This is a list of GWR 6959 (Modified Hall) Class locomotives that survive in preservation.
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The locomotive was built in March 1944 at Swindon Works. Its first shed allocation was Old Oak Common. The locomotive was withdrawn from service in June 1964 and sold to Woodham Brothers scrapyard in Barry, South Wales for cutting up. However it was saved for preservation and left the yard in October 1972, sold to Steamtown, Carnforth as the 26th departure from Barry. Restored in 1975, she was then based at the Severn Valley Railway where she ran behind 4930 Hagley Halls tender while her own was put behind 4930. She left the Severn Valley Railway in 1996. Sold to Jeremy Hosking, by 2008 it was at The Flour Mill workshops in the Forest of Dean receiving a thorough overhaul. Proposed to run at the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway, restored form 2009 to operational condition in November 2011 at the West Somerset Railway.
This locomotive was built in February 1948 at Swindon Works. Its first shed allocation was Hereford. It was withdrawn from service with in 1966 and sold for scrap to Woodham Brothers scrapyard. In 1986 it was saved for preservation and moved to the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway where restoration work is currently under way.
6989 was completed on the 25th March 1948 at Swindon Works, and was first based at Hereford. The locomotive was withdrawn in June 1964, and sold to Woodham Brothers scrapyard on 17 July 1964. In 1978, the locomotive was purchased by the Quainton Railway Society. It was the 88th engine to leave Barry to go into preservation, and is currently under restoration at the Buckinghamshire Railway Centre.
6990 was built at Swindon in 1948 and withdrawn in January 1966. It was bought by the Witherslack Hall Locomotive Society and it arrived on the Great Central Railway in November 1975. Restoration was completed in 1986. It is now being restored once again for use at the GCR.
The locomotive was built by British Railways to GWR specifications at Swindon in January 1949, and named after the Yorkshire stately home. Initially based at Cardiff, it was finally withdrawn by British Rail in 1966. The locomotive was acquired by the Great Western Society in the same year, and moved to the Didcot Railway Centre in 1967. Since 1996 the locomotive has been a stationary exhibit.
The locomotive, like 6998, was built in 1949 at Swindon Works. First shed allocation was Old Oak Common, and it was named after the Derbyshire stately home. The locomotive was withdrawn from service in 1964 and sold to Woodhams' Scrapyard. Nearly twenty years later, in 1981, it was moved to the Swindon and Cricklade Railway where restoration work began. Restoration was completed 22 years later in 2003, and the locomotive was used on the S&CR before moving to the nearby Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway, where it is now based, in 2004.
Frames of locomotive purchased as part of a project to re-create a GWR 1000 "County" Class locomotive, No.1014 "County of Glamorgan". The boiler is going to be used for new-build Grange Class No. 6880 Betton Grange.