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NBR 224 and 420 Classes

The NBR 224 and 420 Classes consisted of six steam locomotives of the 4-4-0 wheel arrangement built by the North British Railway (NBR) in 1871 and 1873. No. 224 had three claims to fame: it was the first inside-cylinder 4-4-0 engine to run in Great Britain;[4] it was the locomotive involved in the Tay Bridge disaster;[5] and after rebuilding in 1885, it was the only compound-expansion locomotive on the NBR, and one of just three tandem compounds in Britain.[6]

NBR 224 and 420 Classes
224 Class, as built
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
DesignerThomas Wheatley
BuilderNBR, Cowlairs
Build date1871 (224 Class); 1873 (420 Class)
Total produced2 (224 Class); 4 (420 Class)
Specifications
Configuration:
 • Whyte4-4-0
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
Leading dia.
  • 2 ft 9 in (840 mm) (224 Class)
  • 3 ft 4 in (1,020 mm) (420 Class)
Driver dia.6 ft 6 in (1,980 mm)
Wheelbase20 ft 3+38 in (6,182 mm) (224 Class)
Adhesive weight24.45 long tons (24.84 t) (224 Class)
Loco weight
  • 38 long tons (39 t) (224 Class)
  • 37.75 long tons (38.36 t) (420 Class)
Fuel typeCoal
Water cap.1,652 imp gal (7,510 L)
Firebox:
 • Grate area15.75 sq ft (1.463 m2) (224 Class)
Heating surface:
 • Firebox87 sq ft (8.1 m2) (224 Class)
 • Tubes894 sq ft (83.1 m2) (224 Class)
 • Total surface981 sq ft (91.1 m2) (224 Class)
CylindersTwo, inside
Cylinder size17 in × 24 in (432 mm × 610 mm)
Career
OperatorsNorth British Railway
Numbers224, 264, 420–3
Withdrawn1914–19
DispositionAll scrapped
[1][2][3]

Intended for express passenger trains on the EdinburghGlasgow, Edinburgh–Carlisle, and BurntislandDundee routes, they handled these well. When trains from London to Edinburgh began to be forwarded via Carlisle over the NBR in mid-1876, these heavier trains were beyond the locomotives' capabilities, and they had to be removed from front-line service on the Carlisle line. Rebuilt between 1885 and 1897, they remained in service until 1914–19.

History edit

Thomas Wheatley became locomotive superintendent of the North British Railway (NBR) at the start of February 1867.[7] During his tenure of seven years, he provided the NBR with 185 new locomotives;[7] but only eight of these were suitable for hauling express passenger trains, the first two of which were 2-4-0s built in 1869 (the 141 Class),[8] which were considered to be very good engines.[9]

In 1871, Wheatley followed these with two 4-4-0s, nos. 224 and 264, which were built at the NBR's Cowlairs locomotive works. These two locomotives formed the 224 Class.[10] A leading bogie was chosen because of the preponderance of sharp curves on the NBR; the bogie wheels were quite small, at 2 ft 9 in (840 mm) diameter, and had solid centres, without spokes.[11] The bogie centre was fixed, as opposed to the Adams type used later by the NBR,[12] and the bogie wheelbase was 6 ft 0 in (1,830 mm).[1] The coupled wheels were 6 ft 6 in (1,980 mm) diameter, and the other principal dimensions were: cylinders 17 in (430 mm) diameter by 24 in (610 mm) stroke; coupled wheelbase 7 ft 7 in (2,310 mm).[1]

No. 224 was the first inside-frame inside-cylinder 4-4-0 to run in Great Britain, and predated the G&SWR 6 Class[4] by some two years, the latter being introduced in July 1873.[13] This layout, the 4-4-0 with inside frames and inside cylinders, became widespread across most of Great Britain, with the Great Western Railway being the only main-line company which did not eventually possess the type.[14] There had been earlier 4-4-0 designs on other railways, but these either had outside cylinders (such as nos. 160 & 161 (built 1860) of the Stockton and Darlington Railway)[15][16] or outside frames (such as the "Whitby Bogies" (1864–65) of the North Eastern Railway).[17][18]

The 224 Class were used on express passenger trains, no. 264 being used both on the Waverley Route between Edinburgh and Carlisle and on the line between Edinburgh and Glasgow. No. 224 was used in Fife, which in the days before the construction of the Forth Bridge, was an isolated part of the NBR system.[10]

