GWR 4073 Class

The 4073 or Castle Class are 4-6-0 steam locomotives of the Great Western Railway, built between 1923 and 1950.[2] They were designed by the railway's Chief Mechanical Engineer, Charles Collett, for working the company's express passenger trains. They could reach speeds of up to 100 mph (160 km/h).[3]

GWR 4073 Castle class
5002 Ludlow Castle with a parcels train in 1962
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
DesignerCharles Collett
BuilderGWR / BR Swindon Works
Order numberLots 224, 232, 234, 280, 295, 296, 303, 310, 317, 324, 357, 367, 375
Build date1923–1950
Total produced171
Specifications
Configuration:
  Whyte4-6-0
  UIC2'Ch4
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Leading dia.3 ft 2 in (0.965 m)
Driver dia.6 ft 8+12 in (2.045 m)
Minimum curve8 chains (530 ft; 160 m) normal,
7 chains (460 ft; 140 m) slow
Length65 ft 2 in (19.86 m) over buffers
Width8 ft 11 in (2.718 m)
Height13 ft 4+12 in (4.077 m)
Axle load19 long tons 14 cwt (44,100 lb or 20 t)
22.1 short tons full
Adhesive weight58 long tons 17 cwt (131,800 lb or 59.8 t)
65.9 short tons full
Loco weight79 long tons 17 cwt (178,900 lb or 81.1 t)
89.4 short tons full
Tender weight47 long tons 6 cwt (106,000 lb or 48.1 t)
53.0 short tons full
Fuel typeCoal
Fuel capacity
  • Churchward tender: 7 long tons (7.1 t; 7.8 short tons)
  • Collett/Hawksworth tender: 6 long tons (6.1 t; 6.7 short tons)
Water cap.Churchward tender:
  • 3,500 imp gal (16,000 L; 4,200 US gal)
  • Collett/Hawksworth tender: 4,000 imp gal (18,000 L; 4,800 US gal)
Firebox:
  Firegrate area
29.36 sq ft (2.728 m2)
BoilerGWR Standard No. 8[1]
Boiler pressure225 lbf/in2 (1.55 MPa)
Heating surface:
  Tubes
  • 1,857.7 sq ft (172.59 m2) (Collett)
  • 1,799.5 sq ft (167.18 m2) (Hawksworth)
  Firebox
  • 162.7 sq ft (15.12 m2) (Collett)
  • 163.5 sq ft (15.19 m2) (Hawksworth)
Superheater:
  Type
  • 14-element "Swindon" (Collett)
  • 21-element (Hawksworth)
  Heating area
  • 262.6 sq ft (24.40 m2) (Collett)
  • 295.0 sq ft (27.41 m2) (Hawksworth)
CylindersFour (two inside, two outside)
Cylinder size16 in × 26 in (406 mm × 660 mm)
Valve gear
  • Inside cylinders: Walschaerts
  • Outside cylinders: derived from inside cylinders via rocking bars.
Valve typePiston valves
Performance figures
Tractive effort31,625 lbf (140.68 kN)
Career
Operators
Power class
Numbers4073–4099; 5000–5099; 7000–7037.
Axle load classGWR: Red
LocaleGreat Western Main Line
WithdrawnMay 1950 to December 1965
DispositionEight preserved, remainder scrapped

Background

The origins of this highly successful design date back to the Star Class of 1907 which introduced the basic 4-cylinder 4-6-0 layout with long-travel valves and Belpaire firebox that was to become characteristic of Great Western Railway (GWR) express passenger locomotives. The Star class was designed to take the top express trains on the GWR, with 61 in service by 1914, but after World War I there was a need for an improved design. To meet this need, Chief Mechanical Engineer George Churchward had in mind an enlarged Star class design with a standard No.7 boiler, as fitted to his GWR 4700 Class express freight 2-8-0.[4] However, this combination would have taken the axle load over the 20-ton limit then set by the civil engineers, and in the end, nothing came of the idea.

