BR standard class 7 70000 Britannia
| Britannia | |
|---|---|
| Number 70000 on a charter train on Whalley viaduct | |
| Power type | Steam |
| Builder | British Railways Crewe works |
| Build date | 2 January 1951 |
| Gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) |
| Career | British Railways |
| Class | standard class 7 |
| Number in class | 55 |
| Number | 70000 |
| Official name | Britannia |
| Retired | 1966 |
| Current owner | Jeremy Hosking |
British Railways (BR) standard class 7 (also known as Britannia class), number 70000 Britannia is a preserved steam locomotive.
Contents |
[edit] British Railways
Britannia was built at Crewe, completed on January 2, 1951. She was the first British Railways standard locomotive to be built and the first of 55 locomotives of the Britannia class. The locomotive was named at a ceremony at Marylebone Station by the then Minister for Transport Alfred Barnes on 30 January 1951.
The BR Locomotive Naming Committee were determined not to use names already in use on other locomotives. They tried to observe this by not selecting the name Britannia for use on 70000 because it was already in use on one of the ex-LMS Jubilee Class locomotives, but Robert Riddles overruled them and the Jubilee had to be renamed.[1]
Britannia was initially based at Stratford (30A) in order to work East Anglian expresses to Norwich and Great Yarmouth. Subsequently, the loco was based at Norwich Thorpe (w/e 31/01/1959) and March (6/1961) before spending the remainder of her career on the London Midland Region: Willesden (1A) (w/e 30/03/1963), Crewe North (5A) (w/e 25/05/1963), Crewe South (5B) (w/e 19/05/1965) and finally Newton Heath (9D) (w/e 05/03/1966) from where she was withdrawn w/e 28 May 1966,[2]
For many years, Britannia had her cab roof painted white. This was to commemorate her pulling the funeral train of King George VI from Norfolk to London following his death in February 1952 at Sandringham House, Norfolk.[3]
Britannia was withdrawn in May 1966, after 15 years of service.[4]
[edit] Preservation
Initially destined for the National Railway Museum because of her cultural significance, she was stored. However, due to her prototype design and construction differences, the NRM chose standard sister 70013 Oliver Cromwell instead. Britannia was eventually bought by the Britannia Locomotive Company Limited.
After a series of moves, she was eventually returned to steam on the Severn Valley Railway, where she remained for a number of years in operational but non-mainline condition. With the society wishing to make more use of the locomotive, she was moved to the European gauge Nene Valley Railway in Peterborough, where she was also fitted with an air-brake compressor. Britannia made her return to the main line on 27 July 1991, successfully working enthusiast trips until 1997, and was featured in an episode of London's Burning.
With an expired mainline boiler certificate, due to the high cost of refurbishment, the locomotive was sold to Pete Waterman in 2000. Stored at Waterman's workshops at the Crewe Heritage Centre, after initial assessment the amount of work resulted in Waterman selling her to Jeremy Hosking. The locomotive underwent restoration at Crewe which involved a newly refurbished cab, a new smoke box and major work on the boiler; replacement steel sides, new crown stays, new front section barrel section, new steel and copper tubeplate, repairs and patches to door plate and major work to copper firebox.
The locomotive was returned to main line operational condition in 2011, initially outshopped in its prototype black British Railways livery (where it did not have nameplates fitted, as was thus known by railway convention as 70000). It can be seen hauling special and excursion trains, and in 2012 the locomotive was repainted in British Railway's Brunswick Green but with an early BR crest (unlike her sister 70013 Oliver Cromwell which carries BR's Late Crest). On January 24th 2012 the loco hauled the Royal Train with Prince Charles on board to Wakefield Kirkgate station where he rededicated the locomotive. For the trip the loco again had a painted white cab roof (although it is to be removed at somepoint in the year).
[edit] References
- ^ Itinerary dated 8 October 1993, Queen of Scots Train.
- ^ "BRDatabase: Britannia". BR Database. http://brdatabase.info/locoqry.php?action=locodata&type=S&id=70000&loco=70000. Retrieved 2011-07-19.
- ^ http://www.york.ac.uk/inst/irs/irshome/features/readings/archive/royal.htm Railways and Royalty
- ^ "Britannia 7MT Class". Kent Rail. http://www.kentrail.org.uk/Britannia%20Class.htm. Retrieved 201-06-20.