The 224 Class were followed in 1873 by the four locomotives of Wheatley's 420 Class, nos. 420–3.[19] These differed from the 224 Class in several respects: the bogie wheels were 3 ft 4 in (1,020 mm) diameter instead of 2 ft 9 in (840 mm); the coupled wheelbase was 7 ft 9 in (2,360 mm) instead of 7 ft 7 in (2,310 mm); the dome was mounted on the boiler barrel instead of the firebox; and the rear wheel splashers were shaped to the wheel instead of being square-topped.[20] They were intended for use on the Waverley route, over which an increase of traffic was anticipated: the Midland Railway (MR) were at the time building their Settle–Carlisle line. This route not yet being open, and the English traffic being entirely in the hands of the London and North Western Railway which worked closely in tandem with the Caledonian Railway, the NBR's main rival, the trains over the Waverley route were comparatively light and well within the capabilities of the 420 Class.[21]

The MR opened the Settle and Carlisle line on 1 May 1876, and a through service using that route between London St Pancras and Edinburgh Waverley was introduced at the same time.[22] There were two trains each day in each direction – one in the daytime, and one overnight.[23] North of Carlisle, the trains were operated by the NBR over their Waverley route. Each company used its own locomotives over their respective lines, and initially the locomotives used by the NBR were the 420 Class, no. 421 being equipped with the Westinghouse brake (as were three other locomotives at a cost of £90,[24] or £10,690 as of 2023,[a] per engine), the brake with which MR carriages were then fitted. But these locomotives proved insufficiently powerful, a second engine often being needed to assist in climbing the gradients,[25] particularly those at Falahill (between Tynehead and Heriot) and at Whitrope (between Shankend and Riccarton Junction).[24][26] Wheatley's successor, Dugald Drummond, offered the opinion that NBR express locomotives of the period were "like skinny chickens, all legs and wings".[27] As a result, Drummond designed a new class of 4-4-0 (the 476 Class) which began to displace the Wheatley 4-4-0s from the through trains in 1877, and which were capable of maintaining the schedule of 2 hr 35 min for 98 miles (158 km) (with three intermediate stops).[28] The 420 Class remained on the Waverley route, but were used on the local trains, which were lighter than the through trains from England.[29]

No. 224 and the Tay Bridge disaster edit

 
No. 224 following its recovery from the Firth of Tay in 1880

Until the opening of the Forth Bridge in 1890, passengers from Edinburgh to Dundee would cross the Firth of Forth by a ferry from Granton which connected with trains at Burntisland.[30][5] Further north, the Firth of Tay had been bridged in 1878, and trains could travel through from Burntisland to Dundee and onward to Aberdeen.[31][32]

On 28 December 1879, the regular engine for the 1.30 p.m. mail train from Dundee to Burntisland (no. 89 Ladybank of the 88 Class, an 0-4-2T) failed, and no. 224 (which was based at Dundee, and spare at the time) was called out to work the train.[5] It did so without incident on the southbound run, but when working the 5.20 p.m. northbound service later in the day, due to arrive at Dundee a little before 7.30, it was on the Tay Bridge when shortly after 7.13 p.m. the latter collapsed.[10] The driver, David Mitchell, and "stoker" (fireman), John Marshall,[33] of no. 224 had no warning of the impending disaster, and neither closed the regulator nor applied the brakes;[34] they were among the 75 people killed.[35] Despite the fall, the locomotive was relatively undamaged, being protected by the bridge girders which formed a cage around the train as they fell together.[36]

In April 1880, an attempt to recover the locomotive failed when the chains broke. Two days later, a second attempt also failed because the salvage equipment broke after the locomotive had been brought to the surface.[37] One week later, it was recovered, and stood on the bank of the Tay until it was sent to Cowlairs on its own wheels for repairs, after which it was returned to traffic.[10][38] It gained the nickname "The Diver" as a result of its accident and difficult recovery.[9][39]

After this, drivers refused to take no. 224 across the second Tay Bridge (which was built to a new design and opened in 1887[40]). However, on the 29th anniversary of the disaster, 28 December 1908, no. 224 was used on the Sunday evening mail to Dundee via the Tay Bridge.[41]

