GER Class D27


The GER Class D27 was a class of 2-2-2 steam tender locomotives designed by James Holden for the Great Eastern Railway.

History

In 1888 Holden experimented by removing the side rods of T19 No. 721 to form a 2-2-2. In 1889 the first of a new class appeared: initially No. 740 which had been built on a 'Locomotive and Machinery' account. This was followed by two batches of ten on the more normal 'Letter' account. in 1893. They were built with inside cylinders powered by a boiler. They were later rebuilt with and boilers.
YearOrder no.ManufacturerQuantityGER Nos.Notes
1889LM68Stratford Works1740Renumbered 789, then 780
1891D27Stratford Works10770–779
1893F32Stratford Works101000–1009

One of their main spheres was on the Joint Line working expresses to York. In 1896 the class inaugurated the epic making non-stop run to North Walsham using oil-firing. Rous-Martin found that the singles climbed Brentwood Bank more rapidly than the 2-4-0s. See also Ahrons.
Nine locomotives were withdrawn between 1901 and 1903. The surviving eight locomotives in the 770-series were transferred to the duplicate list in July 1904, and had their number prefixed with a "0". The remaining fourteen were withdrawn between 1904 and 1907.
YearQuantity in
service at
start of year
Quantity
withdrawn
Locomotive numbers
19012141000, 1002, 1005, 1007
1902173773, 1001, 1003
19031421008, 1009
1904124775, 0771, 1004, 1006
1905840772, 0774, 0777, 0780
1906410770
1907330776, 0778, 0779