LDE – Columbus

COLUMBUS
Quantity 1
Manufacturer Gillingham & Winans, Baltimore
Year(s) of manufacture 1835
Retired 1842
Wheel arrangement 0-4-0
Axle arrangement B n2
Gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Driving wheel diameter 1,220 mm
No. of cylinders 2
Cylinder bore 254 mm
Piston stroke 610 mm
Boiler Overpressure 4.9 at
No. of heating tubes 400
Heating tube length 965 mm

Columbus was a tender locomotive operated by the Leipzig–Dresden Railway Company (Leipzig-Dresdner Eisenbahn or LDE).

History

The locomotive was sent to the LDE on the recommendation of the Saxon consul in the United States. Similar locomotives had already proven themselves on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. (cf. Tom Thumb) She was built in 1835 by Gillingham & Winans in Baltimore/USA.

In the LDE's company records the locomotive was later described as unreliable and unusable. Several attempts to give the engine back to the manufacturer failed.

In 1842 the locomotive was given to the Sächsische Maschinenbau-Compagnie in Chemnitz in payment for the PEGASUS. Beyond that, her fate is unknown. She may be identical with the TEUTONIA, which was delivered to the Magdeburg-Leipzig Railway in 1843.[1]

See also

References

  1. Helmholtz and Staby 1930, p. 63.

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.