Rebuilding edit

Matthew Holmes, locomotive superintendent of the NBR between 1882 and 1903, rebuilt no. 224 as a four-cylinder tandem compound in 1885. In this form, the low-pressure cylinders, which were 20 in (510 mm) diameter, were mounted in the position previously occupied by the original cylinders, above the bogie centre; and the high-pressure cylinders, which were of diameter 13 inches (330 mm), were placed in front of these; the common stroke remained at 24 in (610 mm).[42][43] The engine was given a modified form of Joy valve gear.[42] The boiler pressure was 140 pounds per square inch (970 kPa), and the grate area 16.6 sq ft (1.54 m2).[44] The chief features of the design had been patented (no. 16,967 of 1884) by W.H. Nesbit (or Nisbet), who was a cousin of Holmes.[42][10] Although not entirely successful,[19] it did somewhat better than the only two other British tandem compounds – Great Western Railway nos. 7 & 8, of 1886;[6] although the tandem compound system was more widely used in the USA and Russia.[45] No. 224 was rebuilt back into simple expansion form during 1887.[19]

On the NBR, locomotives were generally rebuilt when their boilers wore out.[46] No. 224 received two new boilers in the course of its life: one was fitted by Drummond, the other by Holmes.[9] Holmes ultimately rebuilt all of the locomotives: other than no. 224, nos. 420/1 were rebuilt in 1887, nos. 422/3 in 1890 and no. 264 in 1893. No. 224 then received its third rebuilding in 1897.[47] In later years, no. 224 was used on secondary and branch line trains.[19]

Final years edit

Every six months, the NBR renumbered some of its older locomotives into a "duplicate list", in order to vacate numbers for new construction.[48] Accordingly, in 1913, nos. 224 and 264 were placed on the duplicate list, becoming nos. 1192/8 respectively;[19] nos. 420–3 were similarly treated in 1914, becoming 1241–4 in the same order.[25] No. 1244 was withdrawn from service in 1914, the others following in 1915 (no. 1241), 1917 (no. 1198), 1918 (nos. 1242/3) and 1919 (no. 1192).[47] These were the only classes of 4-4-0 on the NBR to be completely withdrawn before the 1923 Grouping. As such, they were not among the 183 locomotives of this wheel arrangement which were passed by the NBR to the London and North Eastern Railway when the latter company was formed at the start of 1923 by the amalgamation of the NBR with several other railways.[49]

The number plate from the tender of no. 224 has been preserved at Selkirk Museum.[50]

Summary edit

Original number Class Built Rebuilt Renumbered (year) Withdrawn
224 224 1871 1885, 1887, 1897 1192 (1913) 1919
264 224 1871 1893 1198 (1913) 1917
420 420 1873 1887 1241 (1914) 1915
421 420 1873 1887 1242 (1914) 1918
422 420 1873 1890 1243 (1914) 1918
423 420 1873 1890 1244 (1914) 1914

The locomotives may have been named after 1875 – it has been stated that Drummond, who replaced Wheatley in 1875, named NBR engines "including those already in service".[51]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Ahrons 1987, p. 195.
  2. ^ Highet 1970, pp. 88–90.
  3. ^ SLS 1970, pp. 66–68.
  4. ^ a b Boddy et al. 1968, p. 5.
  5. ^ a b c Rolt & Kichenside 1982, p. 98.
  6. ^ a b Ahrons 1987, pp. 260, 262.
  7. ^ a b SLS 1970, p. 62.
  8. ^ SLS 1970, p. 63.
  9. ^ a b c Highet 1970, p. 89.
  10. ^ a b c d e SLS 1970, p. 66.
  11. ^ Highet 1970, pp. 88–89.
  12. ^ Highet 1970, p. 94.
  13. ^ Baxter 1984, p. 147.
  14. ^ Highet 1970, p. 88.
  15. ^ Ahrons 1987, p. 149.
  16. ^ Baxter 1986, pp. 74–75.
  17. ^ Ahrons 1987, p. 150.
  18. ^ Baxter 1986, p. 95.
  19. ^ a b c d e SLS 1970, p. 67.
  20. ^ SLS 1970, pp. 66, 67, 68.
  21. ^ SLS 1970, pp. 67–68.
  22. ^ Ellis 1961, p. 64.
  23. ^ Ellis 1959, p. 79.
  24. ^ a b Highet 1970, p. 93.
  25. ^ a b SLS 1970, p. 68.
  26. ^ Gradient Profiles 2003, Sc12.
  27. ^ Chacksfield 2005, p. 27.
  28. ^ Boddy et al. 1968, pp. 13, 16.
  29. ^ Haresnape & Rowledge 1982, p. 22.
  30. ^ Thomas & Turnock 1989, pp. 69, 75.
  31. ^ Rolt & Kichenside 1982, p. 97.
  32. ^ Thomas & Turnock 1989, p. 131.
  33. ^ Prebble 1959, p. 100.
  34. ^ Yolland & Barlow 1880, p. 9.
  35. ^ Prebble 1959, p. 108.
  36. ^ Rolt & Kichenside 1982, p. 101.
  37. ^ Rolt & Kichenside 1982, pp. 101–2.
  38. ^ Prebble 1959, p. 164.
  39. ^ Prebble 1959, p. 188.
  40. ^ Thomas & Turnock 1989, p. 135.
  41. ^ Rolt & Kichenside 1982, p. 102.
  42. ^ a b c Ahrons 1987, p. 260.
  43. ^ Pearce-Carr 2007, p. 85.
  44. ^ van Riemsdijk 1994, p. 132.
  45. ^ van Riemsdijk 1994, p. 41.
  46. ^ Boddy et al. 1968, p. 8.
  47. ^ a b SLS 1970, pp. 67, 68.
  48. ^ Boddy et al. 1963, p. 28.
  49. ^ Boddy et al. 1968, pp. 4–5.
  50. ^ Boddy et al. 1988, p. 82.
  51. ^ Haresnape & Rowledge 1982, p. 15.
  1. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 7 May 2024.

