LB&SCR E2 class


The London, Brighton and South Coast Railway E2 Class was a class of 0-6-0T steam locomotives designed by Lawson Billinton, intended for shunting and short distance freight trains. Ten examples were built between 1913 and 1916, and all were withdrawn from service and scrapped between 1961 and 1963. None were preserved.
This class of locomotive is famous for being the basis of Thomas The Tank Engine.

Background

By 1910 many of the Stroudley E1 class locomotives were worn out or inadequate for the heavier duties required of them. D. E. Marsh intended to rebuild some examples with a larger boiler, but only one E1X rebuild had been completed by the time of his unexpected retirement. Marsh's successor Billinton reversed this policy and instead ordered five new, more powerful locomotives from Brighton works. The new class included several features found on other LB&SCR classes including an I2 class boiler. They were delivered between June 1913 and January 1914.

Second Series

The new design was judged to be successful, except that they were found to have inadequate water supply. Thus when a further order for five locomotives was placed they were given extended side tanks. The second batch were delayed by the onset of the war but were eventually delivered between June 1915 and October 1916.

Use

The E2 class locomotives were mainly used for the heavier shunting and short distance freight duties in the London area and on the south coast, as their small coal bunkers made them unsuitable for long trips. These included empty stock workings at Victoria and London Bridge Stations.
Two were tried in 1914 as passenger locomotives on push-pull duties with the locomotives in the middle of a rake of six coaches, but the experiment was abandoned during the same year as they had insufficient coal capacity.
Following the electrification of the Brighton line in 1936 the class was used as replacements for the former London Chatham and Dover Railway T class at the Herne Hill marshalling yard, around Victoria station and at Dover harbour. During the Second World War they also replaced the SR Z class at Hither Green marshalling yard.
In the mid-1950s the class were tried out as shunters at Southampton Docks and found to be useful, although their 16-foot wheelbase meant that their route availability on the tightly-curved lines within the docks complex was limited compared to that of the S100 USA tanks and Austerity 0-6-0 saddle tanks, which had a 10-foot and 11-foot wheelbase respectively. Six examples were retained for this purpose until their replacement by British Rail Class 07 diesel shunters in 1962.
Withdrawal of the class took place between February 1961 and April 1963 and were all scrapped. None have survived to preservation.

Locomotive summary

Thomas the Tank Engine

In 1946, Reginald Payne used the later series of E2 locomotives as the basis for the character Thomas the Tank Engine in the second book of The Railway Series by the Reverend W. Awdry. According to some sources and early sketches by Awdry Thomas was originally going to be modelled on one of the LNER Class J50 tank classes, although Awdry's original model of Thomas was a Tri-ang LB&SCR E1X. This was later replaced with a Tri-ang E2 which represented engines 100–104, the original five engines.
In The Railway Series and the television series from 1984, Thomas appears to have some subtle differences to the original E2 class. He is noticeably shorter in length than the E2 class, with two extra windows on the sides of his cab, which flushes with his coal bunker and water tanks, a set of splashers over his leading driving wheels, and a larger coal bunker, something the original engines never had. The bottom section of his smoke box saddle is stretched towards his lamp irons, his whistle is mounted on his firebox rather than on the top of his cab, and his water tanks appear closer to the later batch of engines, although they are more square in shape than the originals. Thomas' rear buffer beam is also higher than on the original engines because the back end of his footplate is straight. This caused some concern about Thomas being unable to pull any trains with his buffers at different levels, and this was amended by the story "Thomas Comes to Breakfast".
In the television series, Thomas has always been portrayed with a downward slope at the front end of his footplate, even after the story "Thomas Comes to Breakfast" was adapted. However, his buffers, coupling hooks, and vacuum brake hoses are measured at the correct position, regardless of the downward slope to his front buffer beam. Thomas also carries an electric light on the right-hand side of his front buffer beam and a red tail light mounted on the centre of his bunker, whereas the originals had removable kerosene lamps mounted on lamp irons, which Thomas incidentally has, although they are not used but instead included for continuity with the other engines.

00 Gauge models

Trix produced a model of the first series Class E2 in 1961. It was designed for the Trix Twin 3-rail system, but could be converted to 2-rail using the optional 2-rail pick up included with the locomotive.
Hornby produced the locomotive in its earliest form as a 00 gauge model. Production lasted from 1979 to 1985 in three distinct variants with four reference numbers. In 1985 the tooling was retired and after some alterations, was instead used as the basis for the Thomas the Tank Engine model.
Bachmann have also produced several different-coloured E2-based models in their Junior Range, based on their Thomas model. These are considerably smaller than the Hornby variant, as Bachmann's models were based on the engines of the TV series instead of the "real" locomotive. Bachmann also produces a Thomas model with moving eyes, which is closer in design to Thomas's as illustrated by Reginald Payne rather than the E2 type as for the Hornby model.