Havenstreet currently boasts a surplus of ex. Wight railway network stalwarts & industrial tank engine designs. More are being restored all the time, covering for other locomotives as they themselves are taken out of service. In the near future, additional classes from the mainland may be brought in for when the railway expands its operations.
Built at Brighton Works and originally No. 40 Brighton, Newport is one of the most famous members of the class, having been chosen to take part in the Paris Exhibition of 1878. Her performance earned her a gold medal, and over 2 decades at Battersea were followed by a move to Wight in 1902. Ownership passed to the Southern in 1923 and she was renamed and numbered in 1930. returning to the mainland in 1947, and was purchased by Billy Butlin in 1963 for display at his Pwllheli camp. A deal caused ownership to pass to the WLS in 1976, and she was restored to running order by 1989. In 2002 she was withdrawn from service for overhaul and replacement of her boiler. This work was completed in March 2014 and on 12 March 2014, Newport passed her boiler examination and steam test. She reentered service on Saturday 24 May 2014.
W24 was built with remaining 59 engines in the class at Nine Elms Locomotive Works, first working at Fratton and Exeter before falling into the hands of the Southern Railway, who moved her to the Island in 1925, along with 22 other 02s to replace the older locomotives employed by the railways on the Isle of Wight. When electrification came in 1967, she was retained for preservation with the IOWSR, the first of the current fleet to do so. After 25 years her restoration ended in 1992, and a second overhaul saw her in operation from 2010 until 2019. It was then withdrawn from service, undergoing another overhaul until it returned to service in 2021.
Though she was built within the final batch of WD-ordered "Austerities", WD198 did not start her career until 1956, which included working with WD92 at Bicester. Following a period in store, she was overhauled and named Royal Engineer, and became the last of her kind in service with the Army upon withdrawal in 1991. She became part of the NAM collection and moved to the Isle of Wight, where she was overhauled and fitted with air brakes. She had a major boiler overhaul from 2015 to 2017. She is now back in service after 3 years. Boiler ticket expires in 2027.
41298 was built at Crewe with all but 10 engines of the same design and was first allocated to shunt stock at Bricklayers Arms, London. Leaving the site in 1953, her next work was in South West England around Devon and Barnstaple. 1967 saw her being purchased for preservation at the Longmoor Military Railway, before moving to the Buckinghamshire Railway Centre in 1970 after it closed down. The decision to move the Ivatt Trust's collection to the Isle of Wight was settled and 41298 (which arrived in late 2008), is now the first of the owner's locomotives in the overhaul queue. The engine was steamed, and undertook her first moves in preservation on 20 August 2014. The locomotive hauled its first passenger train in preservation in September 2015, and made its official return to service at the start of the 2016 running season.
41313 spent the first few years of her BR-career in the south of England, replacing pre-grouping passenger tanks. Upon withdrawal from her final base at Eastleigh (71A) in 1965, was sold to Woodham Brothers for scrap. She was purchased by the ILT in 1975, and was originally meant as a spares loco for 41298, though her current condition was assessed as being good enough for restoration. The move to the Isle of Wight was made in 2006, 2 years before the remaining members of the Ivatt Trust's collection started arriving and she has since been in store awaiting full restoration. She moved to the East Somerset Railway for restoration in February 2015 and returned to service in June 2017.
W8 was originally named Newington and numbered 46, she worked for both the LB&SCR and the LSWR, and moved to Wight in 1913, later renamed and numbered to match the standard of naming the island's engines after towns. 1949 saw her career on the IOW end and she returned to the mainland for work on Hayling Island branches until 1963. In 1979 an agreement with the former owners saw her return to Wight for preservation and in two years she started hauling trains on the private rail network. After a boiler replacement costing £35,000, this locomotive's boiler ticket expired in November 2018 and has been dismantled for its ten-yearly overhaul.