References edit

  • Ahrons, E.L. (1987) [1927]. The British Steam Railway Locomotive 1825-1925. London: Bracken Books. ISBN 1-85170-103-6.
  • Baxter, Bertram (1984). Baxter, David (ed.). British Locomotive Catalogue 1825-1923, volume 4: Scottish and remaining English Companies in the LMS Group. Ashbourne: Moorland Publishing.
  • Baxter, Bertram (1986). Baxter, David (ed.). British Locomotive Catalogue 1825-1923, volume 5A: North Eastern Railway; Hull and Barnsley Railway. Ashbourne: Moorland Publishing. ISBN 0-903485-54-0.
  • Boddy, M.G.; Fry, E. V.; Hennigan, W.; Proud, P.; Yeadon, W.B. (July 1963). Fry, E. V. (ed.). Locomotives of the L.N.E.R., part 1: Preliminary Survey. Potters Bar: RCTS.
  • Boddy, M.G.; Brown, W. A.; Fry, E. V.; Hennigan, W.; Manners, F.; Neve, E.; Tee, D. F.; Yeadon, W.B. (April 1968). Fry, E. V. (ed.). Locomotives of the L.N.E.R., part 4: Tender Engines - Classes D25 to E7. Kenilworth: RCTS. ISBN 0-901115-01-0.
  • Boddy, M.G.; Fry, E. V.; Hennigan, W.; Hoole, Ken; Yeadon, W. B. (November 1988). Fry, E.V. (ed.). Locomotives of the L.N.E.R., part 10A: Departmental Stock, Locomotive Sheds, Boiler and Tender Numbering. Lincoln: RCTS. ISBN 0-901115-65-7.
  • Chacksfield, John E. (2005). The Drummond Brothers: A Scottish Duo. The Oakwood Library of Railway History. Usk: Oakwood Press. ISBN 0-85361-632-9. OL133.
  • Ellis, Cuthbert Hamilton (September 1959) [1955]. The North British Railway (2nd ed.). Shepperton: Ian Allan. 813/284/15 959.
  • Ellis, Cuthbert Hamilton (1961) [1953]. The Midland Railway (4th ed.). Hampton Court: Ian Allan Publishing. 940/554/125 1059.
  • BR Main Line Gradient Profiles: The Age of Steam. Hersham: Ian Allan Publishing. January 2003 [1966]. ISBN 0-7110-0875-2. 0301/A.
  • Haresnape, Brian; Rowledge, Peter (October 1982). Drummond Locomotives: A Pictorial History. Shepperton: Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 0-7110-1206-7. DX/1082.
  • Highet, Campbell (1970). Scottish Locomotive History 1831-1923. London: George Allen & Unwin. ISBN 0-04-625004-2.
  • Pearce-Carr, Tom (2007). Compound Locomotives of the British Isles. Reading: Finial Publishing. ISBN 978-1-900467-37-7.
  • Prebble, John (1959) [1956]. The High Girders. London: Pan Books. ISBN 0-330-02162-1.
  • Rolt, L. T. C.; Kichenside, Geoffrey M. (1982) [1955]. Red for Danger (4th ed.). Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-8362-0.
  • Locomotives of the North British Railway 1846-1882. Stephenson Locomotive Society. 1970.
  • Thomas, John; Turnock, David (1989). David St John Thomas; Patmore, J. Allan (eds.). A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain, volume XV: North of Scotland. Newton Abbot: David St John Thomas. ISBN 0-946537-03-8.
  • van Riemsdijk, John T. (1994). Compound Locomotives: An International Survey. Penryn: Atlantic Books. ISBN 0-906899-61-3.
  • Yolland, W.; Barlow, W.H. (30 June 1880). "Report of the Court of Inquiry upon the Circumstances attending the Fall of a Portion of the Tay Bridge on the 28th December 1879" (PDF). London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. Retrieved 13 July 2011.

