M&GN Class C LNER Classes D52, D53 & D54 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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![]() M&GN class C 4-4-0, No. 076, at Peterborough North, 1938 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The M&GN Class C was a class of 4-4-0 steam tender locomotives of the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway.
The Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway (M&GN) was formed in 1893. The M&GN possessed insufficient locomotives to work all of its services, and so a number of locomotives were loaned by the railway's two co-owners, the Great Northern Railway and the Midland Railway (MR). To avoid the necessity for such loans, the MR's Locomotive Superintendent, Samuel Waite Johnson, designed a class of 4-4-0 tender locomotives specifically for use on the M&GN. These had much in common with the MR's 1808 class, [1] which had first appeared in 1888. [2] 26 locomotives of the new design were built by Sharp, Stewart & Co. in 1894, with a further seven following in 1896; a final seven were built by Beyer, Peacock & Co. in 1899 bringing the total to 40. [1] Their numbers on the M&GN were 1–7, 11–14, 17, 18, 36–39, 42–57, 74–80, and they formed M&GN Class C. [1] Ten more were built to the same design by Beyer, Peacock in 1900, but these were for the MR, where they formed the 2581 class. [3] [4]
As built, the engines had round-topped fireboxes, and the boiler barrel had a maximum diameter of 4 ft 3 in (1.30 m). When boilers became due for replacement, the replacement boilers were of various types, some of which had Belpaire fireboxes, and some were larger, being 4 ft 9 in (1.45 m) diameter. [5]
When they passed to the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) on 1 October 1936, it was decided to add a zero prefix to their M&GN numbers, to avoid duplication with existing LNER engines, so M&GN no. 1 became LNER no. 01; [6] but 14 locomotives were withdrawn before the prefix could be applied. [7] The remaining 26 had their numbers altered between October 1936 and December 1937. [8]
On the LNER they initially retained the M&GN class C, but this was soon subdivided into C/1, C/2 and C/3 according to boiler design. They were reclassified as D52, D53 and D54 in July 1942: [3]
When the LNER post-war numbering scheme was prepared, it was based on the locomotive stock on 4 July 1943, [9] by which time 19 more had been withdrawn, leaving seven: [8] of these, class D52 nos. 038 & 076 were allotted 2050–1, class D53 nos. 050, 06 & 077 were to become 2052–4, and D54 nos. 055–6 were allotted 2055–6. [7] However, by the time that the scheme was issued in December that year, [9] a further four had been withdrawn, leaving just the three D53 in the final list; and before the renumbering actually began in January 1946, all three of those had also been withdrawn, the last in January 1945. [10]
None of the locomotives were preserved. However, a boiler does survive after being rediscovered in a Maldon timber works factory and there are talks of a static locomotive being built with the boiler. [11] [12]