Design

Charles Collett succeeded Churchward as Chief Mechanical Engineer of the GWR in 1922 and immediately set about meeting the need for a new locomotive design that would both supplement the Stars and replace them on the heaviest expresses. Collett's solution was to take the basic layout of the Star with an extended frame, and add a newly designed No.8 boiler which was both larger and lighter.[5] The increased amount of steam that this produced allowing an increase in the cylinder diameter from 15 in × 26 in (381 mm × 660 mm) to 16 in × 26 in (406 mm × 660 mm). The extended frame allowed for a side window cab and an increased grate area. The result was an increase in tractive effort to 31,625 lb, and a locomotive that looked attractive and well proportioned while remaining within the 20-ton axle limit.

Production

Unlike the Star class, there was no prototype. Collett was sufficiently confident of the design to place an order with Swindon Works (Lot 224) for ten locomotives in 1923, although there was a four-month delay between the appearance of the first example in August 1923 and the second in December, to allow for the correction of any teething problems.[6] Thereafter the remaining eight locomotives came out at regular intervals until April 1924. They were 4073–4082, the number series continuing unbroken from the Star class. The last 12 Star class locomotives, which were built in 1922–23, had been given names of abbeys in the western area served by the GWR. The new locomotives were named after castles, also in the west, beginning with Caerphilly Castle.

Over the twenty-seven years from August 1923 to August 1950, 155 Castles were built new at Swindon Works and a further sixteen were converted from other classes. In February 1952, two engines, 4082 Windsor Castle and 7013 Bristol Castle, swapped names and numbers: 7013 was disguised as 4082 to run George VI's funeral train and the numbers were never swapped back. 4082 was withdrawn from service in 1964 as 7013 and 7013 was withdrawn from service as 4082 in 1965.

New builds

The new-builds were as follows.[7]

Great Western Railway

  • Lot 224: Nos. 4073–4082, delivered August 1923 to April 1924.
  • Lot 232: Nos. 4083–4092, delivered May to August 1925.
  • Lot 234: Nos. 4093–4099 and 5000 to 5012, delivered May 1926 to July 1927.
  • Lot 280: Nos. 5013–5022, delivered June to August 1932.
  • Lot 295: Nos. 5023–5032, delivered June to August 1932.
  • Lot 296: Nos. 5033–5042, delivered May to July 1933.
  • Lot 303: Nos. 5043–5067, delivered March 1936 to July 1937. (Nos. 5043–5063 were originally named after Castles, but were renamed in 1937 after Earls)
  • Lot 310: Nos. 5068–5082 delivered June 1938 to June 1939. (Nos. 5069 and 5070 were named after Isambard Kingdom Brunel and Sir Daniel Gooch; In 1941 5071–5082 were renamed after aircraft used by the Royal Air Force)
  • Lot 324: Nos. 5093–5097, delivered June to July 1939.
  • Lot 357: Nos. 5098–5099, 7000–7007 delivered May to July 1946.

British Railways (Western Region)

  • Lot 367: Nos. 7008–7027, delivered May 1948 to August 1949.
  • Lot 375: Nos. 7028–7037, delivered May 1950 to August 1950.

These locomotives were built with minimal changes to the dimensions. However, from 5013 Abergavenny Castle there was an alteration to the shape of the front-end casing over the inside cylinders, and from 5043 Earl of Mount Edgcumbe a shorter chimney was fitted.[8] Those built before 1926 were fitted with a 3,500 imp gal (16,000 L; 4,200 US gal) tender but thereafter 4,000 imp gal (18,000 L; 4,800 US gal) became standard for the class.

