-0.
  • Freestone, Jill; Smith, Richard W. (1998). Ipswich Engines and Ipswich Men. Ipswich: Under Stoke History group. ISBN 0-9532257-0-4.
  • Yeadon, W. B. (1996). LNER Locomotive Allocations 1st January 1923 (The first day). Challenger Publications. ISBN 1-899624-19-8.

External links edit

  • Y14 Class 0-6-0 1883-1892, 1899, 1906, 1912-1913 — Great Eastern Railway Society

class, confused, with, class, great, eastern, railway, class, class, steam, locomotive, lner, classified, them, lner, class, j15no, 65462, with, demonstration, freight, traintype, originpower, typesteamdesignert, worsdellbuilderstratford, works, sharp, stewart. Not to be confused with GS amp WR Class 101 The Great Eastern Railway GER Class Y14 is a class of 0 6 0 steam locomotive The LNER classified them J15 GER Class Y14 LNER Class J15No 65462 with a demonstration freight trainType and originPower typeSteamDesignerT W WorsdellBuilderStratford Works 270 Sharp Stewart amp Co 19 Build date1883 1913Total produced289SpecificationsConfiguration Whyte0 6 0 UICC n2Gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeDriver dia 4 ft 11 in 1 499 m Length47 ft 3 in 14 40 m Loco weight37 1 long tons 37 7 t 41 6 short tons Tender weight30 65 long tons 31 14 t 34 33 short tons Fuel typeCoalFuel capacity5 long tons 5 1 t 5 6 short tons Water cap 2 640 imp gal 12 000 L 3 170 US gal Boiler pressure160 psi 1 100 kPa CylindersTwo insideCylinder size17 1 2 in 24 in 444 mm 610 mm Performance figuresTractive effort16 940 lbf 75 400 N CareerOperatorsGreat Eastern Railway London and North Eastern Railway British RailwaysClassGER Y14LNER J15Power classBR 1P2FAxle load classLNER BR Route availability 1Withdrawn1922 1962DispositionOne preserved remainder scrapped The Class Y14 was designed by T W Worsdell for both freight and passenger duties a veritable maid of all work Introduced in July 1883 they were so successful that all the succeeding Locomotive Superintendents continued to build new batches up until 1913 with little design change the final total being 289 1 During World War I 43 of the engines served in France and Belgium 2 Contents 1 Background 2 Accidents and incidents 3 Notable features 4 Allocations 5 In film 6 Preservation 7 Models 8 References 9 External linksBackground editOn 10 11 December 1891 the Great Eastern Railway s Stratford Works built one of these locomotives and had it in steam with a coat of grey primer in 9 hours 47 minutes this remains a world record The locomotive then went off to run 36 000 miles 58 000 km on Peterborough to London coal trains before coming back to the works for the final coat of paint It lasted 40 years and ran a total of 1 127 750 miles 1 814 940 km 3 Because of their light weight the locomotives were given the Route Availability RA number 1 indicating that they could work over nearly all routes Table of orders and numbers 4 Year Order Manufacturer Quantity GER Nos LNER Nos 1946 Nos Notes 1883 Y14 Stratford Works 10 610 619 7610 7618 1884 K15 Stratford Works 20 620 639 7620 7639 1884 Sharp Stewart amp Co 3146 3164 19 37 41 119 124 592 599 7037 07038 07039 7600 7119 7124 7592 7599 41 renumbered 600 in 1912 1885 N16 Stratford Works 10 680 689 7680 7689 1885 86 P17 Stratford Works 10 690 699 7690 7699 1886 M18 Stratford Works 10 800 809 7609 7801 7809 800 renumbered 609 in 1892 1886 87 X18 Stratford Works 10 810 819 7810 7819 5350 1887 D20 Stratford Works 10 820 829 7820 7829 5351 5353 1887 88 U20 Stratford Works 10 527 536 7527 7536 5354 5356 1888 R21 Stratford Works 10 537 541 830 834 7537 7541 7830 7834 5357 5360 1889 T22 Stratford Works 10 835 844 7835 7844 5361 5364 1889 P23 Stratford Works 10 845 854 7845 7854 5365 5372 1889 T23 Stratford Works 10 855 864 7855 7864 5373 5375 1889 Y23 Stratford Works 10 865 874 7865 7874 5376 5381 1890 U25 Stratford Works 10 875 884 7875 7884 5382 5388 1890 Y25 Stratford Works 10 885 894 7885 7894 5389 5394 1891 L28 Stratford Works 10 895 904 7895 7904 5395 5400 1891 N28 Stratford Works 10 905 914 7905 7914 5401 5407 1891 P28 Stratford Works 10 915 924 7915 