The NBR J Class (LNER Classes D29 & D30), commonly known as the Scott class, were a class of 4-4-0 steam tender locomotives designed by William P. Reid for the North British Railway. They passed to the London and North Eastern Railway at the grouping in 1923. Forty-three were built, of which thirty-five (ten D29s and twenty-five D30s) survived into British Railways ownership in 1948.
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Overview
editThe original J Class locomotives were based on the NBR K Class mixed traffic 4-4-0s. The J Class had 6' 6" driving wheels for express passenger work and a large tender which carried sufficient water to allow passenger trains to run non-stop between Edinburgh and Carlisle. These locomotives were named after characters in the novels of Sir Walter Scott and naturally became known as "Scotts". Some of the names were later re-used on LNER Peppercorn Class A1 locomotives.
Builders
editSix locomotives were built in 1909 by the North British Locomotive Company and a further ten were built in 1911 by the North British Railway at its Cowlairs railway works, followed by two further identical locomotives with superheaters.[1] The NBR always referred to these locomotives as J Class, but the LNER classified the initial 16 locomotives D29, and the two superheated locomotives as D30.[2] A further 25 superheated locomotives were built between 1914 and 1920 and the LNER classified these as D30/2.[3]
Accidents and incidents
edit- On 3 January 1917, locomotive No. 421 Jingling Geordie overran signals and was in a head-on collision with an express passenger train at Ratho, Lothian. 12 people were killed and 44 were seriously injured. Irregular operating procedures were a major contributory factor in the accident. These were subsequently stopped.[4]
- On 10 December 1937, No. 9896 Dandie Dinmont was hauling a Dundee to Glasgow Queen Street express train when it was involved in an accident at Castlecary, North Lanarkshire. The train was running late in whiteout conditions when it overran a red home signal at Castlecary. Thankfully, there was no collision with the freight train at Dullatur East, but believing that the train was entering the next section, the signalman sent another express train, hauled by LNER Class A3 4-6-2 No. 2744 Grand Parade, into the section. Minutes later, Grand Parade plowed into the back of the first express. 35 people were killed and another 179 people were injured. [5][6][7][8]
Numbers and names
editBritish Railways numbers[9] were:
- D29, 62401-62413 (with gaps)
- D30, 62417-62442 (62433 missing)
Built | Class | NBR no. | Name | LNER 1st no. | LNER 2nd no. | BR no. | Withdrawn |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1909 | D29 | 895 | Rob Roy | 9895 | 2400 | (62400) | 1948 |
1909 | D29 | 896 | Dandie Dinmont | 9896 | 2401 | (62401) | 1949 |
1909 | D29 | 897 | Redgauntlet | 9897 | 2402 | (62402) | 1949 |
1909 | D29 | 898 | Sir Walter Scott | 9898 | 2403 | (62403) | 1948 |
1909 | D29 | 899 | Jeanie Deans | 9899 | 2404 | (62404) | 1949 |
1909 | D29 | 900 | The Fair Maid | 9900 | 2405 | 62405 | 1951 |
1911 | D29 | 243 | Meg Merrilies | 9243 | 2406 | (62406) | 1949 |
1911 | D29 | 244 | Madge Wildfire | 9244 | 2407 | 1947 | |
1911 | D29 | 245 | Bailie Nicol Jarvie | 9245 | 2408 | 1947 | |
1911 | D29 | 338 | Helen MacGregor | 9338 | 2409 | (62409) | 1948 |
1911 | D29 | 339 | Ivanhoe | 9339 | 2410 | 62410 | 1952 |
1911 | D29 | 340 | Lady of Avenel | 9340 | 2411 | 62411 | 1952 |
1911 | D29 | 359 | Dirk Hatteraick | 9359 | 2412 | 62412 | 1950 |
1911 | D29 | 360 | Guy Mannering | 9360 | 2413 | 62413 | 1950 |
1911 | D29 | 361 | Vich Ian Vohr | 9361 | (2414) | 1946 | |
1911 | D29 | 362 | Ravenswood | 9362 | 2415 | 1947 | |
1912 | D30/1 | 400 | The Dougal Cratur | 9400 | (2416) | 1945 | |