Rebuilds

Between January and September 1924, the only Great Western 4-6-2, No.111 The Great Bear, was rebuilt into a member of the Castle Class, although only the "front portion of the original frames and the number plates were used again but probably little else". The new locomotive was renamed Viscount Churchill and survived until withdrawal in July 1953.[4]

In April 1925, Star class No. 4009 Shooting Star was likewise rebuilt as a Castle by extending the frames and fitting a new Castle Class boiler and cab. It was renumbered and renamed 100 A1 Lloyds and was withdrawn in 1950.[9]

In October 1925 a second Star class, No. 4016 The Somerset Light Infantry (Prince Albert's), was similarly converted to a Castle although in this case, it retained its name and number.[4] Two further conversions of Stars were undertaken in 1926; Nos. 4032 Queen Alexandra and 4037 The South Wales Borderers retaining their names and numbers and surviving until 1951 and 1962 respectively.

In November 1929 the prototype for the Star Class, No. 4000 North Star was rebuilt into a Castle, being subsequently withdrawn in 1957.

Between 1937 and 1940 a further ten members of the 'Abbey series' of the Star class (Nos. 4063–4072) were rebuilt as Castles on Lot 317. They were allocated new numbers 5083 to 5092 but retained their original names and were withdrawn between 1958 and 1964.

Publicity and trials

When introduced they were heralded as Britain's most powerful express passenger locomotive, being some 10% more powerful than the Stars. The first, No. 4073 Caerphilly Castle, made its debut at Paddington station on 23 August 1923. The choice of 4082 as Windsor Castle proved fortuitous as this locomotive was used to haul the Royal Train when King George V and Queen Mary visited Swindon Works in 1924, and much publicity was gained when the king was invited to drive the engine back from the works to the station before the return journey, with the Queen and several high-ranking GWR officers also on the footplate.[8]

Castle class locos 5051 Earl Bathurst and 5029 Nunney Castle climb St Germans bank

During 1924, 4073 Caerphilly Castle was exhibited at the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley, alongside Nigel Gresley's Flying Scotsman. The Great Western declared their engine to be more powerful than its bigger LNER rival, and in terms of tractive effort alone they were entitled to do so. As a result of this, GWR General Manager Sir Felix Pole proposed to LNER Southern Area General Manager Alexander Wilson that a trial of the two types should take place via an exchange arrangement.[10] The resulting trials commenced in April 1925 with 4079 Pendennis Castle representing the GWR on the East Coast Main Line and 4474 Victor Wild representing the LNER on GWR tracks. On the first morning Pendennis Castle was to work a 480-ton train from King's Cross to Doncaster, and LNER officials fully expected the smaller, lighter engine to encounter problems climbing Holloway Bank. However, railway writer Cecil J. Allen records that the GWR locomotive made a faster start from King's Cross to Finsbury Park than any LNER Pacific he had recorded up to that time,[10] and over the trial Pendennis Castle kept well within the scheduled time and used less coal, considerably denting LNER pride. For the LNER, Victor Wild was compared on the Cornish Riviera Express to 4074 Caldicot Castle and although it kept to time the longer wheelbase of the Pacific proved unsuited to the many curves on the route. Again the GWR took the honours with Caldicot Castle burning less fuel and always ahead of time, this being illustrated on the last 2 days of the trial by gaining 15 minutes on the schedule in both directions.[10]

In 1926, number 5000 Launceston Castle was loaned to the London, Midland & Scottish Railway (LMS) where it ran trials between London and Carlisle. The locomotive fulfilled the LMS requirements so well that the latter first requested the GWR to build a batch of Castles for use on the West Coast Main Line, and, failing that, a full set of construction drawings. Both proposals were rejected by the GWR Board of Directors. The LMS eventually succeeded in gaining access to the design by recruiting William Stanier, the GWR's Works Manager at its Swindon Works to become the new Chief Mechanical Engineer for the LMS.[11]

In 1935 attention was turning to streamlining locomotives, particularly with the introduction of the LNER A4, and the GWR felt that they could gain publicity in this area. Instructions were passed to Swindon Works to select a suitable locomotive and as 5005 Manorbier Castle was being prepared for test, additions were made to the locomotive to effect some streamlining. The application of shaped steel sheet in an attempt to smooth airflow has been described as a "bodge-up" and certainly lacked either the elegance of the A4 design, or the sense of power associated with the streamlined LMS Coronation Class introduced 2 years later. Once the additions had been added a test run was carried out between Bristol and Swindon during which Manorbier Castle achieved a speed of 100 mph, but the experiment did not have any lasting effect on GWR locomotive design and the additions were later removed.[12]

Performance

The Castles handled all but the heaviest loads, these being entrusted to the 30-strong King Class, themselves a development of the Castles with an even larger boiler and smaller wheels (6 ft 6 in diameter) for both increased tractive effort and to allow for loading gauge clearance.

