GWR 1361 Class
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1363 preserved at Didcot |
|
| Power type | Steam |
|---|---|
| Designer | Harry Holcroft |
| Builder | Great Western Railway |
| Configuration | 0-6-0 |
| Gauge | 4 ft 8.5 in |
| Driver size | 3ft 6in (1.067m) |
| Wheelbase | 11ft 0in (3.353m) |
| Cylinder size | 16in dia × 20in stroke (406mm × 508mm) |
| Career | Great Western Railway |
The 1361 Class were small 0-6-0ST steam locomotives built by the Great Western Railway at their Swindon railway works, England, mainly for shunting in docks and other sidings where track curvature was too tight for large locomotives.
Contents |
[edit] History
The 1361 Class were designed by Harry Holcroft, the Great Western Railway's Chief Draughtsman, by adapting the 1392 Class, originally built in 1874 for the Cornwall Minerals Railway, to conform to George Jackson Churchward's standardisation policy (Churchward was the Chief Mechanical Engineer). As such they combined unusual and outdated elements, such as saddle tanks and Allan valve gear, with current Great Western details such the cab. By 1910 the railway was busy converting all its old saddle tank locomotives to carry pannier tanks. The 11ft wheelbase allowed them to negotiate 2 chain (66ft / 20m) radius curves, a feature necessary for their intended duties in docks and on lightly laid branch lines.
The five locomotives were built at Swindon in 1910 and were set to work alongside the ex-Cornwall Minerals Railway locomotives. Their usual home was Plymouth Millbay, Devon, (later Laira shed) from where they worked in Millbay Docks and on the Sutton Harbour branch. Until 1928 some of the locomotives could also be found at St Blazey engine shed, Cornwall, where they worked on ex-Cornwall Minerals Railway branches, and also at Moorswater for working the Looe branch.
In 1920 one locomotive was transferred to Newton Abbot, Devon, for shunting the railway workshops there, a duty that was to continue until1952). Other allocations were Taunton (1953 - 1961) for working at Bridgwater, Somerset, (again, mainly in the town's docks), and Swindon (1956 - 1961). One was tried briefly at Weymouth, Dorset, in 1949, and another went to St Philips Marsh, Bristol in 1962.
The same basic design was used for the six 1366 Class locomotives built in 1934, but this time they were fitted with pannier tanks. When the 1361s were withdrawn their remaining duties were given to D2000 diesel shunters.
[edit] Locomotives
| Number | Built | Withdrawn | |
| 1361 | 1910 | 1961 | |
| 1362 | 1910 | 1961 | |
| 1363 | 1910 | 1962 | Preserved at Didcot Railway Centre |
| 1364 | 1910 | 1961 | |
| 1365 | 1910 | 1962 |
[edit] References
- Aves, W.A.T. (1998). "The Pre-1923 GWR Pannier and Saddle Tank Locomotives". Locomotives Illustrated (118). RAS Publishing. ISSN 0307-1804.
- Coleford, I.C. (2007). "Swindon's saddle tanks - the GWR's 1361 class 0-6-0STs". Railway Bylines 12 (6): 252 - 263. Irwell Press. ISSN 1360-2098.
[edit] External links
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