7924 5408 5414 1891 92 S28 Stratford Works 10 925 934 7925 7934 5414 5421 1892 X28 Stratford Works 10 936 945 7936 7945 5422 5427 1899 I45 Stratford Works 10 507 516 7507 7516 5428 5435 1899 S45 Stratford Works 10 517 526 7517 7526 5436 5439 1899 X45 Stratford Works 10 640 649 7640 7649 5440 5449 1906 A60 Stratford Works 10 552 561 7552 7561 5450 5459 1912 B70 Stratford Works 10 562 571 7562 7571 5460 5469 1913 G73 Stratford Works 10 542 551 7542 7551 5470 5479Accidents and incidents editOn 25 September 1900 locomotive No 522 suffered a boiler explosion at Westerfield Suffolk Both crew members of the locomotive driver John Barnard and fireman William MacDonald were killed 5 6 On 20 January 1915 locomotive No 629 was hauling a freight train that collided with the rear of a passenger train hauled by GER Class T26 2 4 0 No 446 at County School railway station Norfolk 7 8 On 7 January 1927 locomotive No 7613 was hauling a freight train that was in collision with a lorry at Roudham Heath Norfolk on the Breckland Line due to errors by the crossing keeper The lorry driver was killed 9 On 4 October 1929 locomotive No 7938 was hauling a freight train that departed against a danger signal at Tottenham London and was subsequently stopped foul of a junction Both crew abandoned the locomotive before a northbound mail train hauled by LNER Class B17 4 6 0 No 2808 Gunton collided with the rear of the freight 18 people were injured 10 In the late 1950s No 65475 had to be rerailed by crane due to an unknown cause and location 11 On 17 November 2018 locomotive No 564 struck a vehicle on a level crossing near Sheringham in Norfolk 12 The driver of the Mercedes involved in the collision ignored the warning lights at the crossing and proceeded through into the path of the oncoming locomotive which was travelling at around 10 mph at the time The collision reportedly occurred at around 11 30 AM Notable features editAs built all the locomotives had a stovepipe chimney this was replaced in LNER days by a cast chimney with a small lip The original Worsdell and early Holden series had three ring boilers with the steam dome placed in the middle Also the Worsdell boilers had a flat grate however from 1890 Holden developed a boiler with a sloping grate and a two ring telescopic barrel with the dome located well forward The advantage of the dome position was a short 5 inch steam pipe which limited pressure drop between the boiler and the cylinders This boiler was adopted as standard and persisted on all Great Eastern Locomotives down to 1898 from then on it was perpetuated on the smaller locomotives as long as these remained essentially in their original configuration which could be down to the 1960s 2 As with all Great Eastern classes the Y14 had a cab with a low wooden roof covered with canvas sealed by a coat of lead paint This was replaced in LNER days by a higher arched sheet metal roof Some engines had special side window cabs for service on the exposed Brightlingsea and Colne Valley branches 2 Allocations editOn 1 January 1923 there were 272 J15 locomotives in existence They were allocated as follows 13 Cambridge 48 Colchester 14 Ipswich 32 King s Lynn 5 Lincoln 3 Lowestoft 7 March 17 Norwich 36 Parkeston 2 Peterborough East 19 Stratford 91 Yarmouth 4 In 1942 during World War II six locomotives were drafted into to assist with coal traffic in South Yorkshire with three allocated to Mexborough engine shed and three to Barnsley engine shed 14 On 1 January 1948 when British Railways was formed there were 127 J15 locomotives in existence 15 Unusually in 1957 a couple of the class were allocated to Aylesbury and worked freight trains on the former Great Western Railway branch from Princes Risborough to Watlington before being withdrawn in 1958 16 In film editIn September 1936 locomotives 7541 and 7835 were withdrawn by the LNER and sold to London Film Productions for their film Knight Without Armour The two locomotives were moved to Denham film studios and underwent cosmetic modification to look more Russian as that was where