| MGWR Classes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 13 |
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 Class 13 R&W Hawthorn No. 49 at Castlebar |
| Type and origin |
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| Power type | Steam |
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| Builder | |
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| Build date | 1846-1852, 1862[a] |
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| Details for Class 1 (Grendon) |
Midland Great Western Railway (MGWR) Classes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 13 were 2-2-2 locomotives acquired over the period 1847-1862 serving the railway in its formative years.
MGWR Class 1
The MGWR Class 1 were supplied by Thomas Grendon and Company from April 1847 with Dunsandle performing the trials and opening run. These engines were a replacement for a cancelled order from J & R Mallet of Seville Ironworks Dublin and arrived before the earlier order for MGWR Class 2 from Fairbairn. Juno was later converted into a 2-2-2T tank locomotive.[3]
| MGWR No. | Name | Introduced | Withdrawn |
| 7 | Dunsandle | 1847 | 1871 |
| 8 | Vesta | 1847 | 1870 |
| 9 | Venus | 1847 | 1869 |
| 10 | Luna | 1847 | 1869 |
| 11 | Juno | 1847 | 1867 |
| 30 | Pallas | 1847 | 1875 |
| 33 | Falco | 1847 | 1875 |
MGWR Class 2
Fairbairn supplied 6 engines in response to a quote in 1846, the engines being delivered from June 1847. They seem to have accumulated less average mileages than MGWR Class 1 and were all withdrawn within 10 years, apart from Orion which was converted to a tank engine in 1852.
| MGWR No. | Name | Introduced | Withdrawn |
| 1 | Orion | 1847 | 1860 |
| 2 | Mars | 1847 | 1856 |
| 3 | Saturn | 1847 | 1856 |
| 4 | Mercury | 1847 | 1856 |
| 5 | Jupiter | 1847 | 1856 |
| 6 | Sirius | 1847 | 1856 |
MGWR Class 3
The six MGWR Class 3 locomotives were also supplied by Fairbairn in 1848. Built to a different design, they had a longer service life than the Fairbairn Class 2.
| MGWR No. | Name | Introduced | Withdrawn |
| 12 | Heron | 1848 | 1873 |
| 13 | Condor | 1848 | 1873 |
| 14 | Petrel | 1848 | 1875 |
| 15 | Pelican | 1848 | 1873 |
| 16 | Cygnet | 1848 | 1873 |
| 17 | Ouzel→Snipe | 1848 | 1875 |
MGWR Class 4
The MGWR Class 4 from Fairbairn were 2-2-2 Well Tank locomotives ordered for the MGWR's Galway extension in 1851. One of the original order of four was believed to have been sent to Brazil. They had a long service life of nearly 50 years, with some remaining in use as stationary boilers up to 1906.
| MGWR No. | Name | Introduced | Withdrawn |
| 27 | Fairy→Bee | 1851 | 1897 |
| 28 | Titania→Elf | 1851 | 1897 |
| 29 | Ariel→Fairy | 1851 | 1897 |
MGWR Class 5
With the exception of Class 13, all subsequent locomotive builds for the MGWR were of engines with the driving wheels connected by coupling rods for better adhesion. The MGWR Class 5 engines were themselves rebuilt as 2-4-0s beforce withdrawal and renumbered in the range 88-93.
| MGWR No. | Name | Introduced | Withdrawn |
| 18 | Eclipse | 1851 | 1880 |
| 19 | Childers | 1851 | 1872 |
| 20 | Arabian | 1851 | 1873 |
| 21 | Voltiguer | 1851 | 1873 |
| 22 | Harpaway | 1852 | 1873 |
| 23 | Birdcatcher | 1852 | 1873 |
MGWR Class 13
The final set of six 2-2-2 passenger locomotives for the MGWR designated Class 13 built by R and W Hawthorn of Leith, Scotland. They had double-sandwich frames, outside springs and 15 in × 22 in (381 mm × 559 mm) cylinders. Their driving wheels were the largest of any MGWR 2-2-2 locomotive, being 6 feet 6 inches (1.98 m) in diameter. They were renumbered 43-48 between 1871 and 1873, switching the number range with MGWR Class 12 so all passenger engines could be numbered 1 to 48.} Their final years saw them displaced from main line to branch services.
| MGWR No. | Name | Maker No. | Introduced | Withdrawn | Renumber[b] |
| 49 | Queen | 1170 | 1862 | 1880/5 | 45 |
| 50 | Viceroy | 1171 | 1862 | 1884/7 | 47 |
| 51 | Leinster | 1172 | 1862 | 1886 | 43 |
| 52 | Munster | 1173 | 1862 | 1884/7 | 46 |
| 53 | Ulster | 1174 | 1862 | 1886/7 | 44 |
| 54 | Connaught | 1175 | 1862 | 1887 | 48 |
Notes
- ^ a b Refers to all MGWR 2-2-2 locomotives
- ^ Assumes name remained with same engine with early 1870s renumbering
References
Sources
- Shepherd, Ernie (1994). The Midland Great Western Railway of Ireland – An illustrated History. Midland Publishing Limited. ISBN 1-85780-008-7.
- Ahrons, E. L. (1954). L. L. Asher (ed.). Locomotive and train working in the latter part of the nineteenth century. Vol. six. W Heffer & Sons Ltd.
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| Belfast and County Down Railway (1846–1948) | |
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| Belfast and Northern Counties Railway (1860–1903) | - A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- Q
- R
- S
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| Northern Counties Committee (1903–1949) | |
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| Great Northern Railway (1876–1958) | |
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| Sligo, Leitrim and Northern Counties Railway (1875–1957) | - Erne
- Faugh-a-Ballagh
- Glencar
- Leitrim
- Lough
- Pioneer
- Sir Henry
- Waterford
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| Cork, Bandon and South Coast Railway (1849–1924) | - 1, 2
- 1, 2, 4A, 8
- 2 (II)
- 3, 4
- 3, 9, 10, 18
- 5, 6
- 7 (I)
- 7 (II)
- 9, 10
- 11
- 5, 6, 12, 16, 17
- 14, 15
- 19, 20
- 4, 8, 11, 13, 14, 15, 19, 20
- Argadeen
- St Molaga
- Slaney
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| Dublin and Kingstown Railway (1834–1856) | |
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| Dublin and South Eastern Railway (1854–1925) | - 1, 2, 6–7, 9–10, 28, 44–47, 49
- 3, 8, 10–12, 27–30, 40, 45–46
- 4–5
- 13–14, 18, 65–66
- 15–16
- 15–23, 37–39, 48
- 17, 36
- 20, 34–35
- 24–26, 32–33
- 42–44
- 50–51
- 52–54
- 55–58
- 59–64
- 67–68
- 69–70
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| Great Southern and Western Railway (1845–1924) | |
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| Midland Great Western Railway (1847–1924) | |
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| Great Southern Railways (1925–1944) | |
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| Córas Iompair Éireann (1945–1962) | |
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| Tralee and Dingle Light Railway (1891–1953) | |
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| Industrial engines | |
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