GS&WR Class 101

The Great Southern and Western Railway Class 101, classified as Class 101 or Class J15 by the Great Southern Railways, was a class of 0-6-0 steam locomotives designed for working goods traffic although they did, and were quite capable of, working branch or even main line passenger trains.

Great Southern & Western Railway Class 101
Preserved No.186 in steam at Whitehead, County Antrim, in 2010.
Type and origin
Power typeSteam
DesignerAlexander McDonnell
BuilderInchicore Works (91),
Beyer, Peacock & Co. (12),
Sharp, Stewart & Co. (8)
Serial numberBP: 747–750, 780–783, 1251–1252, 2029–2030
SS: , 2155–2158, 2310–2311, 2837–2838
Build date1866–1903
Total produced111
Specifications
Configuration:
  Whyte0-6-0
  UICC
Gauge5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm)
Axle load13 long tons 0 cwt (29,100 lb or 13.2 t)
Loco weight37 long tons 13 cwt (84,300 lb or 38.3 t)
CylindersTwo, inside
Cylinder size18 in × 24 in (457 mm × 610 mm)
Performance figures
Tractive effort17,170 lbf (76.4 kN)
Career
OperatorsGS&WRGSR → CIÉ
ClassGS&WR: 101
GSR: 101/J15
Withdrawn1886–1963
Preserved184 & 186
Current ownerRPSI
DispositionTwo preserved, remainder scrapped
107 with unsuperheated boiler at Valencia about between 1901 and 1908

History

The 101s were by far the most numerous class of locomotive (diesel or steam) ever to run in Ireland with 111 being built between 1866 and 1903 with only minor modifications between batches. The great majority were built by the GS&WR at Inchicore Works, though the construction of some examples was contracted out to Beyer, Peacock and Company (12) and Sharp, Stewart and Company (8), both famous Manchester based locomotive building firms.

The 101s survived long after many more modern steam locomotives were scrapped with nearly half their number still in traffic when the Córas Iompair Éireann completed dieselisation at the end of 1962.

Specification

The RPSI has two examples, Nos.184 (1880) and 186 (1879).

  • Class: J15
  • Wheels: 0-6-0
  • Company: Great Southern & Western Railway
  • Designer: Alexander McDonnell
  • Builder: Sharp, Stewart and Company, Atlas Works, Manchester (Works No. 2838)
  • Dates: Built:1879; Withdrawn:1964
  • Boiler: Z
  • Boiler diameter: 5 ft 1 34 in (1.57 m)
  • Cylinders: 18 in × 24 in (457 mm × 610 mm)
  • Tractive effort: 17,170 lbf (76.4 kN)
  • Total weight: 37.65 long tons (38.25 t; 42.17 short tons)
  • Axle load: 13.00 long tons (13.21 t; 14.56 short tons)

Preservation

184, Whitehead

Two have been preserved by the Railway Preservation Society of Ireland making them the most numerous class of preserved Irish steam locomotives.

  • No. 186, a Sharp, Stewart engine, has a superheated larger boiler with a Belpaire firebox and tender no. 375, a larger 3,345 imperial gallons (15,210 l; 4,017 US gal) tender.[1]
  • No. 184 has a smaller saturated boiler with round-topped firebox, and was paired with tender no. 156,[1] an 1,864 imperial gallons (8,470 l; 2,239 US gal) outside-sprung tender. To give a larger water capacity, No. 184 has been paired with the larger tender when used on the Irish railway network.

As built the locomotives would have carried the lined dark olive green livery of the Great Southern & Western Railway until around the start of the 20th Century. After that, they were black with red lining until the late 1910s, when they were painted all over unlined grey. This dull but all-encompassing livery included motion, wheels, inside frames, cabs, smoke boxes and chimneys. The only relieving feature was the red buffer beam. Standard cast number plates were also painted over grey, with rim and numerals picked out in cream or very pale grey, or occasionally not at all. This livery persisted post-1925 into Great Southern Railways days, and was extended to locomotives of other constituent companies after the GSR amalgamation of that date. On the formation of CIÉ in 1945, the only change was that the cast number plates were gradually removed and pale yellow numerals were painted on instead. In addition, most tenders received a lined pale green "flying snail" logo. Both locomotives are out of service awaiting overhauls, with No. 186 last operating in late 2013.

While CIÉ repainted a few locomotives in green or black, all of the J15 class remained grey until withdrawal.

In film

The preserved locomotives have appeared in various films. Most recently, No. 186 appears in the 2006 film, The Wind That Shakes the Barley. Both 184 and 186 appear in the 1979 film, The First Great Train Robbery.[2]

Model

The Class 101 is available as a 00 gauge etched-brass kit from Studio Scale Models. It includes transfers, brass etches and cast white metal parts.

gollark: EFI support?
gollark: Partition UUIDs?
gollark: Also, that's effectively what I'm *doing* but with dedicated syntax for some reason?
gollark: Ew. No.
gollark: Better idea, buy a RTL-SDR and stream random information-containing/strong (defined somehow) radio signals!

See also

Steam passing Drumbane Level Crossing on Northern Ireland Railways metals on a Railway Preservation Society of Ireland service on the Belfast-Dublin railway line.

References

  1. Clements & McMahon 2008, p. 295
  2. "Film Contracts". RPSI. Retrieved 2017-06-09.
  • Clements, Jeremy & McMahon, Michael (2008). Locomotives of the GSR. Newtownards: Colourpoint Books. pp. 76–83, 281, 283, 295. ISBN 978-1-906578-26-8.
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