the film was set The locomotives were then sold to the War Department and worked on the Shropshire and Montgomeryshire Railway as WD221 and WD212 During their war service both were involved in incidents and returned to Stratford in 1944 and subsequently scrapped 17 Another member of the class appeared in the 1954 film Happy Ever After disguised as an Irish locomotive 18 Preservation edit nbsp 65462 at Sheringham Number 564 7564 65462 is preserved on the North Norfolk Railway and owned by the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway Society 19 In 2002 the locomotive reached the end of a major overhaul and was painted in LNER numbered 7564 and BR black numbered 65462 liveries for the duration of its boiler ticket It originally operated in these liveries when classified as a J15 in LNER and BR days Following withdrawal from service in 2013 the locomotive received another overhaul completed 2015 where it was outshopped in GER lined blue and sporting its original number of 564 and representing its days when classified as a Y14 65469 was originally a candidate for preservation but it was scrapped 20 Models editHornby produces a ready to run model of the J15 in 00 gauge 4 mm in BR with the rebuilt high arched cab roof and LNER liveries both as built and high arch cab roofs 21 Also in 00 gauge there are kits from Alan Gibson and Nu Cast Finley and Smith produce a 3 mm kit A 7mm O gauge kit is made by Connoisseur Models References edit Locomotives of the Great Eastern Railway a b c The Class J15 GER Class Y14 0 6 0 Locomotives Allen 1961 p 110 Baxter 2012 pp 51 52 67 72 Freestone Jill Smith Richard W 1998 Ipswich Engines and Ipswich Men Ipswich Under Stoke History group ISBN 0 9532257 0 4 Lt Col P G von Donop R E Board of Trade 13 November 1900 Great Eastern Railway PDF Retrieved 25 July 2017 Von Donop P G 1915 Report on Accident at County School station 1915 PDF H M R I J15 7629 BRDatabase Lt Col A H Mount Board of Trade 7 January 1927 London and North Eastern Railway PDF Retrieved 10 April 2016 Earnshaw 1990 p 16 Atterbury Paul 2012 Paul Atterbury s railway collection Newton Abbot United Kingdom David amp Charles F amp W Media ISBN 978 1 4463 0202 6 OCLC 794708326 Car collides with train on North Norfolk railway line 19 November 2018 Yeadon W B 1996 LNER Locomotive Allocations 1st January 1923 The first day Challenger Publications ISBN 1 899624 19 8 James H N July 1975 Great Eastern Wanderers Part 8 Ipswich Transport Journal 132 19 Steam Loco Class Information Class J15 Details RailUK Retrieved 8 November 2010 Great Eastern Railway Society Journal No 84 letter and photograph from Dick Riley October 1995 Walker Peter July 2017 Classic Camera Great Eastern Journal 171 2 James H N July 1975 Great Eastern Wanderers Part 8 Ipswich Transport Journal 132 19 Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway Society Home 65462 GER 564 LNER 7564 LNER 5462 amp BR 65462 Preserved British Steam Locomotives 10 July 2017 Retrieved 16 December 2019 National Model Rail Database National Model Rail Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 13 September 2015 Allen Cecil J 1961 1955 The Great Eastern Railway London Ian Allan 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 ISBN 978 1 905505 26 5 Fry E V ed September 1966 Locomotives of the L N E R Part 5 Tender Engines Classes J1 to J37 Kenilworth RCTS ISBN 0 901115 12 6 Earnshaw Alan 1990 Trains in Trouble Vol 6 Penryn Atlantic Books ISBN 0 906899 37 0 Freestone Jill Smith Richard W 1998 Ipswich Engines and Ipswich Men Ipswich Under Stoke History group ISBN 0 9532257 0 4 Yeadon W B 1996 LNER Locomotive Allocations 1st January 1923 The first day Challenger Publications ISBN 1 899624 19 8 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to GER Class Y14 LNER Class J15 Y14 Class 0 6 0 1883 1892 1899 1906 1912 1913 Great Eastern Railway Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title GER Class Y14 amp oldid 1177932163, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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