(Redirected from Hunslet Class 50550)
Preserved "Austerity" 0-6-0
The
Hunslet Engine Company 'Austerity 0-6-0ST' is a design of
steam locomotive designed for
shunting. The class became the standard
British shunting locomotive during the
Second World War, and a total of 485 were built right through until
1964.
Background
The 48150 class were built for the
Guest Keen Baldwins Iron & Steel Company in
1937, being an enlarged version of a design dating from
1923. These developed into the '50550 class' of 1941-2, with various modifications.
At the outbreak of the
Second World War, the
War Department had initially chosen the
LMS 'Jinty' 3F 0-6-0T as its standard shunting locomotive, but was persuaded by Hunslet that a simplified version of their more modern 50550 design would be more suitable. The first was completed at their
Leeds works at the start of
1943.
Construction
Hunslet subcontracted some of the construction to
Andrew Barclay,
W. G. Bagnall,
Hudswell Clarke,
Robert Stephenson and Hawthorns and the
Vulcan Foundry.
After
D-Day they were used on
Continental Europe and in North
Africa as well as at docks and military sites in Britain.
A total of 337 were built for the War Department by
1947 (on orders placed during the war), with two further engines having been built for collieries (without the permission of the
Ministry of Supply). With the end of the war and then the reduced need for locomotives, the military started to review its fleet:
★ 90 locomotives were kept by the military
★ 75 locomotives were sold to the
LNER and classified as
J94
★ 27 had been loaned to
Nederlandse Spoorwegen who bought them in 1947 (
NS Class 8800, numbers 8801-27)
★ 11 were loaned to the
Nederlandsche Staatsmijnen, who bought 9 of those
Others were sold for industrial use. A number of those used on the continent are believed to have worked on light and industrial railways in
France, six going to the
Chemins de Fer Tunisiens.
Post-war construction
As the final War Department locomotives were being delivered, the
National Coal Board was placing orders for identical locomotives to be used at collieries. Between
1948 and
1964, 77 new "Austerity" locomotives were built for the NCB.
Needing more locomotives for military depots, the Army ordered 14 locomotives in
1952 to supplement the original 90 they had retained.
The
Yorkshire Engine Company also built 8 locomotives in
1954 for use in ironstone quarries and at
Scunthorpe Steelworks. It is thought the design and many parts were sold to them by Hunslet as part of a subcontract for Yorkshire Engine Co built
GWR 9400 Class 0-6-0PTs (ordered from Hunslet).
Hunslet undertook the rebuilding of many NCB locomotives and when the Army started to sell off locomotives again in
1959, they bought 15 examples that were to be rebuilt and sold on. The NCB bought 13 of these, the 14th was sold directly into preservation and the final locomotive was scrapped without being rebuilt.
The total number Austerity 0-6-0STs built to 485.
The Austerities continued in industrial use with the NCB into the
1970s with a small number surviving until the early
1980s. The examples that survived the longest were those fitted with mechanical stokers and
Kylpor Blast pipes or
Giesel ejectors to improve their performance and reduce smoke.
Preservation
Austerities have become a favourite of the
heritage railway scene, and around 70 examples have escaped the cutter's torch. Indeed, the stereotypical image of a small British preserved railway is an Austerity saddle tank hauling 2 or 3
British Railways Mark 1 coaches. Several of these have become ''faux''
Class J94, to represent mainline rather than industrial steam.
Not all have survived intact; the boiler of RSHN 7135 of
1944 was used on the replica
Broad gauge locomotive "
Iron Duke" built in
1985. At least one has been turned into a
Thomas the Tank Engine look-a-like, and another into one of
Donald and Douglas also from ''
The Railway Series''.
The
Kent and East Sussex Railway has three preserved austerity tanks.
In fiction
This class of engine forms the basis of
Wilbert the Forest Engine and
Sixteen the Steelworks Engine from
the Railway Series of
children's books by
Christopher Awdry. Wilbert is named after the author's father the
Rev. W. Awdry who created the series.
References
★ ''Continent, Coalfield and Conservation - The Biographical History of the British Army Austerity 0-6-0 Saddle Tank'' by A.P.Lambert & J.C.Woods ISBN 0-901096-63-6
★ ''Locomotives Illustrated No.61 - The Hunslet 'Austerity' 0-6-0STs'' (Introduction by Don Townsley) Ian Allan Ltd, 1988
External links
★ http://www.cirsel.freeserve.co.uk/wdindex.htm
★ http://www.irsociety.co.uk/Archives/23/18in_Hunslets.htm