Further reading edit

  • 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. p. 166. ISBN 978-1-905505-26-5.
  • Everard, Stirling (1943). "Cowlairs commentary". Locomotive, Railway Carriage & Wagon Review. 49: 60–2.
  • Middlemass, Thomas (1994). The Scottish 4-4-0. Penryn: Atlantic.
  • Thomas, John (1969). The North British Railway, vol. 1. Newton Abbot: David & Charles.
  • Thomas, John (1975). The North British Railway, vol. 2. Newton Abbot: David & Charles.

classes, consisted, steam, locomotives, wheel, arrangement, built, north, british, railway, 1871, 1873, three, claims, fame, first, inside, cylinder, engine, great, britain, locomotive, involved, bridge, disaster, after, rebuilding, 1885, only, compound, expan. The NBR 224 and 420 Classes consisted of six steam locomotives of the 4 4 0 wheel arrangement built by the North British Railway NBR in 1871 and 1873 No 224 had three claims to fame it was the first inside cylinder 4 4 0 engine to run in Great Britain 4 it was the locomotive involved in the Tay Bridge disaster 5 and after rebuilding in 1885 it was the only compound expansion locomotive on the NBR and one of just three tandem compounds in Britain 6 NBR 224 and 420 Classes224 Class as builtType and originPower typeSteamDesignerThomas WheatleyBuilderNBR CowlairsBuild date1871 224 Class 1873 420 Class Total produced2 224 Class 4 420 Class SpecificationsConfiguration Whyte4 4 0Gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm Leading dia 2 ft 9 in 840 mm 224 Class 3 ft 4 in 1 020 mm 420 Class Driver dia 6 ft 6 in 1 980 mm Wheelbase20 ft 3 3 8 in 6 182 mm 224 Class Adhesive weight24 45 long tons 24 84 t 224 Class Loco weight38 long tons 39 t 224 Class 37 75 long tons 38 36 t 420 Class Fuel typeCoalWater cap 1 652 imp gal 7 510 L Firebox Grate area15 75 sq ft 1 463 m2 224 Class Heating surface Firebox87 sq ft 8 1 m2 224 Class Tubes894 sq ft 83 1 m2 224 Class Total surface981 sq ft 91 1 m2 224 Class CylindersTwo insideCylinder size17 in 24 in 432 mm 610 mm CareerOperatorsNorth British RailwayNumbers224 264 420 3Withdrawn1914 19DispositionAll scrapped 1 2 3 Intended for express passenger trains on the Edinburgh Glasgow Edinburgh Carlisle and Burntisland Dundee routes they handled these well When trains from London to Edinburgh began to be forwarded via Carlisle over the NBR in mid 1876 these heavier trains were beyond the locomotives capabilities and they had to be removed from front line service on the Carlisle line Rebuilt between 1885 and 1897 they remained in service until 1914 19 Contents 1 History 1 1 No 224 and the Tay Bridge disaster 1 2 Rebuilding 1 3 Final years 2 Summary 3 Notes 4 References 5 Further readingHistory editThomas Wheatley became locomotive superintendent of the North British Railway NBR at the start of February 1867 7 During his tenure of seven years he provided the NBR with 185 new locomotives 7 but only eight of these were suitable for hauling express passenger trains the first two of which were 2 4 0s built in 1869 the 141 Class 8 which were considered to be very good engines 9 In 1871 Wheatley followed these with two 4 4 0s nos 224 and 264 which were built at the NBR s Cowlairs locomotive works These two locomotives formed the 224 Class 10 A leading bogie was chosen because of the preponderance of sharp curves on the NBR the bogie wheels were quite small at 2 ft 9 in 840 mm diameter and had solid centres without spokes 11 The bogie centre was fixed as opposed to the Adams type used later by the NBR 12 and the bogie wheelbase was 6 ft 0 in 1 830 mm 1 The coupled wheels were 6 ft 6 in 1 980 mm diameter and the other principal dimensions were cylinders 17 in 430 mm diameter by 24 in 610 mm stroke coupled wheelbase 7 ft 7 in 2 310 mm 1 No 224 was the first inside frame inside cylinder 4 4 0 to run in Great Britain and predated the G amp SWR 6 Class 4 by some two years the latter being introduced in July 1873 13 This layout the 4 4 0 with inside frames and inside cylinders became widespread across most of Great Britain with the Great Western Railway being the only main line company which did not eventually possess the type 14 There had been earlier 4 4 