Locomotives of the North British Railway
The North British Railway was opened in 1846 as the line from Edinburgh to Berwick-upon-Tweed, and its workshops were initially situated in St. Margarets, Edinburgh. Gradually other railways were acquired, including in 1865 the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway, whose works at Cowlairs, Glasgow were better than that at St. Margarets, which were reduced to repairs only and all production moved to Cowlairs.
As is customary, engine classes are organized according to the man who was locomotive superintendent when the class was introduced, and to whom the design is often attributed. The NBR was rather unfortunate in its choice of locomotive superintendents, the first five of whom were sacked or forced to resign either for alleged incompetence or financial scandals.
The NBR's locomotive classification system is not very helpful because the same letter has been applied to several different classes. The North British Railway Study Group has developed its own classification system and a list can be found here.
These are not complete lists, as most engines acquired second-hand and from absorbed companies are not included.
Robert Thornton">Robert Thornton (engineer)">Robert Thornton (1846–51)
William Smith">William Smith (engineer)">William Smith (1851–54)
No new locomotives were built during his term of office[Edmund George Petrie] (1854)
No new locomotives were built during his term of officeWilliam Hurst">William Hurst (engineer)">William Hurst (1855–66)
Hurst came from the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway, to which he returned after being sacked from the NBR.There were many variations within the classes listed here, both as built and after subsequent rebuilding.
1st built | Wheel arrangement | Number built | Builder | Date | Notes |
72 | 0-4-2 | 4 | W. Fairbairn | 1855 | Originally intended for Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway |
90 | 2-4-0 | 24 | Neilson Dübs | 1861–68 | |
109 | 0-4-0 | 3 | NBR St. Margarets | 1865–66 | |
76 | 0-6-0 | 4 | NBR St. Margarets | 1860–61 | |
80 | 0-6-0 | 58 | Hawthorn of Leith R. Stephenson Dübs & Co. | 1861–67 | |
31 | 2-2-2WT | 2 | NBR St. Margarets | 1856 | 1877 sold to Wigtownshire Railway |
20 | 0-4-2WT | 14 | NBR St. Margarets | 1857–64 | |
282 | 0-6-0ST | 3 | Dübs | 1866–67 |
Thomas Wheatley">Thomas Wheatley (locomotive engineer)">Thomas Wheatley (1867–74)
[Dugald Drummond] (1874–82)
Matthew Holmes">Matthew Holmes (engineer)">Matthew Holmes (1882–1903)
[William Paton Reid] (1903–19)
NBL was a private locomotive manufacturer, distinct from the North British Railway.1st built | 1913 Class | Wheel arrangement | Number built | Builder | Date | LNER Class | Notes |
868 | H | 4-4-2 | 22 | NBL R. Stephenson | 1906–21 | Commonly known as the "North British Atlantics". Final two built with superheaters. Superheaters added to all others 1915–25. The largest and most powerful locomotives ever built by the NBR. | |
1 | M | 4-4-2T | 30 | Yorkshire Engine Co. | 1911–13 | ||
438 | L | 4-4-2T | 21 | NBL | 1915–21 | Superheated | |
895 | J | 4-4-0 | 16 | NBL NBR Cowlairs | 1909–11 | "Scott" class. Superheaters added 1925–35 | |
400 | J | 4-4-0 | 27 | NBR Cowlairs | 1912–20 | "Scott" class. Superheated. | |
882 | K | 4-4-0 | 12 | NBR Cowlairs | 1906–07 | Superheaters added 1923–26 | |
331 | K | 4-4-0 | 12 | NBR Cowlairs | 1909–10 | Superheaters added 1925–36 | |
149 | K | 4-4-0 | 32 | NBR Cowlairs | 1913–20 | "Glen" class. Superheated. 256/9256/2469/62469 Glen Douglas preserved. | |
239 | M | 0-4-4T | 12 | NBL | 1909 | ||
848 | B | 0-6-0 | 76 | NBL NBR Cowlairs | 1906–13 | ||
8 | S | 0-6-0 | 104 | NBR Cowlairs NBL | 1914–21 | Superheated | |
836 | F | 0-6-0T | 35 | NBR Cowlairs | 1905–19 | ||
858 | A | 0-6-2T | 6 | NBL | 1909–20 | ||
7 | A | 0-6-2T | 69 | NBL | 1910–24 | +30 built by LNER |
[Walter Chalmers] (1919–22)
All previous incumbents were known as Locomotive Superintendent. Chalmers held the same position, but with the title changed to Chief Mechanical Engineer.There were no new locomotive designs during the incumbency of Walter Chalmers as Chief Mechanical Engineer. Two new NBR H class locomotives were built under his supervision. Although these were not his design, he had drawn the designs under the direction of W P Reid, having been Chief Draughtsman of the NBR whilst Reid was Locomotive Superintendent.
Locomotive nicknames
As with most companies, certain classes of locomotive from the North British Railway were commonly known by distinctive names or nicknames, rather than their official class designations. The following is a guide to these nicknames, with links to articles about the respective locomotive types.Common nickname | NBR designation | LNER designation | Wheel arrangement | Design date | Notes |
Longback | - | - | 0-6-0 | 1868 | Withdrawn before any standard class designation system was introduced. |
Berwick | - | - | 2-2-2 | 1876 | Withdrawn before any standard class designation system was introduced. |
Eighteen Incher | C class | J32 class | 0-6-0 | 1876 | |
Abbotsford | M class | D27 & D28 class | 4-4-0 | 1877 | |
Wee Drummond | D class | J34 class | 0-6-0 | 1879 | |
Pug | G class | Y9 class | 0-4-0ST | 1882 | 42 preserved. |
West Highland Bogie | N class | D35 class | 4-4-0 | 1894 | |
North British Atlantic | H class | C11 class | 4-4-2 | 1906 | |
Scott | J class | D29 class | 4-4-0 | 1909 | |
Superheated Scott or Super Scott | J class | D30 class | 4-4-0 | 1912 | |
Glen | K class | D34 class | 4-4-0 | 1913 | 256 Glen Douglas preserved. |