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The GER Class S56 was a class of 0-6-0T steams designed by James Holden for the Great Eastern Railway. Together with some rebuilt examples of GER Class R24, they passed to the London and North Eastern Railway at the grouping in 1923, and received the LNER classification J69.

History[]

The Class S56 were a development of the Class R24, being almost identical, apart from higher boiler pressure and larger water tanks. Twenty were built in 1904 at Stratford Works.

Table of orders and numbers
Year Order No. Quantity GER Nos. LNER Nos. 1946 Nos. Notes
1904 S56 10 51–60 7051–7060 8617–19, —, 8621, —, 8623, —, 8625–8626
1904 P57 10 81–90 7081–7090 —, 8628–8633, —, 8635–8636

All twenty passed to the LNER in 1923. Thirteen class J69 locomotives were lent to the War Department in October 1939, of which five had been built as Class S56. They were sold to the War Department in October 1940, where they were used on the Melbourne and Longmoor Military Railways. The remaining locomotives were renumbered 8617–8636 in order of construction; however gaps were left where the locomotives sold to the War Department would have been. At nationalisation in 1948, the remainder passed to British Railways, who added 60000 to their number. Post-war withdrawals started in 1958, and by 1962 all had been retired.

Table of withdrawals of S56-built locomotives
Year Quantity in

service at start of year

Quantity

withdrawn

Locomotives numbers Notes
1940 20 5 7054, 7056, 7058, 7081, 7088 to WD 86, 87, 83, 80, 91
1958 15 5 68617–18/28/31–32
1959 10 4 68625/29–30/36
1960 6 1 68633
1961 5 2 68619/23
1962 3 3 68621/26/35

Preservation[]

GER no. 87 (LNER 7087, 8633, BR 68633) has been preserved, initially at the Clapham Transport Museum, and now at the National Railway Museum. It is currently on display at Bressingham Steam Museum.

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