The SER Q class was a class of
0-4-4T
Under the Whyte notation for the classification of steam locomotives, 0-4-4 represents the wheel arrangement of no leading wheels, four powered and coupled driving wheels on two axles, and four trailing wheels on two axles. This type was only used ...
steam locomotive
A steam locomotive is a locomotive that provides the force to move itself and other vehicles by means of the expansion of steam. It is fuelled by burning combustible material (usually coal, oil or, rarely, wood) to heat water in the locomot ...
s of the
South Eastern Railway. The class was designed by
James Stirling and introduced in 1881.
Construction
Prior to the appointment of
James Stirling as
Locomotive Superintendent of the South Eastern Railway (SER) in 1878, that railway possessed only a small number of tank locomotives suitable for the London suburban passenger services. There were twelve 0-4-2WT of the
205 class (later G class) dating from 1863–64; seven 0-4-4WT of the
235 class (later J class) dating from 1866; six 0-4-2WT of the
73 class (later H class) dating from 1867–69; and nine 0-4-4T of the
58 class (later M class) dating from 1877–78.
The SER had opened a connection to the
London, Chatham and Dover Railway in June1878 giving access to
Blackfriars station
Blackfriars, also known as London Blackfriars, is a central London railway station and connected London Underground station in the City of London. It provides Thameslink services: local (from North to South London), and regional (Bedford and ...
, the
Widened Lines and thus the
Great Northern Railway. Tender locomotives were not suitable for working this route, and nor were many of the existing tank engines which were not powerful enough. As a stop-gap pending the preparation of a new design, the SER purchased three newly-built
Metropolitan Railway B Class
Metropolitan may refer to:
* Metropolitan area, a region consisting of a densely populated urban core and its less-populated surrounding territories
* Metropolitan borough, a form of local government district in England
* Metropolitan county, a typ ...
4-4-0T locomotives from that railway in April 1880, which were used on SER services from via Blackfriars and to . They were sold back to the Metropolitan Railway in November 1883.
In his previous post with the
Glasgow and South Western Railway
The Glasgow and South Western Railway (G&SWR) was a railway company in Scotland. It served a triangular area of south-west Scotland between Glasgow, Stranraer and Carlisle. It was formed on 28 October 1850 by the merger of two earlier railway ...
(G&SWR), Stirling had designed an 0-4-4T for suburban passenger services, the
G&SWR 1 class. He kept copies of the drawings and used these as the basis for a new class for the SER, which became the SER Q class. One hundred and eighteen locomotives were built between 1881 and 1897, of which 60 were built by
Neilson and Company; 48 by the SER at
Ashford Works; and ten by
Sharp, Stewart and Company.
Most were built with tall chimneys giving an overall height of and two
injectors for the boiler feed. The 1881–82 Ashford series were built for working through the
Snow Hill tunnel and the tunnels of the
East London Railway, and so were provided with condensers and short chimneys giving an overall height of , one injector being omitted and a boiler feed pump fitted instead.
The first 34, built between 1881 and 1885, had bogies of wheelbase having wheels of diameter. These bogies had a fixed centre pin and were troublesome, and so beginning in 1887 new locomotives had a better bogie design based upon that of the contemporary 4-4-0s of the
F class. This had side play, its wheelbase being ; and after four of these had been built using the 3-foot wheel, subsequent locomotives had the bogie wheel diameter increased to to make them fully interchangeable with those of the F class.
Rebuilding
The locomotives passed to the
South Eastern and Chatham Railway
The South Eastern and Chatham Railway Companies Joint Management Committee (SE&CRCJMC),Awdry (1990), page 199 known as the South Eastern and Chatham Railway (SE&CR), was a working union of two neighbouring rival railways, the South Easter ...
in 1899 and 55 were rebuilt by
Harry Wainwright
Harry Smith Wainwright (16 November 1864 – 19 September 1925) was an English railway engineer, and was the Locomotive, Carriage and Wagon Superintendent of the South Eastern and Chatham Railway from 1899 to 1913. He is best known for a se ...
to
class Q1 between 1903 and 1919.
Numbering
Thirty-two unrebuilt locomotives survived into
Southern Railway ownership on 1 January 1923 with random numbers between 6 and 424. All had been withdrawn by 1929.
References
Bibliography
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South Eastern Railway (UK) locomotives, Q
0-4-4T locomotives
Railway locomotives introduced in 1881
Scrapped locomotives
Standard gauge steam locomotives of Great Britain
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