The Castle class was noted for superb performance overall, and notably on the Cheltenham Flyer during the 1930s: for example, on 6 June 1932 the train, pulled by 5006 Tregenna Castle, covered the 77.25 miles from Swindon to Paddington at an average speed of 81.68 mph start-to-stop (124.3 km at an average speed of 131.4 km/h). This world record for steam traction was widely regarded as an astonishing feat.[8]

Subsequent modification

5043 Earl of Mount Edgcumbe is one of two preserved Castles to be fitted with a double chimney

In 1946 Frederick Hawksworth, Collett's successor, introduced a higher degree of superheat to the Castle boiler with resulting increased economy in water consumption. From 1956 the fitting of double chimneys to selected engines, combined with larger superheaters, further enhanced their capacity for sustained high-speed performance. The fastest recorded speed of a Castle Class engine was 102 mph achieved by 7018 Drysllwyn Castle at Little Somerford in April 1958 while hauling The Bristolian from Bristol to London. The non-stop run over 117.6 miles took 93 minutes 50 seconds, an average speed of more than 75 mph.[13]

Oil firing

Between 1946 and 1948 five engines—100A1, 5039, 5079, 5083 and 5091—were converted to oil-firing, but were soon restored to burn coal. (Eleven Halls were also temporarily converted.)[14]

Accidents and incidents

  • On 30 November 1948, a passenger train hauled by 5022 Wigmore Castle overran signals and was in collision with locomotive 4150, which was running round its train at Lapworth.[15] Eight passengers were injured.[16]
  • On 12 November 1958, a freight train, hauled by GWR 4700 Class 2-8-0 No. 4707, overran signals and was derailed at Highworth Junction, Swindon. Locomotive No. 5009 Shrewsbury Castle was hauling a newspaper train which collided with the wreckage.[17]

Royal connections

On 28 April 1924, King George V drove locomotive No. 4082 Windsor Castle from the Swindon Works to Swindon railway station, accompanied on the footplate by Queen Mary. Plaques to commemorate the event were fixed to the sides of the cab and it was considered to be a royal locomotive from then onwards.[18] At the king's state funeral on 28 January 1936, Windsor Castle was chosen to haul the funeral train from Paddington Station in London to Windsor & Eton. It was preceded at ten-minute intervals by another six trains hauled by Castle-class engines, each carrying royal and other important mourners.[19]

The same locomotive was requested for the funeral of King George VI in February 1952; however, Windsor Castle was under repair at Swindon, so the number, name plate and commemorative plaques were swapped with No. 7013 Bristol Castle for the event. Following the funeral, the two locomotives retained their exchanged names and numbers, but the commemorative plaques were returned. No. 7013 (originally 4082) was scrapped in September 1964 while number 4082 (originally 7013) survived until February 1965.[18]

Withdrawal

Withdrawal of steam power started in the 1950s, with the first 100 A1 Lloyds withdrawn from Old Oak Common in March 1950. The first "new build" Castle, number 4091 Dudley Castle, was withdrawn from Old Oak Common nearly nine years later in January 1959.

The lowest mileage of a Castle was the 580,346 miles run by 7035 Ogmore Castle between August 1950 and June 1964; the highest mileage of any Castle class was by 4080 Powderham Castle which totalled 1,974,461 miles in 40 years and 5 months.

