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词条 GWR locomotive numbering and classification
释义

  1. Numbering

     Broad Gauge Era  Standard Gauge 1854-1875  Standard Gauge 1875-1902  Standard Gauge 1902-1912  1912 Renumbering  Standard Gauge 1912 onwards  1923 Renumbering  1946 Renumbering  Application by British Railways 

  2. Classification

  3. See also

  4. Notes

  5. References

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2018}}{{Use British English|date=February 2018}}

The GWR was the longest-lived of the pre-nationalisation railway companies in Britain, surviving the 'Grouping' of the railways in 1923 almost unchanged. As a result, the history of its numbering and classification of locomotives is relatively complicated. This page explains the principal systems that were used.

  • For information about individual classes and locomotives, see: Locomotives of the Great Western Railway

Numbering

Broad Gauge Era

From the start, the GWR gave names only to its broad gauge locomotive stock. However, many classes carried 'themed' names, e.g. stars or signs of the zodiac, which aided identification of locomotives to some extent. See List of 7-foot gauge railway locomotive names

The exception to this rule was that any broad gauge locomotives the GWR absorbed from other railways (in particular, the South Devon Railway and Bristol and Exeter Railway) were given numbers in the 2000-2199 series. This applied even where locomotives had carried names under their previous owner (indeed, these names were usually removed by the GWR) and even when the locomotives had originally belonged to the GWR and had been sold out of stock.

Towards the end of the broad gauge era, a number of locomotives were built to a design that enabled them to be easily converted from one gauge to the other (hence the term 'convertibles' used for these locomotives). These engines also carried numbers in the standard gauge series, whether or not they were running in broad gauge form.

Standard Gauge 1854-1875

Initially standard gauge locomotive numbering was a simple sequential system, starting from 1. Numbering in this series, which included new locomotives and those absorbed from other railways, eventually reached 1297.

New locomotives were identified as being paid from either revenue or capital account. Initially an effort was made to treat the numbering of locomotives bought out of revenue differently from those out of capital, including by re-using old numbers left vacant following withdrawal, using a duplicate number system (unusually, giving the new locomotives an A suffix - other railways tended to apply such notation to the old locomotive being replaced) and, for a few years, using the series 1000 (later 1001) upwards. In 1875, the sequential system starting at 1 reached 1000 and then jumped to 1116, the other side of the latter range of numbers still carried.

Standard Gauge 1875-1902

Under William Dean's leadership, blocks of numbers were allocated for different locomotive types, as follows:

NumbersTypes
1298 to 1400Absorbed standard and narrow gauge locomotives
1401 to 1500Passenger tank locomotives
1501 to 2000Goods tank locomotives
2001 to 2200Absorbed broad gauge locomotives (later reused for goods tank locomotives)
2201 to 3000Goods tender locomotives
3001 to 32004-2-2 express passenger locomotives
3201 to 35002-4-0 and 4-4-0 express passenger locomotives
3501 to 3600Passenger tank locomotives

The only exceptions to these principles under Dean were use of the 20xx, 21xx, and 27xx series for goods tank engines after the end of broad gauge operations. Experimental locomotives and other small classes continued to be numbered in gaps left following withdrawals in the number series below 1000.

Standard Gauge 1902-1912

Under George Jackson Churchward, the system applied by William Dean broke down, and new classes simply took the next free block of hundred numbers starting at xx01, with experimental engines numbered in odd gaps in the earlier series of numbers, usually below 110.

1912 Renumbering

In December 1912 (the official date being 28 December), the GWR undertook a renumbering of some of its locomotives — mainly 4-4-0 classes — so that locomotives of the same class were numbered consecutively. This desirable aim was made more important following the rebuilding of some Duke and Atbara locomotives to Bulldog and City class designs. A few of the changes were connected with a decision that blocks of numbers for each class should start at xx00 rather than xx01 as previous.[1]