Working at Woolwich Arsenal for 40 years, Invincible was a shunter there with several other 0-4-0STs. After and extensive period in store, she was overhauled for a transfer to the RAE of Farnborough. Following the closure of the centre, the new owner placed her on loan to the railway from 1971 until his death in 1979, and ownership was passed to the WLS, who carry out her overhauls and repairs. She was featured in Christie's Iron Horse Music Video. Nearing the end of the 2009 season, she suffered a broken spring hanger and was withdrawn from service. The overhaul was started in 2017.
Originally WD192, she was part of the final batch of 14 engines ordered by the War Department, and worked on the Longmoor Military Railway, Hampshire, before moving to Histon in 1959, and later Bicester in 1959. From 1961 she spent several years in store, but in 1968 was renumbered and named in recognition of her services. After a further 16 years in service, she was retired and displayed at the NAM in 1984, moving to the island in 2005. She returned to steam in 2006 and ownership was later passed on to the Isle of Wight Steam Railway. The locomotive put in a very reliable and high mileage performance during its ten-year boiler ticket, which expired in December 2015. The locomotive is undergoing a ten-yearly overhaul.
Yarmouth was first allocated to Brighton as LB&SCR No. 110 Burgundy. She was then based at numerous depots around the south of England, becoming SR No. B110 after the Grouping in 1923. After her retirement in 1925, she was sold to the Cannock and Rugeley Colliery Company where she was fitted with a new boiler and renumbered No. 9. She was withdrawn again in 1963 when she was preserved at the Chasewater Railway until 1978 when she moved to the East Somerset Railway. After a long overhaul, she returned to steam in 1993, but firebox problems caused her to be withdrawn prematurely in 1997. After spending many years dismantled, she was cosmetically restored in 2011 and painted into inauthentic BR unlined black as No. 32110. In 2012, she was purchased by the Isle of Wight as part of a deal which saw LMS Class 2MT 2-6-0No. 46447 move to the ESR in exchange for No. 32110. The loco arrived at Havenstreet in October 2012. In 2021 work began to take Yarmouth apart for restoration. The identity of No. W2 was previously worn by one of the E1's that worked on the line from 1932.
Ajax was built to order by the former Sulphide Corporation of London, where she stayed for many years before moving overseas to Iran for work at the Anglo-Persian Oil Company. Several years later she was repatriated and worked at Llandarcy Refinery, until retirement in 1968. The owner moved her the Havenstreet for restoration, though for over two decades she was stored in the shed until work began. The boiler passed its steam test in 2003 and within two years Ajax returned to work with air brakes fitted for passenger trains. Ajax was withdrawn from service at the beginning of 2015, following the completion of her boiler ticket. Currently, no plans for her future have been drawn up, and she is stored in the Train Story building.
46447 was first allocated the Crewe North, not far from her birthplace of Crewe Works, though moved to Workington within months to replace many elderly LNWR locomotives in the local area. She was moved to various sheds in North Wales and Derbyshire, right up until 1966, subsequently sold for scrap to Dai Woodham. She was rescued in 1972 as the 20th locomotive to leave Barry Scrapyard and moved to the Buckinghamshire Railway Centre. No. 46447 later moved to the Isle of Wight in 2008. In 2012, an agreement was made between the East Somerset Railway and the IoW which saw No. 46447 move to Cranmore in exchange for LB&SCR E1 No. 32110 Burgundy. She arrived at Cranmore in November 2012 and was launched back into service following restoration in October 2014. She will now run on the ESR for 10 years.
Juno (works No. 3850) was built for work at Hunslet's Ironstone Quarry Railways, but was officially declared "redundant" only 10 years later and was purchased the following year by the Ivatt Trust and moved bases to the company's home at Quainton Road. Arriving in the May 2009, she left the Island on loan to the National Railway Museum in late October 2010.
Three diesel shunters are currently in the custody of the railway, all of which have run a majority of service trains, as opposed to the usual steam-hauled passenger services.
