Taw locomotive

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L&B Crest
Taw
Taw
Taw (modified cab) in later L&B livery
Power type Steam
Builder Manning Wardle (England)
Serial number 1363
Build date 1898
Configuration 2-6-2
Gauge 1 ft 11.5 in
Leading wheel size 2 ft 0 in
Driver size 2 ft 9 in
Trailing wheel size 2 ft 0 in
Wheelbase 6 ft 6 in fixed
17 ft 9 in total
Length 22 ft 4 in over buffer beams
Width 6 ft 7 in
Height 8 ft 11 in
Total weight 27 Tons 5 cwt
Fuel type coal
Fire grate area 8.85 sq ft
Heating surface: Total 383 sq ft
Cylinders 2
Cylinder size 10.5 in x 16 in
Valve gear Joy
Career Lynton and Barnstaple Railway
Number E761 (post-1923)
Locale Devon, South West England
Last run 29 September 1935
Scrapped 1935

Manning Wardle 2-6-2T built 1898 for Lynton and Barnstaple Railway Scrapped 1935

Taw, like all the locomotives on the L&B, was named after the River Taw, a local watercourse with a three-letter name.

The tradition of naming L&B steam locos after local watercourses continues into the 21st Century, with Lyd, a replica of Lew (the fourth and final locomotive built to this basic design), being built on the Ffestiniog railway by a group associated with that line and the Welsh Highland Railway

Closer to The L&B, the railway's trust currently owns one steam locomotive - renamed Axe - which although it did not serve on the historic L&B, is being rebuilt for eventual use on the new line, currently centred at Woody Bay.