0 designs on other railways but these either had outside cylinders such as nos 160 amp 161 built 1860 of the Stockton and Darlington Railway 15 16 or outside frames such as the Whitby Bogies 1864 65 of the North Eastern Railway 17 18 The 224 Class were used on express passenger trains no 264 being used both on the Waverley Route between Edinburgh and Carlisle and on the line between Edinburgh and Glasgow No 224 was used in Fife which in the days before the construction of the Forth Bridge was an isolated part of the NBR system 10 The 224 Class were followed in 1873 by the four locomotives of Wheatley s 420 Class nos 420 3 19 These differed from the 224 Class in several respects the bogie wheels were 3 ft 4 in 1 020 mm diameter instead of 2 ft 9 in 840 mm the coupled wheelbase was 7 ft 9 in 2 360 mm instead of 7 ft 7 in 2 310 mm the dome was mounted on the boiler barrel instead of the firebox and the rear wheel splashers were shaped to the wheel instead of being square topped 20 They were intended for use on the Waverley route over which an increase of traffic was anticipated the Midland Railway MR were at the time building their Settle Carlisle line This route not yet being open and the English traffic being entirely in the hands of the London and North Western Railway which worked closely in tandem with the Caledonian Railway the NBR s main rival the trains over the Waverley route were comparatively light and well within the capabilities of the 420 Class 21 The MR opened the Settle and Carlisle line on 1 May 1876 and a through service using that route between London St Pancras and Edinburgh Waverley was introduced at the same time 22 There were two trains each day in each direction one in the daytime and one overnight 23 North of Carlisle the trains were operated by the NBR over their Waverley route Each company used its own locomotives over their respective lines and initially the locomotives used by the NBR were the 420 Class no 421 being equipped with the Westinghouse brake as were three other locomotives at a cost of 90 24 or 10 690 as of 2023 a per engine the brake with which MR carriages were then fitted But these locomotives proved insufficiently powerful a second engine often being needed to assist in climbing the gradients 25 particularly those at Falahill between Tynehead and Heriot and at Whitrope between Shankend and Riccarton Junction 24 26 Wheatley s successor Dugald Drummond offered the opinion that NBR express locomotives of the period were like skinny chickens all legs and wings 27 As a result Drummond designed a new class of 4 4 0 the 476 Class which began to displace the Wheatley 4 4 0s from the through trains in 1877 and which were capable of maintaining the schedule of 2 hr 35 min for 98 miles 158 km with three intermediate stops 28 The 420 Class remained on the Waverley route but were used on the local trains which were lighter than the through trains from England 29 No 224 and the Tay Bridge disaster edit Main article Tay Bridge disaster nbsp No 224 following its recovery from the Firth of Tay in 1880 Until the opening of the Forth Bridge in 1890 passengers from Edinburgh to Dundee would cross the Firth of Forth by a ferry from Granton which connected with trains at Burntisland 30 5 Further north the Firth of Tay had been bridged in 1878 and trains could travel through from Burntisland to Dundee and onward to Aberdeen 31 32 On 28 December 1879 the regular engine for the 1 30 p m mail train from Dundee to Burntisland no 89 Ladybank of the 88 Class an 0 4 2T failed and no 224 which was based at Dundee and spare at the time was called out to work the train 5 It did so without incident on the southbound run but when working the 5 20 p m northbound service later in the day due to arrive at Dundee a little before 7 30 it was on the Tay Bridge when shortly after 7 13 p m the latter collapsed 10 The driver David Mitchell and stoker fireman John Marshall 33 of no 224 had no warning of the impending disaster and neither closed the regulator nor applied the brakes 34 they were among the 75 people killed 35 Despite the fall the locomotive was relatively undamaged being protected by