4-4-0 classes
ClassOriginal NumbersNew Number RangeNotesRef
Atbara3373-34124120-41483382 scrapped 1911;
3400-3409 rebuilt to City
[2]
Badminton3292-33114100-4119[3]
Bird3731-37453441-3455[4]
Bulldog (ex-Duke)Various (from 3253-3331)3300-3319[5]
Bulldog (new build)3332-3372, 3413-3432, 3443-3472, 3701-37303320-3440[6]
City (ex-Atbara)3400-34093700-3709[7]
City (new build)3433-34423710-3719[8]
County3473-3482, 3801-38303800, 3831-38393801-3830 not renumbered[9]
Duke3252-3291, 3312-3331 (various, total 40)3252-3291others rebuilt to Bulldog[10]
Flower4101-41204149-4168[11]
Other classes
ClassWheel arrangementOriginal NumbersNew Number RangeRef
455 (Metro)2-4-0T36003500[12]
2600 (Aberdare)2-6-0332600[13]
27210-6-0T28002700[14]
28002-8-0972800[15]
2900 (Saint)4-6-0/4-4-298,100,171-1902998,2900,2971-2990[16]
31002-6-2T993100[17]
36002-4-2T113600[18]
4000 (Star)4-6-0404000[19]
44002-6-2T115, 3101-104400-10[20]
45002-6-2T2161-904500-29[21]
Cornwall Min. Rly0-6-0T14001398[22]

Standard Gauge 1912 onwards

From the time of the 1912 renumbering, a system was adopted for new locomotives where the second digit indicated the broad type of locomotive. For example, express passenger locomotives had x0xx numbers and large mixed traffic tender locomotives were x9xx. When a class numbered more than 100 locos, rather than continue the numbers consecutively the second digit remained constant (e.g. 4900 Class included 4900-4999, 5900-5999, and 6900 onwards).

At the same time, a change was made so that new classes usually commenced from the number xx00. There was a certain amount of renumbering so that the prototype locomotives for existing classes took the appropriate xx00 number before the series used by production locomotives. Thus, from this time on, numbers below 2000 were mainly occupied by old, absorbed or otherwise non-standard locomotives, including the experimental diesel locomotives used by the GWR.

1923 Renumbering

In 1923, the GWR absorbed a number of small railway companies as part of the Grouping. The locomotives that it inherited were renumbered into gaps in the number series below 2199 left vacant by the withdrawal of older locomotives. Many of these engines were withdrawn after a short period of time, but those that survived in 1946 were subject to another renumbering to rationalise the system further (see below).

The bulk of the locomotives absorbed were renumbered into gaps in broad number ranges according to their wheel arrangement. Locomotives from the following railways were included in this scheme: Alexandra Docks Railway, Barry Railway, Cambrian Railways, Cardiff Railway, Midland and South Western Junction Railway, Port Talbot Railway, Rhondda and Swansea Bay Railway, Rhymney Railway, South Wales Mineral Railway, Taff Vale Railway, Vale of Rheidol Railway, and Welshpool and Llanfair Light Railway.

Locomotives from the Brecon and Merthyr Railway, Burry Port and Gwendraeth Valley Railway and Neath and Brecon Railway were also renumbered according to their wheel arrangement, but used a different set of number ranges.

The number ranges used for all these locomotives are set out below, but note that those engines that had previously been sold out of stock by the GWR regained their original GWR numbers, and were not allocated new numbers in these ranges:

Wheel ArrangementMain Number RangeBMR, BPGVR and NBR Range
0-4-4T2-23
2-6-024
4-4-4T25-27
0-6-2T30-60311-1375, 1668-1833
0-6-0T604-8432161-2199
0-6-0844-1013
4-4-01014-1128
4-4-0T1129-11841392
2-4-0T1189-11971400-1458
2-6-2T1199-1213
4-4-2T1301-13061391
2-4-2T1307-1326
2-4-01328-1336
0-4-0T1338-1343
0-6-4T1344-1357
0-8-2T1358-1386
0-8-01387-1390

The locomotives inherited by the GWR from other concerns were renumbered as follows:

  • Ex-Cleobury Mortimer and Ditton Priors Light Railway 0-6-0T engines became 28-29.
  • Locomotives from the Llanelli & Mynydd Mawr Railway, Powesland and Mason and Swansea Harbour Trust were absorbed after the original numbering series had been drawn up, and these were fitted into available gaps without reference to the original number ranges. In some case they took the numbers of other absorbed engines that had already been withdrawn.
  • In the 1940s, the Corris Railway and Weston, Clevedon and Portishead Railway were absorbed. The four engines inherited from these two concerns took GWR numbers 3-6.

1946 Renumbering

By 1946, the majority of the locomotives inherited at the 1923 Grouping had been withdrawn, as had most of the older GWR engines numbered below 2000. In order to tidy up the gaps in this number range, it was decided to renumber the surviving locomotives from each pre-Grouping company together. The series used were:

  • 1: ex-Ystalyfera Tin Works
  • 7-9: ex-Vale of Rheidol Railway
  • 30-96: ex-Rhymney Railway
  • 193-399: ex-Taff Vale Railway and Barry Railway
  • 421-436: ex-Brecon and Merthyr Railway
  • 1140-1147: ex-Swansea Harbour Trust
  • 1150-1153: ex-Powesland and Mason

Application by British Railways

When the GWR was nationalised as part of British Railways in 1948, its steam locomotives retained their numbers unchanged and new steam engines built to GWR designs continued to be allocated numbers in the same way as the GWR had done. However, its diesel locomotives were completely renumbered. They took numbers 15100-15107 in the 15xxx series allocated to pre-Nationalisation design diesel shunters.