Built by the same company that produced Ajax, 235 was used in the Army for many years before being placed on static display in the NAM with the "Austerities". She came to the Isle of Wight under the same agreement that saw WD198 return to service for use there, and in 2008 became a member of the Wight Locomotive Society's extensive steam and diesel fleet and now works on maintenance trains year round.
After ending her career with BR in 1988, D2059 was selected to become a back-up engine, taking over from a steam service in the case of an emergency. She was initially selected due to having the appropriate brake equipment required by all engines on the railway to be able to pull passenger trains, though has been mostly seen working on freight trains, as the high restoration standards of the Wight Locomotive Society means that very few failures have actually occurred over the years.
D2554 spent the first ten years of her career on the Western Region, though she was transferred to the Southern and the Isle of Wight in 1966, being allocated to Ryde Depot for work on the island's newly instated electrification policy. She left the island network for the steam railway in 1984, though has only worked demonstration freights and service trains, as she is not fitted with air brakes. The loco has not run since 2005, but in early 2011 work started to see what needed doing to return it to service. The fuel pump was known to be faulty so was sent away for reconditioning. The loco was started for the first time in October 2011 and work continues.
The Ryde Pier Petrol Tram was built in 1927 by Drewry. It was withdrawn in 1969 when the tramway closed. It is undergoing restoration work, with a possibility of running the tram on the IOWSR in the future.
483007 at the IOWSR (Isle of Wight steam Railway) train story area.]
The British Rail Class 483 483007, named "Jess Harper," was transferred from the Island Line to the Isle of Wight Steam Railway in 2021 for static display in the carriage shed at Havenstreet Station. The train was originally built in 1940 as London Underground 1938 Stock. A medium-term goal of the Steam Railway is to have 483007 operate on the line, either by having propulsion provided by one of the diesel shunters, or by being converted to battery power.
The Ryde Pier Electric Tram was built by Merres Pollard and Sons in 1911. It was withdrawn in 1927 and replaced by a petrol tram. In 1980, it was brought for a price of £2 by a private owner and was given to the Isle of Wight Council who cosmetic restored it. It went to the Cothy Bottom Heritage Center, Newport Quary and the Isle of Wight Bus Museum before being put away out of the public view. In 2018, ownership was transferred to the Isle of Wight Steam Railway (IOWSR).
Coaching stock:[]
All of the railway's operational coaches have been built to a pre-grouping design. These have been restored by the skilled Havenstreet staff and are the envy of many Southern Region preserved railways.
IWR coaches:[]
The stock collection includes a small set of original Isle of Wight Railway passenger stock.
Under restoration, underframe only. Under-frame will have body of LCDR Bogie 5-compartment Brake Third No. 4115 permanently placed on it, under-frame has been shortened by 5 feet to accommodate this.
Operational, underframe and body separate. Underframe has body of LCDR 4-wheeled 4-compartment Composite No. 6378 permanently placed on it, and has been modified to accommodate this. Body is stored at Havenstreet.
Operational, underframe only. Underframe has body of LCDR 4-wheeled Saloon Brake Third No. 4112 permanently placed on it, and has been modified to accommodate this.
Operational, underframe only. Underframe has body of LCDR 4-wheeled Saloon Composite No. 6369 permanently placed on it, and has been modified to accommodate this. Body is stored away from the railway.
Operational, underframe only. Underframe has body of LBSCR Bogie 8-compartment Third No. 2403 permanently placed on it, and has been modified to accommodate this.
Operational, underframe only. Underframe has body of LBSCR 4-wheeled 3-compartment Brake Third No. 4115 permanently placed on it, and has been modified to accommodate this.
Operational, underframe and body separate. Underframe has body of LBSCR 4-wheeled 5-compartment Third No. 2343 permanently placed on it, and has been modified to accommodate this. Body is stored at Havenstreet.
Operational, Under frame and body separate. Under-frame has body of LCDR 4-wheeled 5-compartment Third No.2515 permanently placed on it, under-frame has been modified to accommodate this.