the bridge girders which formed a cage around the train as they fell together 36 In April 1880 an attempt to recover the locomotive failed when the chains broke Two days later a second attempt also failed because the salvage equipment broke after the locomotive had been brought to the surface 37 One week later it was recovered and stood on the bank of the Tay until it was sent to Cowlairs on its own wheels for repairs after which it was returned to traffic 10 38 It gained the nickname The Diver as a result of its accident and difficult recovery 9 39 After this drivers refused to take no 224 across the second Tay Bridge which was built to a new design and opened in 1887 40 However on the 29th anniversary of the disaster 28 December 1908 no 224 was used on the Sunday evening mail to Dundee via the Tay Bridge 41 Rebuilding edit Matthew Holmes locomotive superintendent of the NBR between 1882 and 1903 rebuilt no 224 as a four cylinder tandem compound in 1885 In this form the low pressure cylinders which were 20 in 510 mm diameter were mounted in the position previously occupied by the original cylinders above the bogie centre and the high pressure cylinders which were of diameter 13 inches 330 mm were placed in front of these the common stroke remained at 24 in 610 mm 42 43 The engine was given a modified form of Joy valve gear 42 The boiler pressure was 140 pounds per square inch 970 kPa and the grate area 16 6 sq ft 1 54 m2 44 The chief features of the design had been patented no 16 967 of 1884 by W H Nesbit or Nisbet who was a cousin of Holmes 42 10 Although not entirely successful 19 it did somewhat better than the only two other British tandem compounds Great Western Railway nos 7 amp 8 of 1886 6 although the tandem compound system was more widely used in the USA and Russia 45 No 224 was rebuilt back into simple expansion form during 1887 19 On the NBR locomotives were generally rebuilt when their boilers wore out 46 No 224 received two new boilers in the course of its life one was fitted by Drummond the other by Holmes 9 Holmes ultimately rebuilt all of the locomotives other than no 224 nos 420 1 were rebuilt in 1887 nos 422 3 in 1890 and no 264 in 1893 No 224 then received its third rebuilding in 1897 47 In later years no 224 was used on secondary and branch line trains 19 Final years edit Every six months the NBR renumbered some of its older locomotives into a duplicate list in order to vacate numbers for new construction 48 Accordingly in 1913 nos 224 and 264 were placed on the duplicate list becoming nos 1192 8 respectively 19 nos 420 3 were similarly treated in 1914 becoming 1241 4 in the same order 25 No 1244 was withdrawn from service in 1914 the others following in 1915 no 1241 1917 no 1198 1918 nos 1242 3 and 1919 no 1192 47 These were the only classes of 4 4 0 on the NBR to be completely withdrawn before the 1923 Grouping As such they were not among the 183 locomotives of this wheel arrangement which were passed by the NBR to the London and North Eastern Railway when the latter company was formed at the start of 1923 by the amalgamation of the NBR with several other railways 49 The number plate from the tender of no 224 has been preserved at Selkirk Museum 50 Summary editOriginal number Class Built Rebuilt Renumbered year Withdrawn 224 224 1871 1885 1887 1897 1192 1913 1919 264 224 1871 1893 1198 1913 1917 420 420 1873 1887 1241 1914 1915 421 420 1873 1887 1242 1914 1918 422 420 1873 1890 1243 1914 1918 423 420 1873 1890 1244 1914 1914 The locomotives may have been named after 1875 it has been stated that Drummond who replaced Wheatley in 1875 named NBR engines including those already in service 51 Notes edit a b c Ahrons 1987 p 195 Highet 1970 pp 88 90 SLS 1970 pp 66 68 a b Boddy et al 1968 p 5 a b c Rolt amp Kichenside 1982 p 98 a b Ahrons 1987 pp 260 262 a b SLS 1970 p 62 SLS 1970 p 63 a b c Highet 1970 p 89 a b c d e SLS 1970 p 66 Highet 1970 pp 88 89 Highet 1970 p 94 Baxter 1984 p 147 Highet 1970 p 88 Ahrons 1987 p 149 Baxter 1986 pp 74 75 Ahrons 1987 p 150 Baxter 1986 p 95 a b c d e SLS 1970 p 67 SLS 1970 pp 66 67 68 SLS 1970 pp 67 68 Ellis 1961 p 64 Ellis 1959 p 79 a b Highet 