Great Western Railway City Class Steam Loco |
Great Western Railway 3440 'City of Truro' Steam LocomotivePhoto of the Great Western Railway's 3700 'City' Class UK steam locomotive, designed by William Dean for use as express passenger motive power on the GWR, came into being following George Jackson Churchward's rebuilding in September 1902, of Atbara Class 4-4-0 No. 3405 Mauritius, by replacing the original boiler with his new Standard No.4 design.
Following
successful trials with 3405 (3705) Mauritius,
10 new steam locomotives were ordered and built at the GWR Swindon Works in
1903, bearing the numbers 3433-3442.
As a point of interest it cost £1,957
to construct No. 3440 (later renumbered 3717) 'City of Truro'.
The new batch of locomotives was added
to by the rebuilding of another nine Atbaras between 1907 and 1909.
Between 1910 and 1912, all 20 engines in the class received
superheaters.
Regular passenger services between Paddington
and Bristol, and on the non-stop Paddington to Plymouth 'Cornish
Riviera Express', were hauled by 'Cities' as their first employment
on the Great Western Railway network.
In 1905, London to Birmingham passenger trains
which were at the time still routed through Oxford, began to be
hauled by a 'City' locomotive until a few years later when they were
gradually replaced by 4-6-0s and Atlantics.
Following on from this, the 'City' class locos then saw service between Birmingham and Bristol.
After 24 years of service the writing
was on the wall for the 55 ton, double-framed, 'City' class
locomotives and withdrawal was on the horizon.
No.
3441 (3718) 'City of
Winchester' was
condemned in October 1927, swiftly followed by the others until only
2 of the original 20 remained – 3435 (3712)'City
of Bristol'
and 3440 (3717) 'City of Truro'.
'City
of Bristol'
was scrapped in May 1931. However, through the efforts of various
parties, 'City of
Truro'
was saved and, when not on display at York railway museum, can still
be seen today at various locations heading up 'specials' around the UK.
During
a working life of 28 years, 'City
of Truro',
which incidentally was the 2,000th
steam locomotive to be constructed at Swindon, had clocked up an
impressive 1,000,483 miles of hauling.
List
of 'City' locomotive numbers and names.
Numbers in brackets are those renumbered in 1912.
3400
(3700) Durban
3401
(3701) Gibraltar
3402
(3702) Halifax
3403
(3703) Hobart
3404
(3704) Lyttelton
3405
(3705) Mauritius
3406
(3706) Melbourne
3407
(3707) Malta
3408
(3708) Ophir & Killarny
3409
(3709) Quebec
3433
(3710) City of Bath
3434
(3711) City of Birmingham
3435
(3712) City of Bristol
3436
(3713) City of Chester
3437
(3714) City of Gloucester
3438
(3715) City of Hereford
3439
(3716) City of London
3440
(3717) City of Truro
3441
(3718) City of Winchester
3442
(3719) City of Worcester & City of Exeter More steam locomotive 'Photos and History' pages. Photos and History of Q1 Class 0-6-0 UK Steam Locomotive Photos and History of King Arthur Class 4-6-0 UK Steam Locomotive 'City of Truro' GWR steam locomotive on YouTube: Don't forget to subscribe to 'Along These Tracks' to get all new posts and updates sent directly to you.
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