The last three Castles to be withdrawn were all allocated to Gloucester shed,[20] with 5042 Winchester Castle and 7022 Hereford Castle withdrawn in June 1965. The last to be withdrawn was 7029 Clun Castle in December 1965, which worked the last steam train out of Paddington on 27 November 1965.[21]

Table of withdrawals
YearNumber in
service at
start of year
Number
withdrawn
Total
withdrawn
Locomotive numbersNotes
195017111100A1
1951170234016/32
195316814111
1957167154000
1958166165086
1959165394091, 5010/83
19601627164073/84/97, 5005/09/28/794073 preserved
19611554204037/75/83/92
196215154744077–78/85–86/94–95/99,

5003–04/06–08/11–13/16–17/19–21/24/27/30/32–36/44–48/52–53/59, 5061/62/64/66–69/72/75/77–78/82/84/88/90/94–95, 7016

196397491234074/76/81/87/90/96/98,

5001/15/22–23/25/29/31/38/40–41/43/49–51/58/60/65/71/80–81/87/92–93/97/99, 7000–01/06–07/09/15/17–18/20–21/27–28/30–31/33/36–37

5029, 5043, 5051, 5080 & 7027 preserved
196448361594079–80/82/88–89/93,

5000/02/18/26/37/39/54–57/70/73–74/76/85/89/91/96/98, 7002–05/08/10/12/19/25–26/32

4079 preserved
196512121715014/42/63, 7011/13–14/22–24/29/34–35. 7029 preserved

List of locomotives

See List of GWR 4073 Class locomotives

Preservation

On 4 March 1967, Nos. 7029 Clun Castle and 4079 Pendennis Castle hauled specials from Banbury and Oxford respectively to Chester, to mark the end of through trains between Paddington and Birkenhead. These two, and six other Castles, survive in preservation.

Of the eight Castles to be preserved, six have steamed in preservation and have been operated on the main line. Three were obtained direct from BR, 4073, 4079 and 7029, with the remaining five being rescued from Barry Scrapyard.

No. 4073 Caerphilly Castle was given directly to the National Collection upon withdrawal and has not run since being preserved. It can currently be found at STEAM, the Museum of the Great Western Railway in Swindon. No. 7027 Thornbury Castle was in ex-Barry Scrapyard condition and in July 2016 was sold by Pete Waterman to the Somerset transport firm JJP Holdings SW, transported to Weston-super-Mare on a low loader, then placed on a temporary track in the Crosville Motor Services bus depot. In summer 2018 it was moved briefly to Tyseley Locomotive Works in Birmingham to make an appearance at their open weekend before moving to its planned home at the West Somerset Railway for restoration. It is now located at Loughborough on the Great Central Railway.[22], but will not be restored to mainline standards as its current owner intends to run it for its first ticket on the GCR before considering future mainline certification.

Two of the eight preserved Castles, nos. 5043 Earl of Mount Edgcumbe and 7029 Clun Castle, are fitted with double chimneys while the remaining six are still fitted with the original single chimney.

4079 was purchased by Sir William McAlpine and hauled a small number of railtours on the main line in its early preservation years before being sold to Hamersley Iron in the Pilbara region of Western Australia and exported in 1977.[23] In 1989 it was moved by road to Perth where it double-headed with 4472 Flying Scotsman operating as far as Esperance.[24] In 2000 it was donated by Rio Tinto to the Great Western Society and restored to operational condition at the Didcot Railway Centre in 2021.[25]

4 of the preserved Castle locomotives on display for the classes Centenary celebration at the Didcot Railway Centre, 4 March 2023

As of 2023, three castle's are operational. Both 5043 and 7029 have mainline certificates with 4079 restricted to only operate on heritage lines.[26] Two engines are in the process of undergoing overhauls/restoration with 5080 planned to operate on the mainline. 5080 is intended to operate as part of Tyseley's pool of mainline certified engines alongside fellow classmembers 5043 and 7029. 4079 was originally planned to operate on the mainline following completion of its overhaul, but a later announcement by Didcot that they intend to stop operating on the mainline meant it will only run on heritage railways.[26] Upon completion of its restoration, 7027 is also intended to operate only on heritage railways, however the debate over the restoration of this locomotive continues. 5029 is also in the process of undergoing a mainline standard overhaul.[27]