  • see: British Rail locomotive and multiple unit numbering and classification

Classification

A very simple system was adopted, whereby the name (for broad-gauge locomotives) or number of the first locomotive in a class became the classification for all locomotives in that class (e.g. 'Sun Class', '4000 Class'). After the end of the broad gauge, names were applied to principal passenger and mixed-traffic standard-gauge locomotives. These were often based on a single theme, which could also lend its name to describe a class, for example 'Stars', also known as the '4000 Class', whose names included 'North Star', 'Rising Star' etc.

However, the classes of locomotives inherited at the Grouping in 1923 continued to be referred to by the classification allocated to them by their original owner.

See also

  • Great Western Railway Power and Weight Classification

Notes

1. ^RCTS Part 1, p.14
2. ^RCTS Part 7, pp.G33,G35-G36
3. ^RCTS Part 7, pp.G29,G32
4. ^RCTS Part 7, pp.G19,G26-G27
5. ^RCTS Part 7, pp.G12,G16-17,G19,G23-G24
6. ^RCTS Part 7, pp.G19,G24-G26
7. ^RCTS Part 7, pp.G33,G35-G36,G38
8. ^RCTS Part 7, pp.G36,G38
9. ^RCTS Part 9, pp.J10,J11-J12
10. ^RCTS Part 7, pp.G12,G16-17
11. ^RCTS Part 7, pp.G33,G36
12. ^RCTS Part 6, pp.F28,F37
13. ^RCTS Part 7, pp.G40,G36
14. ^RCTS Part 5, pp.E67,E71
15. ^RCTS Part 9, pp.J19,J22-J23
16. ^RCTS Part 8, pp.H22-H23
17. ^RCTS Part 9, pp.J28,J30
18. ^RCTS Part 6, pp.F38,F41
19. ^RCTS Part 8, pp.H6,H7
20. ^RCTS Part 9, pp.J44,J46
21. ^RCTS Part 9, pp.J46,J49
22. ^RCTS Part 3, pp.C73-C74,C76

References

  • {{cite book |last1=Allcock |first1=N.J. |last2=Davies |first2=F.K. |last3=LeFleming |first3=H.M. |last4=Maskelyne |first4=J.N. |last5=Reed |first5=P.J.T. |last6=Tabor |first6=F.J. |series=The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway |volume=Part 1 |title=Preliminary Survey |date=June 1951 |publisher=Railway Correspondence and Travel Society |ref=RCTSGWR1 }}
  • {{cite book |last=Reed |first=P.J.T. |series=The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway |volume=Part 3 |title=Absorbed Engines, 1854-1921 |date=December 1956 |publisher=Railway Correspondence and Travel Society |ref=RCTSGWR3 }}
  • {{cite book |last=LeFleming |first=H.M. |series=The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway |volume=Part 5 |title=Six-Coupled Tank Engines |date=April 1958 |publisher=Railway Correspondence and Travel Society |ref=RCTSGWR5 }}
  • {{cite book |last=Tabor |first=F.J. |series=The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway |volume=Part 6 |title=Four-Coupled Tank Engines |date=August 1959 |publisher=Railway Correspondence and Travel Society |ref=RCTSGWR6 }}
  • {{cite book |last=LeFleming |first=H.M. |series=The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway |volume=Part 7 |title=Dean's Larger Tender Engines |date=October 1954 |publisher=Railway Correspondence and Travel Society |ref=RCTSGWR7 }}
  • {{cite book |last=LeFleming |first=H.M. |series=The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway |volume=Part 8 |title=Modern Passenger Classes |date=November 1960 |origyear=1953 |publisher=Railway Correspondence and Travel Society |ref=RCTSGWR8 }}
  • {{cite book |last=LeFleming |first=H.M. |series=The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway |volume=Part 9 |title=Standard Two-Cylinder Classes |date=February 1962 |publisher=Railway Correspondence and Travel Society |ref=RCTSGWR9 }}
{{British railway rolling stock numbering and classification}}

2 : Great Western Railway locomotives|Locomotive classification systems

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