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The London and North Eastern Railway Thompson Class B1 is a class of steam locomotive designed for medium mixed traffic work. It was designed by Edward Thompson. It was the LNER's equivalent to the highly successful GWR Hall Class and the LMS Stanier Black Five, two-cylinder mixed traffic 4-6-0s. However, it had the additional requirement of having to be cheap because, due to wartime and post-war economies, the LNER, never the richest railway company, had to decrease Spending.

Introduced in 1942, the first example, No. 8301, was named Springbok in honor of a visit by Jan Smuts. The first 40 of the class were named after breeds of antelopes and the like, and they became known as bongos after 8306 Bongo. 274 were built by the LNER. 136 were built by British Railways after grouping in 1948. The total number in stock at any one time however was only 409 as 61057 was involved in an accident in 1950 and was scrapped.

The prototype for the new B class (later classified B1) 4-6-0 was built at Darlington and entered service on 12 December 1942. It was the first 2-cylinder main-line locomotive constructed for the LNER since the grouping, such had been Sir Nigel Gresley's faith in the 3 cylinder layout. With cost saving a wartime priority the LNER's Workmen went to great lengths to re-use existing patterns, jigs and tools to economize on materials and labor. Extensive use was made of welding instead of steel castings. The boiler was derived from the Diagram 100A type fitted to the LNER Class B17 Sandringham 4-6-0s but with a larger grate area and an increase in boiler pressure to 225 pounds per square inch.

The appearance of No. 8301 (subsequently renumbered No. 1000) coincided with a visit to Britain by the Prime Minister of South Africa, Field Marshal Jan Smuts, and, as mentioned above, it was named Springbok. 18 other B1s took the names of LNER directors. Not that there were many B1s to be named during the war years: constraints on production meant that the first ten were not completed until 1944. However, Thompson then placed substantial orders with two outside builders: Vulcan Foundry and the North British Locomotive Company of Glasgow. Between April 1946 and April 1952 NBL built 290 B1s. Over the period the cost of each engine rose from £14,893 to £16,190. Vulcan Foundry contributed 50 at £15,300 apiece. Orders for the B1s, which became Nos. 61000–61409 under British Railways, totaled 410.

The B1s operated throughout LNER territory. The first batch was distributed among depots on the former Great Eastern Railway section: Ipswich, Norwich, and Stratford in London. They were an immediate success and were soon working the Liverpool Street - Harwich boat trains, the Hook Continental, the Day Continental and the Scandinavian. B1s were also a familiar sight on other top-link workings such as The East Anglian, The Broadsman and The Fenman. During the 1950s over 70 B1s were stationed on ex-GE lines.

They enjoyed similar popularity on ex-Great Northern and Great Central territory. Engines based at Darnall, Sheffield were regularly rostered for the Master Cutler and South Yorkshireman expresses. Elsewhere there were substantial allocations in Scotland, West Yorkshire and East Yorkshire.

If any fault is to be highlighted on the B1, it must be the ride quality. O.S. Nock often criticised the B1s for a poor ride, not something many were used to on the Gresley engines. The B1 was very cheap to build, but the final result was an engine that was somewhat lacking in the quality LNER men had come to expect. The two-cylinder layout gave the engines good starting power and excellent hill climbing abilities, but it also caused very bad hunting effects, a result of the use of cut-offs of up to 75% (a 10% advance on Gresley engines), and as such they were less kind on the passengers they carried than the B17s they replaced.

Overall, however, it was entirely necessary that the B1s be introduced, because the LNER was operating a large number of engines that were well past their economic life. It was somewhat ironic that among the engines that came under threat with the arrival of the B1s were the ones that Thompson admired the most: the engines of the North Eastern Railway designed by Vincent Raven (his father-in-law).

Preservation[]

Two have been preserved, these being 61264 and 61306. Both of these were built by North British Locomotive Company.

Gallery[]

Preserved LNER Locomotives
A1/A10/A3 Class No.4472 'Flying Scotsman'
A4 No.4464 'Bittern'No.4468 'Mallard'No.4488 'Union of South Africa'No.4489 'Dominion of Canada (Originally 'Woodcock')No.4496 'Dwight D. Eisenhower' (Originally 'Golden Shuttle')No.4498 'Sir Nigel Gresley'
Peppercorn A2 Class No.60532 'Blue Peter'
B1 Class No.1264No.61306
D49 Class No.246 'Morayshire'
V2 Class No.4771 'Green Arrow'
Y1 Class No.59
J94 Class No.8077No.8078
K4 Class No.3442 'The Great Marquess' (Originally 'MacCailein Mor')
K1 Class No.62005
V2 Class No.4771 'Green Arrow'
Y1 Class No.59
J52 Class No.1247
C1/C2 Class No.251No.990 'Henry Oakley'
N2 Class No.1744
M1/Q Class No.1621
1463 Class No.1463
901 Class No.910
1001 Class No.1275
Q6 Class No.2238
Q7 Class No.901
J21 Class No.876
J27 Class No.2392
ES1 Class No.ES1
X1 Class No.66 'Aerolite'
H Class No.1310No.985
E1 Class No.69023
F Class No.49 'Gordon Highlander'
Y9 Class No.42
K Class No.256 'Glen Douglas'
J36 Class No.673 'Maude'
T26 Class No.490
G58 Class No.1217
Y14 Class No.564
S56 Class No.87
209 Class No.229
L77 Class No.999
S69 Class No.8572
8K Class No.102
11F Class No.506 'Butler-Henderson'
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