The
North British Locomotive Company of Scotland
(NBL or
North British) was created in 1903 through the merger of three
Glasgow
companies, Sharp Stewart, Neilson and Company and Dübs and Company, creating the largest
locomotive building company in Europe. Its main factories were located at the
neighbouring Atlas and Hyde Park Works in central Springburn
. The new central Administration Block and
Drawing Offices for the combined company were completed across the
road from the Hyde Park Works in 1909 and was later the main campus
of
North Glasgow College.In
1918 the factory produced the first prototype of the Anglo-American
Mark VIII battlefield tank for the
Allied armies, but with the
Armistice it
did not go into production. The two other Railway works in
Springburn were
St. Rollox
railway works, owned by the
Caledonian Railway and
Cowlairs railway works, owned by the
North British Railway.
Steam locomotives
NBL built
steam locomotives for countries as far afield as Australia, Malaysia
and New Zealand
. The Colony of New South Wales
purchased numerous North British locomotives, as
did the State of
Victoria
as late as
1951 (Oberg, Locomotives of Australia). Western
Australia also purchased many North British Locomotives, such as
the
WAGR P Class.
In 1939 NB supplied 40
J class to
the
New Zealand Railways
Department (NZR); some of which were later converted to
JB class oilburners. In 1951
NB supplied another 16
JA
class, though these did not have the American-style
streamlining of the J class. Together with the NB predecessor
firms, North British supplied about a quarter of the steam
locomotives used by the NZR.
In 1949
South Africa purchased over 100
engines from the company in the 2-8-4 layout and these became the
Class 24; some operated tourist trains on the George-Knysna line
until 2000. Additionally South Africa also purchased some of its
Class 25, 4-8-4 engines from the company between 1953-55. These
successful engines with various in-service modifications survived
until the end of steam in South Africa in 1992. NB also introduced
the
Modified Fairlie locomotive in 1924. In
total South Africa purchased over 2000 locomotives from the North
British Locomotive Company.
Locomotives made for Britain included the
LMS Stanier Class 8F, the
LMS Jubilee Class, and the
LSWR N15 class, the
Scotch
Arthurs.
The sad tale of engines 22878, 22879 and 22880
The story begins in 1922. North British Locomotive Company received
an order from half a world away, in New Zealand. The
New Zealand Railways
Department wanted a batch of their very successful
AB class pacifics built and shipped as
soon as possible. The trio 22878, 22879 and 22880 were built amidst
this batch.
22878 and 22879 were loaded aboard the
SS Whiltshire and the ship sailed for
Auckland
, New Zealand
. Sadly, the ship got into difficulty on the
east coast of Great Barrier Island
, near its destination, and sank, sending 22878 and
22879, two of Casey Jones's locomotives down to Davey Jones's
locker!22880 was dispatched on the next ship to sail
and was put into service in New Zealand
as AB class
number 745.The locomotive worked hard for over 30 years,
before fate would see it, too, sink.
This time, the
locomotive hit a washout near Hawera
, New
Zealand.The locomotive was left in the mud for nearly 50
years, before it was eventually exhumed, with the intention of
restoration.
Diesel locomotives
Whilst highly successful as designers and builders of steam
locomotives for both its domestic market and abroad, North British
failed to make the jump to diesel locomotive production. It did
build a Paxman engined diesel locomotive,
British Rail 10800, originally ordered
for the
London,
Midland and Scottish Railway before the 1948 nationalisation of
British Railways, but not delivered
until 1950. Another Paxman engined locomotive was PVH1, built in
1953 as 'Paxman Voith Hydraulic 1' (hence the identity) for the Emu
Bay Railway, Tasmania, and survives today preserved at the Derwent
Valley Railway (Tasmania)
[101892]. Its wheel formation is -D- being a
hydraulic transmission locomotive, so in appearance it looks like
an 0-8-0. It also built 8 Paxman engined shunters
British Rail Class D2/1. Later in
the 1950s it signed a deal with the German company
MAN to construct further diesel engines under
licence. These power units appeared in the late 1950s' British
Railways (BR) designs pre-
TOPS British Rail Class D3/1 (later
D3/4), and later designated
Class
21,
Class 22,
Class 41,
Class 43 and
Class 251 None of these were
particularly successful: constructional shortcomings with the MAN
engines made them far less reliable than German-built examples. A
typical example of this was the grade of steel used for exhaust
manifolds in the Class 43s - frequent manifold failures led to loss
of
turbocharger drive gas pressure and
hence loss of power. More importantly, the driving cabs of the
locomotives would fill with poisonous exhaust fumes. BR returned
many North British diesel locomotives to their builder for repair
under warranty and they also insisted on a three-month guarantee on
all repairs (a requirement not levied on its own workshops).
Electric locomotives
North
British was involved in the construction of early 25 kV AC electric
locomotives for the West Coast Main Line
(WCML) electrification project of the early
1960s. The
General Electric Company
won a contract for ten locomotives and sub-contracted the
mechanical design and construction to North British:
Class AL4 E3036-E3045 (later Class 84
84001-84010) entered traffic in 1960-61. As with its diesel
locomotives, the class suffered poor reliability and spent long
periods out of service.
A partial reprieve came when money was made
available to extend the electrification of the WCML north to
Glasgow
but no
immediate funds were available for more electric
locomotives. The Class 84s were refurbished in 1972 and
pressed back into service, being finally withdrawn between 1978 to
1980 following delivery of
Class
87 locomotives.
Decline
Perhaps unwisely, North British supplied many of its diesel and
electric locomotives to BR at a loss, hoping to make up for this on
massive future orders that never came . This and the continuing
stream of warranty claims to cure design and workmanship faults
proved fatal - North British declared bankruptcy on 19 April 1962.
Because of the unreliability of its UK diesel and electric
locomotives, all were withdrawn after comparatively short
lifespans.
Preservation
-
- A 2-8-4 SAR Class 24, No. 3664 (North
British build no. 26386/49), affectionately called
Jo-Anna, still does regular tourist trips in and around
Pretoria

- The Outeniqua Choo Tjoe uses
the Class 24
-
- Around 21 North British diesel shunters are preserved, mostly
by public museums or preservation societies in the UK, e.g. the
Scottish Railway Preservation Society [101893] (SRPS) Diesel
Group [101894] owns D2767 and returned this to working order
on 25 June 2008. A list of these with information and photos can be
found on the World of Preserved Shunters web site [101895].
- The only surviving North British main-line diesel or electric
locomotive is Class 84
84001.
- A
gauge North British 4-6-2 steam locomotive is preserved at the
Phyllis
Rampton Trust
in Surrey, England.
References
- Reed, Brian (1974):Diesel Hydraulic Locomotives of the
Western Region. David and Charles (London) ISBN
0-7153-6769-2
- Oberg, Leon. Locomotives of Australia, Reed, Sydney,
1975.
- ARHS, A Century Plus of Locomotives: New South Wales
Railways 1855-1965, Sydney, 1965.
See also
External links