Image Number Name (Current in Bold) Built Renamed Withdrawn Chimney fitted Tender fitted Owner Livery Home Base Current status Mainline Certified Notes
4073 Caerphilly Castle August 1923 May 1960 Single Churchward National Railway Museum GWR Lined Green, Great Western Lettering Museum of the Great Western Railway On static display No
4079 Pendennis Castle February 1924 May 1964 Single Collett Great Western Society GWR Lined Green, Great Western Lettering Didcot Railway Centre Operational, (Boiler Certificate 2021-31) No
5029 Nunney Castle May 1934 December 1963 Single Collett Jeremy Hosking BR Lined Green, TBC (on completion) Crewe Diesel TMD Under Overhaul[28] No, to be certified Overhaul anticipated for completion in late 2024.[29]
5043 Earl of Mount Edgcumbe
(Barbury Castle)
March 1936 September 1937 December 1963 Double Hawksworth Birmingham Railway Museum BR Lined Green, Early Emblem Tyseley Locomotive Works Operational (Boiler Certificate 2023-33). Yes (2023-Ongoing)
5051 Earl Bathurst
(Drysllwyn Castle)
May 1936 August 1937 May 1963 Single Collett Great Western Society GWR Lined Green, Shirtbutton Logo Didcot Railway Centre On static display No
5080 Defiant
(Ogmore Castle)
May 1939 January 1941 April 1963 Single Collett Birmingham Railway Museum GWR Lined Green, GW Lettering (on completion) Tyseley Locomotive Works Undergoing mainline standard overhaul.[30] No, to be certified
7027 Thornbury Castle August 1949 December 1963 Single Hawksworth Great Western Society's 4709 Group BR Lined Green, TBC (on completion) Great Central Railway Stored No Initially undergoing restoration but now sold to the 4709 Group which intends to use the boiler in their project to re-create a GWR 4700 Class.[31][32][33]
7029 Clun Castle May 1950 December 1965 Double Collett Birmingham Railway Museum BR Lined Green, Late Crest Tyseley Locomotive Works Operational, boiler certificate 2017-27 Yes (2019-Ongoing)

Models

Hornby Railways manufacture a model of the 4073 in OO gauge. The Hornby Dublo brand, then owned by Meccano Ltd, also built "Bristol Castle" (released 1957) for their three-rail system and "Cardiff Castle" for the two-rail system two years later; Wrenn continued the Hornby Dublo model when they took over the range. Airfix/GMR (and later Dapol) also produced an OO model; Tri-ang released a TT gauge model; and Graham Farish (later Bachmann) released N gauge models. Many different prototype examples have been depicted by the various manufacturers.