1912 | D30/1 | 363 | Hal o' the Wynd | 9363 | 2417 | 62417 | 1951 |
1914 | D30/2 | 409 | The Pirate | 9409 | 2418 | 62418 | 1959 |
1914 | D30/2 | 410 | Meg Dods | 9410 | 2419 | 62419 | 1957 |
1914 | D30/2 | 411 | Dominie Sampson | 9411 | 2420 | 62420 | 1957 |
1914 | D30/2 | 412 | Laird o' Monkbarns | 9412 | 2421 | 62421 | 1960 |
1914 | D30/2 | 413 | Caleb Balderstone | 9413 | 2422 | 62422 | 1958 |
1914 | D30/2 | 414 | Dugald Dalgetty | 9414 | 2423 | 62423 | 1957 |
1914 | D30/2 | 415 | Claverhouse | 9415 | 2424 | 62424 | 1957 |
1914 | D30/2 | 416 | Ellangowan | 9416 | 2425 | 62425 | 1958 |
1914 | D30/2 | 417 | Cuddie Headrigg | 9417 | 2426 | 62426 | 1960 |
1914 | D30/2 | 418 | Dumbiedykes | 9418 | 2427 | 62427 | 1959 |
1914 | D30/2 | 419 | The Talisman | 9419 | 2428 | 62428 | 1958 |
1914 | D30/2 | 420 | The Abbot | 9420 | 2429 | 62429 | 1957 |
1914 | D30/2 | 421 | Jingling Geordie | 9421 | 2430 | 62430 | 1957 |
1914 | D30/2 | 422 | Kenilworth | 9422 | 2431 | 62431 | 1958 |
1914 | D30/2 | 423 | Quentin Durward | 9423 | 2432 | 62432 | 1958 |
1915 | D30/2 | 424 | Lady Rowena | 9424 | 2433 | 1947 | |
1915 | D30/2 | 425 | Kettledrummle | 9425 | 2434 | 62434 | 1958 |
1915 | D30/2 | 426 | Norna | 9426 | 2435 | 62435 | 1957 |
1915 | D30/2 | 427 | Lord Glenvarloch | 9427 | 2436 | 62436 | 1959 |
1915 | D30/2 | 428 | Adam Woodcock | 9428 | 2437 | 62437 | 1958 |
1920 | D30/2 | 497 | Peter Poundtext | 9497 | 2438 | 62438 | 1957 |
1920 | D30/2 | 498 | Father Ambrose | 9498 | 2439 | 62439 | 1959 |
1920 | D30/2 | 499 | Wandering Willie | 9499 | 2440 | 62440 | 1958 |
1920 | D30/2 | 500 | Black Duncan | 9500 | 2441 | 62441 | 1958 |
1920 | D30/2 | 501 | Simon Glover | 9501 | 2442 | 62442 | 1958 |
NBR no. 898 was named after Sir Walter Scott the author of the Waverley Novels, and the others were given the names either of those novels, or of characters and places in them. The LNER increased the NBR numbers by 9000, and these were applied between 1924 and 1926. New LNER numbers were allotted in 1943 in the order of construction, but the locos were not renumbered until 1946, by which time two had been withdrawn. British Railways increased the LNER 1946 numbers by 60000 between 1948 and 1950, but some were withdrawn before this could be carried out. Numbers in parentheses were allocated but not carried.[10]
References
edit- ^ Marsden, Richard. "The Reid D29 'Scott' (NBR Class J) 4-4-0 Locomotives". The LNER Encyclopedia. Winwaed Software Technology LLC. Retrieved 20 November 2008.
- ^ Marsden, Richard. "The Reid D30 'Superheated Scott' (NBR Class J) 4-4-0 Locomotives". The LNER Encyclopedia. Winwaed Software Technology LLC. Retrieved 20 November 2008.
- ^ "LNER Encyclopedia: The LNER Reid D30 'Superheated Scott' (NBR Class J) 4-4-0 Locomotives".
- ^ Earnshaw, Alan (1991). Trains in Trouble: Vol. 7. Penryn: Atlantic Books. pp. 18–19. ISBN 0-906899-50-8.
- ^ "Memorial marks 80 years since Castlecary train disaster". BBC. 10 December 2017. Retrieved 11 December 2017.
- ^ "Village remembers its blackest day after more than 70 years". The Herald. 1 September 2008. Retrieved 11 October 2017.
- ^ "Report on the collision between two passenger trains which occurred on 10th December, 1937, at Castlecary on the London and North Eastern Railway" (PDF). 24 April 1938. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
- ^ "Castlecary disaster death-toll of 35". The Herald. 14 February 2005. Retrieved 11 October 2017.
- ^ Ian Allan ABC of British Railways Locomotives, 1948 edition, part 4, pp 19-20
- ^ Boddy, M.G.; Brown, W.A.; Fry, E.V.; Hennigan, W.; Manners, F.; Neve, E.; Tee, D.F.; Yeadon, W.B. (April 1968). Fry, E.V. (ed.). Locomotives of the L.N.E.R., part 4: Tender Engines - Classes D25 to E7. Kenilworth: RCTS. pp. 18, 21, 22, 24, 26, 27–28. ISBN 0-901115-01-0.