Dübs and Company


Dübs & Co. was a locomotive manufacturer in Glasgow, Scotland, founded by Henry Dübs in 1863 and based at the Queens Park Works in Polmadie. In 1903 it amalgamated with two other Glasgow locomotive manufacturers to create the North British Locomotive Company.

Preserved locomotives

Eleven locomotives built for the New Zealand Railways Department, numerous others in South Africa and the Isle of Man.

Preserved locomotives in New Zealand

Four members of the 0-4-0 A class built in 1873 have been preserved. A 64 and are in full operational condition on vintage railways; is owned and operated by the and A 62 is in private ownership and it is understood that the smokebox has been snapped from the boiler, and A 66. Currently in operation at the Silver Stream Railway is an example from 1875 that originally had the wheel arrangement of 0-4-0 but was converted soon after purchase to 0-4-2 and is preserved with that wheel arrangement. Another member of the C class was recovered by the Westport Railway Preservation Society in 1993 from where it had been dumped in the Buller Gorge, West Coast, and is under restoration with the goal of returning it to a fully operational state.
Five members of the 0-6-0 F class built between 1878 and 1880 have been preserved. Currently in operational condition are F 163 and F 185. F 111 had its boiler condemned in 1980 and its owners, the Ocean Beach Railway, have yet to replace it; the Ocean Beach Railway also owns F 150 but it has been on lease to the Plains Vintage Railway of Ashburton since 1986 and is unrestored and partially dismantled. F 230 was converted to a wheel arrangement of 0-4-2 on a private industrial line and is on static display at Hamilton Lake Park in a somewhat rundown condition. Other members of the 88-total F class that still exist were built by other manufacturers.

Preserved locomotives in Australia

The oldest steam locomotive in Tasmania is Dübs No.1415 of 1880. It is a 2-4-2T and was built to run on Queensland Railways' gauge. In 1917 the locomotive was sold to the Strahan Marine Board on Tasmania's West Coast, where it was employed in the construction of the breakwater at Hells Gates at the entrance to Macquarie Harbour. The locomotive is now on display at the Don River Railway.
On Sunday, 30 December 1900, the Emu Bay Railway took delivery of three Dübs 4-8-0 locomotives to run on their gauge track from Burnie, Tasmania to Zeehan, Tasmania line. The locomotives were EBR Nos. 6, 7 and 8. No.7 was taken out of service in 1959 and scrapped in 1963. In 1960 No.6 was named MURCHISON and No.8 was named HEEMSKIRK and both locomotives were repainted from drab black to a striking two tone blue livery to haul the new Westcoaster train, which transported buses and cars from Burnie to Rosebery. No.6 is now on display at the West Coast Pioneers Museum at Zeehan, where its drab black has recently been replaced by the striking blue livery mentioned above. No.8 is preserved in running order at the Don River Railway preservation society at Devonport, Tasmania.
Mount Lyell Mining and Railway Company purchased five 0-4-2T locomotives to run on their gauge railway from Queenstown, Tasmania to Strahan, Tasmania, Australia, using the Abt Rack railway system. The first four of these were built by Dübs and the first three are still in existence. Mount Lyell No.1 and Mount Lyell No.3 operate on the West Coast Wilderness Railway. The third example, Mount Lyell No.2 is preserved at the Tasmanian Transport Museum at Glenorchy, near Hobart, Tasmania.
no. 3730, built in 1898, leaving the shed at Strahan, Tasmania in September 2009No. 3730, built in 1898, is used by the West Coast Wilderness Railway between Strahan, Tasmania and Queenstown, Tasmania. It was locally fitted for the Abt Rack railway system.
Victorian Railways No. 2 steam crane, built 1890 by Dubs, works number 2711, is on display at the Australian Railway Historical Society Museum, North Williamstown, Victoria.

Preserved locomotives elsewhere

In the United Kingdom, 1901-built Dübs crane tank No. 4101 is preserved at the Foxfield Light Railway, Stoke-on-Trent. It was operational and saw frequent use by late 2012.
Natal Government Railways 'A' Class 4-8-2 tank locomotive No. 196 returned to the UK for preservation by the NBL Preservation Group on 12 May 2011. It is on display at the Mizens Railway near Woking in Surrey. Full details can be found on www.nbloco.net
On the Isle of Man Railway, Manx Northern Railway 0-6-0 no. 4 Caledonia was built in 1885, renumbered 15 when brought into IoMR stock in 1904. Cale returned to service to commemorate its part in building the Snaefell Railway when a third rail to 3' gauge was laid to facilitate a return to Snaefell, and 15 has just undergone a major overhaul and returned to service after a brief absence.
Nos. 1 and 2 of NSB class XXI, built 1894, are preserved at the Setesdal Line museum railway, Norway. No. 1 has been out of service since the closure of ordinary activities at the Setesdal Line in 1962; no. 2 has been in regular use on the Setesdal Line since 1894 and until recently, both during ordinary activities and, since 1964, at the museum railway. It was undergoing a general service in August 2005.
Locomotive No.3 built for the Canadian Pacific Railway in 1882 is owned by the Prairie Dog Central enthusiast railway of Winnipeg, Manitoba. It underwent a thorough restoration, completed in early 2009.
Built in 1882 for Natal Government Railways, a predecessor to South African Railways, is Class-A No.88, restored and preserved by Umgeni Steam Railway. It is used on the 3.2 km route from Durban to Point Road and later on the 23-hour trip from Durban to Johannesburg.
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Built in 1888 for former Brazilian CP and later having been an industrial locomotive at Frigorífico Bordon is Dubs #2351, a 2-6-4T of gauge, completely restored for static exhibition at Museu de Tecnologia de São Paulo (São Paulo Technology Museum in São Paulo, SP.
The 2-4-2T locomotive No. 17 Urdaneta was built in 1888 was built for the Manila–Dagupan Railway. It entered service in 1890 and was retired in 1927. Urdaneta was one of the only two steam locomotives to be preserved by the Philippine National Railways, its modern-day successor. This locomotive is now on display in Dagupan.