Midland Railway 3835 Class

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Midland Railway 3835 Class
"Class 4 Goods"
BR
ClassMR: 3835
Power classMR: 4
LMS: 4F
Number in classMR: 192
SDJR: 5
Numbers
  • LMS: 3835–4026
  • BR: 43835–44026
Retired1954–1965
DispositionOne preserved, remainder scrapped

The Midland Railway (MR) 3835 Class is a class of 0-6-0 steam locomotives designed for freight work. The first two were introduced in 1911 by Henry Fowler. After the grouping in 1923, the designs were slightly modified and continued to be built up to 1941 by the LMS as the LMS Fowler Class 4F.[1]

History

A total of 197 engines were built. 192 of them were sequentially numbered 3835–4026 for the Midland Railway. After nationalisation in 1948

British Railways added 40000 to their numbers so they became 43835–44026. Five engines were constructed by Armstrong Whitworth for the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway
in 1922, numbered 57–61. They were absorbed into LMS stock in 1930, becoming 4557–4561.

Accidents and incidents

Withdrawal

The 197 engines in this class were withdrawn between 1954 and 1965 as follows:

Preservation

43924 at Oxenhope, KVWR

One Midland-built 4F, (4)3924 is preserved on the

Barry, South Wales in September 1968.[5][6]

Models

N gauge
model.

Product Ref. No. Livery
31-880 3851 LMS unlined black, number on loco.
31-882 43875 BR black, early crest
31-883 3848 Midland Railway black
31-884 44044 BR black, late crest

Hornby introduced a OO gauge model of 3924 in 2022 to celebrate the film "Return of the Railway Children" which featured this locomotive. The model is in a variation of LMS unlined black.

References

  1. ^ Duggan, Jamie (14 July 2018). "MR 3835 / LMS Fowler 4F Class steam locomotives - Class Information". RailAdvent. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
  2. ^ Earnshaw 1993, pp. 14–15.
  3. ^ Hall 1990, p. 95.
  4. ^ Baxter 1982, pp. 180–183.
  5. ^ Devereux, Nigel (8 January 2018). "PRESERVATION HISTORY: ALEXANDER MACDONALD – FROM SCRAP TO SWALLOWS AND AMAZONS: THE 43924 STORY". No. 236. Heritage Magazine. Heritage Magazine. Retrieved 27 October 2020.
  6. ^ "The Barry Scrapyard story, part 2". The Great Western Archive - part1. Retrieved 19 October 2008.

External links