1970 p 93 a b SLS 1970 p 68 Gradient Profiles 2003 Sc12 Chacksfield 2005 p 27 Boddy et al 1968 pp 13 16 Haresnape amp Rowledge 1982 p 22 Thomas amp Turnock 1989 pp 69 75 Rolt amp Kichenside 1982 p 97 Thomas amp Turnock 1989 p 131 Prebble 1959 p 100 Yolland amp Barlow 1880 p 9 Prebble 1959 p 108 Rolt amp Kichenside 1982 p 101 Rolt amp Kichenside 1982 pp 101 2 Prebble 1959 p 164 Prebble 1959 p 188 Thomas amp Turnock 1989 p 135 Rolt amp Kichenside 1982 p 102 a b c Ahrons 1987 p 260 Pearce Carr 2007 p 85 van Riemsdijk 1994 p 132 van Riemsdijk 1994 p 41 Boddy et al 1968 p 8 a b SLS 1970 pp 67 68 Boddy et al 1963 p 28 Boddy et al 1968 pp 4 5 Boddy et al 1988 p 82 Haresnape amp Rowledge 1982 p 15 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 7 May 2024 References editAhrons E L 1987 1927 The British Steam Railway Locomotive 1825 1925 London Bracken Books ISBN 1 85170 103 6 Baxter Bertram 1984 Baxter David ed British Locomotive Catalogue 1825 1923 volume 4 Scottish and remaining English Companies in the LMS Group Ashbourne Moorland Publishing Baxter Bertram 1986 Baxter David ed British Locomotive Catalogue 1825 1923 volume 5A North Eastern Railway Hull and Barnsley Railway Ashbourne Moorland Publishing ISBN 0 903485 54 0 Boddy M G Fry E V Hennigan W Proud P Yeadon W B July 1963 Fry E V ed Locomotives of the L N E R part 1 Preliminary Survey Potters Bar RCTS Boddy M G Brown W A Fry E V Hennigan W Manners F Neve E Tee D F Yeadon W B April 1968 Fry E V ed Locomotives of the L N E R part 4 Tender Engines Classes D25 to E7 Kenilworth RCTS ISBN 0 901115 01 0 Boddy M G Fry E V Hennigan W Hoole Ken Yeadon W B November 1988 Fry E V ed Locomotives of the L N E R part 10A Departmental Stock Locomotive Sheds Boiler and Tender Numbering Lincoln RCTS ISBN 0 901115 65 7 Chacksfield John E 2005 The Drummond Brothers A Scottish Duo The Oakwood Library of Railway History Usk Oakwood Press ISBN 0 85361 632 9 OL133 Ellis Cuthbert Hamilton September 1959 1955 The North British Railway 2nd ed Shepperton Ian Allan 813 284 15 959 Ellis Cuthbert Hamilton 1961 1953 The Midland Railway 4th ed Hampton Court Ian Allan Publishing 940 554 125 1059 BR Main Line Gradient Profiles The Age of Steam Hersham Ian Allan Publishing January 2003 1966 ISBN 0 7110 0875 2 0301 A Haresnape Brian Rowledge Peter October 1982 Drummond Locomotives A Pictorial History Shepperton Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 0 7110 1206 7 DX 1082 Highet Campbell 1970 Scottish Locomotive History 1831 1923 London George Allen amp Unwin ISBN 0 04 625004 2 Pearce Carr Tom 2007 Compound Locomotives of the British Isles Reading Finial Publishing ISBN 978 1 900467 37 7 Prebble John 1959 1956 The High Girders London Pan Books ISBN 0 330 02162 1 Rolt L T C Kichenside Geoffrey M 1982 1955 Red for Danger 4th ed Newton Abbot David amp Charles ISBN 0 7153 8362 0 Locomotives of the North British Railway 1846 1882 Stephenson Locomotive Society 1970 Thomas John Turnock David 1989 David St John Thomas Patmore J Allan eds A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain volume XV North of Scotland Newton Abbot David St John Thomas ISBN 0 946537 03 8 van Riemsdijk John T 1994 Compound Locomotives An International Survey Penryn Atlantic Books ISBN 0 906899 61 3 Yolland W Barlow W H 30 June 1880 Report of the Court of Inquiry upon the Circumstances attending the Fall of a Portion of the Tay Bridge on the 28th December 1879 PDF London Her Majesty s Stationery Office Retrieved 13 July 2011 Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to NBR 224 Class 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 p 166 ISBN 978 1 905505 26 5 Everard Stirling 1943 Cowlairs commentary Locomotive Railway Carriage amp Wagon Review 49 60 2 Middlemass Thomas 1994 The Scottish 4 4 0 Penryn Atlantic Thomas John 1969 The North British Railway vol 1 Newton Abbot David amp Charles Thomas John 1975 The North British Railway vol 2 Newton Abbot David amp Charles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title NBR 224 and 420 Classes amp oldid 1195133314, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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