North Midland Railway Locomotives

Little information remains about the North Midland Railway Locomotives. Unlike other railway companies, the North Midland Railway of England did not give names to its locomotives.

Locomotive summary

Miller and Barnes

Among the first were two tender engines ordered in 1838 from Miller and Barnes of Ratcliffe which would seem to have been delivered in 1840.[1]

Mather, Dixon and Company

The next were in 1839 from Mather, Dixon and Company, three 2-2-2 similar to the "Bury" type.

Various builders

The bulk of the purchases were in 1840 as follows:

Whishaw, in 1842 writes that they were all six-wheeled, about fifty in number, and that there were, in addition, some from Robert Stephenson and Company, R and W Hawthorn and Charles Tayleur and Company. In 1841 another engine was ordered from R.B.Longridge and Company. Little is known of this, but, in 1846, the Midland Railway ordered twenty long-boilered 2-4-0s, for which it might have been a prototype. It is known that in 1842, the railway had complained about overheating of chimneys and smokeboxes, and Robert Stephenson had carried out studies with the assistance of the NMR and its Derby works which culminated in his long boiler patent. It may also be that this was 'No.54 Stephenson,' which took part in the 1845 gauge trials, along with Stephenson's 'Engine A'.

Rolling stock

Passenger

Passenger coaches consisted of First, Second and Third Class, finished in Spanish Brown and lined out in Black. First Class had three compartments, each holding six people. Second Class was open at the sides, but the three compartments, each for eight people, were separated by a wooden partition. Both the buffers and the couplings were sprung by an arrangement of leaf springs under the carriage.

Goods

The railway also owned a number of goods wagons, roughly 12 foot 6 inches long, with solid buffers.

References

  1. "British locomotive manufacturers". Steamindex.com. Retrieved 2012-03-30.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/9/2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.