SECR H class | |
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H class 31177 at Tonbridge 1958 | |
Power type | Steam |
Designer | Harry Wainwright |
Builder | SECR Ashford Works |
Build date | 1904–1909, 1915 |
Total produced | 66 |
Configuration | 0-4-4T |
UIC classification | B2' |
Gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) |
Driver diameter | 5 ft 6 in (1.676 m) |
Trailing wheel diameter |
3 ft 7 in (1.092 m) |
Length | 32 ft 11 in (10.033 m) |
Locomotive weight | 54 tons 8 cwt (121,900 lb / 55.27 tonnes) |
Fuel type | Coal |
Boiler pressure | 160 psi (1.10 MPa) |
Cylinders | Two, inside |
Cylinder size | 18 × 26 in (457×660 mm) |
Tractive effort | 17,360 lbf (77.22 kN) |
Career | South Eastern and Chatham Railway (1904–1922), Southern Railway (1923–1947), British Railways (1948–1962) |
Class | SECR & SR: H BR: 1P |
Retired | 1944–1964 |
Disposition | One preserved, remainder scrapped |
The South Eastern and Chatham Railway (SECR) H Class is a class of 0-4-4T steam locomotive originally designed for suburban passenger work, designed by Harry Wainwright in 1904. Most of the sixty six members of the class were later equipped for push-pull working for use on rural branch lines.
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The two constituent railways of the SECR had both relied on 0-4-4T locomotives for London suburban, and semi-fast train services. The South Eastern Railway (SER) Q class was introduced in 1887, and the London Chatham and Dover Railway (LCDR) R class in 1891. Of these, the R was the most successful design, and was continued in production by Harry Wainwright after the amalgamation of the railways in 1899. However, as traffic continued to increase there was a need for a new powerful 0-4-4T design to take over from the SER Q class. Wainwright therefore based his new design on the LCDR A class.[1]
The first seven locomotives were built by Ashford Works in November and December 1904. The design was soon found to be successful so that sixty-four were built at Ashford between 1904 and 1909. Following Wainwright's retirement Richard Maunsell discovered that sixty-six had been ordered and their components built, but had not been erected earlier. Therefore a further two were erected in 1915.[2]
The H class boiler design was found to be so successful that it was later used as a standard replacement boiler on the SECR R1 class, LCDR B1 class, LCDR B2 class, LCDR R class, SER O1 class, SER Q1 class, and SER R1 class.[3] All 66 locomotives were equipped with vacuum brakes as used on the former SER, but thirteen also had Westinghouse air brakes and were used on the former LCDR lines.[4]
The majority of the class replaced Q class locomotives on the London suburban services of the SER and remained on these duties until after they entered Southern Railway stock in 1923. They began to be displaced by the electrification of these lines in 1925/6, when they began to be used on stopping trains further afield in the Eastern Section of Southern Railway in Kent. After 1929, they also began to be used on the Central Section (the former lines of the London Brighton and South Coast Railway) in East Sussex), where they replaced withdrawn D3 class locomotives. Between 1941 and 1952, two (and later three) examples were loaned to the Western Section and worked from Nine Elms on local shunting and empty stock. During 1943 and 1944 three examples were also loaned to the London Midland and Scottish Railway at Forfar.[5]
Two members of the class were withdrawn during the Second World War, but the remaining 64 entered British Railways stock in 1948. Forty five of the survivors were equipped for push-pull train working between 1949 and 1960, and the class was increasingly used on motor-trains on rural branches. With the completion of the Kent electrification scheme between 1959 and 1962, most of the surviving members of the class were withdrawn, except for a few examples working the non-electrified lines between Tunbridge Wells and Three Bridges.[6]
The final member of the class, SECR No. 263 (SR 1263, BR 31263), was withdrawn from Three Bridges on 4 January 1964. It remained in store at the locomotive depot until the following November, when it was purchased by the H-Class Trust and moved to Robertsbridge. Later it was preserved at the South Eastern Steam Centre at Ashford, but in 1975 the Trustees decided that the locomotive would have more scope for running if based on the Bluebell Railway in Sussex. In 2008 ownership was transferred to the Bluebell Railway Trust, which is funding an overhaul which started in March 2009.[7]
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