References

Citations

  1. Champ (2018), p. 320.
  2. Nock (1980), p. 11.
  3. Black (2017), p. 45.
  4. le Fleming (1953), p. H13.
  5. Nock (1980), p. 92.
  6. le Fleming (1953), p. H17.
  7. le Fleming (1953), p. H17–H18.
  8. Nock, O.S. (1969). Kings & Castles of the G.W.R. (2nd ed.). Shepperton: Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 0-7110-0071-9.
  9. le Fleming (1953), p. H17–H19.
  10. Allen, Cecil J (1970). Salute to the Great Western. Shepperton: Ian Allan. ISBN 0-7110-0181-2.
  11. Kenneth J. Cook (1974). Swindon Steam 1921–1951. Staines, Middlesex: Ian Allan. p. 52.
  12. Bullock, William (August 1992). "Swindon Apprentice". Steam World. No. 62. Peterborough: EMAP Apex Publications. pp. 30–33.
  13. Allen, Cecil (1962). Great Western. Ian Allan. p. 64.
  14. Haresnape (1978), pp. 27, 33.
  15. "Light at the end of the tunnel for Severn 'Prairie'". Steam Railway. No. 455. Peterborough: Bauer Consumer Media Ltd. 17 June 2016. pp. 40–42. ISSN 0143-7232.
  16. "Four killed and 50 injured in train crash". The Times. No. 51243. London. 1 December 1948. col A-B, p. 4.
  17. Trevena, Arthur (1980). Trains in Trouble. Vol. 1. Redruth: Atlantic Books. p. 47. ISBN 0-906899-01-X.
  18. Daniel, John. "Castle Class - Windsor Castle". www.greatwestern.org.uk. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  19. "Workings of Royal Special Trains in connection with the Funeral of the late King". The Locomotive Magazine and Railway Carriage and Wagon Review. 42 (522): 42–43. 15 February 1936. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  20. Waters, Laurence (1991). Steam in Action 'Castles'. Shepperton: Ian Allan. ISBN 0-7110-2006-X.
  21. Riley, R.C. (1966). Great Western Album. Shepperton: Ian Allan. ISBN 0-7110-0073-5.
  22. "History of 7027 Thornbury Castle". Castle Class Steam Locomotive Thornbury Castle. Thornbury Castle 7027 Society. Archived from the original on 22 September 2018. Retrieved 21 September 2018.
  23. Castle goes down under Railway Gazette International July 1977 page 28
  24. The World's Heaviest Driverless Trains Locomotives International issue 125 June 2020 page 24
  25. Homeward Bound The Railway Magazine issue 1187 March 2000 pages 20-26
  26. Holden, Michael (12 December 2019). "Steam locomotive 6023 King Edward II retired from mainline work". RailAdvent. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  27. Update on 5029's overhaul Steam Railway issue 549 September 2023 page 76
  28. Update on 5029's overhaul Steam Railway issue 549 September 2023 page 76
  29. Progress on 5029's ongoing overhaul at Crewe Steam Railway issue 549 September 2023 page 76
  30. Defiant Club Archived 14 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine The 5080 Defiant Club
  31. Steam locomotive 7027 Thornbury Castle set for Great Central Railway restoration
  32. "4709 Group buys Thornbury Castle – 4709 – The Ultimate British 2–8–0". 4709 – The Ultimate British 2–8–0. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
  33. "4709 Group purchases Great Central Railway-based steam locomotive 7027 Thornbury Castle". RailAdvent. Retrieved 13 August 2022.

Bibliography

  • Allcock, N. J.; Davies, F. K.; le Fleming, H. M.; Maskelyne, J. N.; Reed, P. J. T.; Tabor, F. J. (1968) [1951]. White, D. E. (ed.). The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway, part one: Preliminary Survey. Kenilworth: RCTS.
  • Black, Stuart (23 February 2017). Loco Spotter's Guide. London, United Kingdom: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1472820495. Retrieved 24 November 2020.
  • Champ, Jim (2018). An Introduction to Great Western Locomotive Development. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Transport. ISBN 978-1-4738-7784-9. OCLC 1029234106. OL 26953051M.
  • le Fleming, H.M. (July 1953). White, D.E. (ed.). The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway. Part 8. Modern Passenger Classes (1st ed.). Kenilworth: The Railway Correspondence and Travel Society. ISBN 0-901115-19-3. OCLC 500544523.
  • Nock, O. S. (1983). British Locomotives of the 20th Century Vol.1. London: Book Club Associates.
  • Nock, O. S. (1980). The GWR Stars, Castles and Kings. London: Book Club Associates.
  • Vaughan, Adrian (1989). Obstruction Danger. Wellingborough: Patrick Stephens Limited. ISBN 1-85260-055-1.
  • Haresnape, Brian (1978). Collett & Hawksworth Locomotives—A Pictorial History. Ian Allan Ltd. ISBN 0-7110-0869-8.
  • Whitehurst, Brian (1973). Great Western Engines, Names, Numbers, Types and Classes (1940 to Preservation). Oxford, UK: Oxford Publishing Company. pp. 36–37, 44–46, 64, 103, 143. ISBN 978-0-9028-8821-0. OCLC 815661.
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