LNER Peppercorn Class A2


The London and North Eastern Railway Peppercorn Class A2 is a class of steam locomotive designed for express passenger work by Arthur Peppercorn, the chief designer of the LNER after Edward Thompson. All save the first of the 15 built were constructed under British Railways after nationalisation in 1948. Only one example is preserved.

Design

The A2s were a development on the driving wheel locomotives of Peppercorn's predecessor, Edward Thompson. Thompson's designs were rebuilds of pre-existing Gresley designs, in addition to being constrained by wartime pressures. With a dilapidated locomotive and rolling stock fleet, Peppercorn designed his A2s to augment Thompson's designs and replace the aging Gresley locomotives.
Peppercorn's design was influenced greatly by Thompson's A2/3 design, although his design differed most obviously with the less stretched look. This was achieved by moving the outside cylinders forward over the leading truck and amending the steam ducts, shortening the smokebox and wheelbase while retaining the same cylinder and valve gear arrangement. However, this came at the cost of either discarding the Kylchap exhaust or the self-cleaning device in the smokebox, of which the former was omitted by the design team. A new smoke deflector design was fitted, although the omission of the Kylchap exhaust led to visibility issues during service. Some Gresley styled features returned in the form of the V-shaped cab and the 'Banjo Dome' steam collector. Most of the design was the same as the Thompson A2/3, utilising the same boiler, grate, a total heating surface of powering three cylinders, controlled from an electrically lit cab. This gave a tractive effort of with a maximum axle load of. The boiler used a small amount of nickel plate for the barrel, saving without compromising integrity.

Construction

The first of the Peppercorn A2s, No. 525 A.H.Peppercorn, was outshopped from Doncaster in December 1947 on the eve of nationalisation, and named after the designer of the class, Arthur Peppercorn. The first two of the class were turned out in LNER apple green livery, and this colour was also applied to the next 13 engines delivered between January and August 1948. Repainting in British Railways Brunswick green began the following year. Another 20 members of the class were also planned, but were put on hold and ultimately cancelled on 4 May 1948 after the 1948 Locomotive Exchanges. No. 60539 Bronzino emerged in August 1948 with Kylchap double blastpipe and chimney in place of the self-cleaning apparatus as an experiment, with Nos. 60526, 60529, 60532, 60533 and 60538 similarly modified in 1949.
LNER 1946 NosBR NosYear
525605251947
526–53160526–311948
60532–391948

Performance

The class's 50 sq ft grate, a remnant of the P2 lineage boilers, meant the A2's were capable of high power and endurance; however, with the exception of the Aberdeen road, there was little need for this large grate firebox in the postwar era, and as a result, on comparable duties the A2's were heavier on fuel than the Gresley machines which pre-dated them, but for outright power and haulage capability, they were the logical successor to the P2 class, and finally provided the answer the Edinburgh-Aberdeen route required. As a result, they were amongst the last multi-cylindered express steam locomotive classes to remain in service in the UK.

Stock list

Only No. 525 was built during LNER ownership, but 526-31 received LNER 1946 numbers. From 60532 onwards, the A2s received BR numbers from new, BR numbers being the LNER 1946 numbers with the addition of 60,000. With the exception of No. 525, named after the last Chief Mechanical Engineer of the LNER, they were named after racehorses.
LNER No.BR No.NameEntered serviceWithdrawn
52560525A.H. Peppercorn
52660526Sugar Palm
52760527Sun Chariot
52860528Tudor Minstrel
52960529Pearl Diver
53060530Sayajirao
53160531Bahram
-60532Blue Peter
-60533Happy Knight
-60534Irish Elegance
-60535Hornets Beauty
-60536Trimbush
-60537Bachelors Button
-60538Velocity
-60539Bronzino

Service

Initially, the A2s were based at depots the length of the East Coast Main Line, ranging from New England in the south to Edinburgh's Haymarket. It is said that Edinburgh Haymarket and Aberdeen Ferryhill shed welcomed the engines in stark comparison to the Thompson A2/2 and A1/1. In 1949, five were put to work on the Edinburgh-Dundee-Aberdeen route and proved the ideal engines for its stiff gradients and sharp curvature. The A2s also worked to Perth, Glasgow, Carlisle, Newcastle upon Tyne and occasionally more southerly outposts. In 1963, Nos. 60525, 60530, and 60535 crossed the LNER-LMS divide and were allocated to a Glasgow depot, Polmadie. They replaced ex-LMS Coronation Class over the ex-Caledonian Railway route to Carlisle.
The final years of the A2s came in eastern Scotland with many notable performances over the Aberdeen road during the early 1960s. No. 60527 Sun Chariot started from Aberdeen with a 400-ton train and reached Montrose, Arbroath and Dundee ahead of schedule. In 1961 on Stoke bank in Lincolnshire, the location of Mallard's 1938 world speed record, No. 60526 Sugar Palm achieved with the up West Riding express. Withdrawals began in the following year. Neither 60526 Sugar Palm or No. 60525 A. H. Peppercorn were saved for preservation.

Withdrawal

Withdrawal in England occurred during 1962 and 1963. Withdrawal in Scotland was completed in 1966. The last three engines - 60528 Tudor Minstrel, 60530 Sayajirao and 60532 Blue Peter - were retired in June 1966.
YearQuantity in
service at
start of year
Quantity
withdrawn
Locomotive numbersNotes
196215860526/29/31/34/36–39
19637260525/33
196450
19655260527/35
19663360528/30/32No. 60532 preserved.

Preservation

One Peppercorn A2, 60532 Blue Peter, has survived.