List of South Devon Railway locomotives

Locomotive classes used by the broad gauge South Devon Railway, later amalgamated with the Great Western Railway.[note 1]

Class code[note 2] Wheel arrangement Builder Driving wheels Cylinders  Introduced Withdrawn Number built Names
Comet[2] D41 4-4-0ST 5 ft 9 in 17 in × 24 in 1851 1884 12 Comet, Lance, Rocket, Meteor, Priam, Aurora, Damon, Ostrich, Falcon, Orion, Ixion, Osiris,
Antelope[3] D42 4-4-0ST Slaughter, Grüning & Co. 5 ft 6 in 16½ in × 24 in 1859 1892 15 Hawk, Eagle, Elk, Lynx, Gazelle, Mazeppa, Giraffe, Lion, Antelope, Wolf, Tiger, Hector, Cato, Dart, Pollux, Castor
Zebra[4] D43 4-4-0ST Avonside Engine Co. 5 ft 8 in 17 in × 24 in 1866 1892 6 Sedley, Gorgon, Titan, Pluto, Zebra, Sol
Stag[5] D44 4-4-0ST Avonside Engine Co. 5 ft 9 in 17 in × 24 in 1872 1892 4 Leopard, Stag, Lance, Osiris
Heron[6] D46 4-4-0ST South Devon Railway 5 ft 3 in 17 in × 24 in 1872 1892 2
Heron, Magpie
King[7] D47 2-4-0T Avonside Engine Co. 3 ft 9 in × 16 in 1871 1878 1 King
Prince[8] D48 2-4-0ST South Devon Railway 4 ft 12 in × 17 in 1871 1892 1[note 3] Prince, Saturn, Jupiter, Mercury
Penwith[9] D49 2-4-0ST Stothert & Slaughter 5 ft 15 in × 22 in 1872 1888 1 Penwith
Tiny[10] D50 0-4-0vbT Sara and Co. 3 ft 9 in × 12 in 1872 1888[note 4] 1
Tiny
Weasel[11] D51 0-4-0WT Avonside Engine Co. 3 ft 11 in × 16 in 1873 1893 3 Owl, Goat, Weasel
Raven[12] D52 0-4-0ST Avonside Engine Co. 3 ft 14 in × 18 in 1874 1892 5 Raven, Rook, Lark, Crow, Jay
Tornado[13] D61 0-6-0ST Vulcan Foundry 4 ft 9 in 17 in × 24 in 1854 1885 4 Volcano, Tornado, Sampson, Goliath
Ada[14] D62 0-6-0ST Slaughter, Grüning & Co. 4 ft 6 in 16½ in × 24 in 1860 1887 5 [note 5] Dido, Hero, Rosa
Romulus[15] D63 0-6-0ST Slaughter, Grüning & Co. 4 ft 9 in 17 in × 24 in 1860 1892 8[note 6]
Hebe, Ajax, Brutus, Argo, Atlas, Juno, Romulus, Remus
Taurus[16] D64 0-6-0ST Avonside Engine Co. 3 ft 12½ in × 16 in 1869 1892 1 Taurus
Camel[17] D65 0-6-0ST Avonside Engine Co. 4 ft 9 in 17 in × 24 in 1872 1892 10 Buffalo, Elephant, Camel, Hercules, Dragon, Achilles, Dromedary, Emperor, Python, Vulcan
Redruth[18] D66 0-6-0ST 4 ft 9 in 17 in × 24 in 1871 1887 1 Redruth
GWR Sir Watkin class[19] A63 0-6-0ST GWR 4 ft 6 in 17 in × 24 in 1872 1892 1[note 7] Saunders
GWR 'Banking' class[20] A61 0-6-0ST GWR 5 ft 17 in × 24 in 1872 1889 1[note 8] Stromboli[note 9]

References

  1. This article uses the class groups and names from Sheppard (2008), as the most recent and most authoritative study.[1]
  2. Broad Gauge Society class code
  3. Prince was completed by the SDR, but the others were still under construction when the SDR amalgamated with the GWR
  4. Tiny is one of the few surviving broad gauge locomotives
  5. Two other locomotives built for the Llynvi Valley Railway
  6. The classification of some of these locomotives is questioned, as to whether they were the 4'6" wheeled Ada class, or the 4'9" wheeled Romulus class. See Dido class
  7. This was a class of six, built by the GWR as side tanks. Three were sold in 1872 to the South Devon and the Cornwall Railways (Bulkeley & Fowler). They returned to the GWR on amalgamation in 1876. All six were rebuilt as saddle tanks after 1883[19]
  8. A class of five, built by the GWR in 1852. Juno was sold to the South Devon in 1872[20]
  9. Previously named Juno, but renamed to avoid confusion with the Romulus class locomotive
  1. Sheppard, Geof (2008). Broad Gauge Locomotives. Noodle Books / Broad Gauge Society. p. 63. ISBN 978-1-906-419-09-7.
  2. Sheppard 2008, p. 65, Comet
  3. Sheppard 2008, p. 65, Antelope
  4. Sheppard 2008, p. 67, Zebra
  5. Sheppard 2008, p. 67, Stag
  6. Sheppard 2008, p. 67, Heron
  7. Sheppard 2008, p. 68, King
  8. Sheppard 2008, p. 68, Prince
  9. Sheppard 2008, p. 68, Penwith
  10. Sheppard 2008, pp. 68–69, Tiny
  11. Sheppard 2008, Weasel
  12. Sheppard 2008, p. 69, Raven
  13. Sheppard 2008, p. 71, Tornado
  14. Sheppard 2008, p. 71, Ada
  15. Sheppard 2008, p. 71, Romulus
  16. Sheppard 2008, p. 72, Taurus
  17. Sheppard 2008, p. 72, Camel
  18. Sheppard 2008, p. 72, Redruth
  19. 1 2 Sheppard 2008, p. 38, Sir Watkin class
  20. 1 2 Sheppard 2008, p. 37, Banking class
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