Metropolitan Railway electric locomotives


Metropolitan Railway electric locomotives were used on London's Metropolitan Railway with conventional carriage stock. On the outer suburban routes an electric locomotive was used at the Baker Street end that was exchanged for a steam locomotive en route.
The first ten had a central cab and were known as camel-backs, and these entered service in 1906. A year later another ten units with a box design and a driving position both ends arrived. These were replaced by more powerful units in the early 1920s.
The locomotives were withdrawn from passenger service in 1962 after electrification reached Amersham and the A Stock electric multiple units entered service. One locomotive, No. 5 John Hampden, is preserved as a static display at London Transport Museum, and another, No. 12 Sarah Siddons, has been used for heritage events.

Westinghouse

The Metropolitan Railway ordered electric locomotives from British Westinghouse and made by Metropolitan Amalgamated. The first ten were built with Westinghouse electrical control equipment and entered service in 1906. These 'camel-back' bogie locomotives featured a central cab, weighed 50 tons, were long over the buffers and had four traction motors. Initially there was only one position for the driver which give difficulties, and a second master controller was soon added.

British Thompson Houston

The second ten, also constructed by Metropolitan Amalgamated, were built to a box car design with British Thompson Houston control equipment. These locomotives weighed 47 tons, and were long over buffers and entered service in 1907. The control equipment was replaced with the Westinghouse type in 1919.

Metropolitan-Vickers

In the early 1920s, the Metropolitan placed an order with Metropolitan-Vickers of Barrow-in-Furness for rebuilding the twenty electric locomotives. When work started on the first locomotive, it was found to be impractical and uneconomical and the order was changed to building completely new locomotives using some equipment recovered from the originals. The new locomotives were built in 1922-1923 and weighing 61½ tons, they had four motors, giving a one-hour rating of and a top speed of.
In 1925, no. 15 was exhibited on the Metropolitan Railway's stand at the British Empire Exhibition; the panelling was removed from one side, so that the equipment inside could be viewed. The locomotives were all named, the first nameplates being fitted on 18 March 1927. Nineteen of the names chosen were of people, real or fictitious, who had a connection with the area served by the Metropolitan; the exception was no. 15, the exhibition locomotive of 1925, which became Wembley 1924. Nameplates were removed during World War II.
In 1953 the fifteen remaining locomotives were overhauled and the traction control equipment replaced by BTH equipment from District line cars. Nameplates were refitted.
After electrification to Amersham was completed in 1961, the locomotives were withdrawn from passenger service although three were kept as shunters.
One locomotive, No. 5 John Hampden, is preserved as a static display at London Transport Museum and another, No. 12 Sarah Siddons, has been used for heritage events, most recently in January 2013 running in conjunction with Metropolitan Railway Locomotive No. 1 on steam excursions to mark the 150th anniversary of the opening of the Metropolitan Railway.

List of Locomotives

NumberNameWithdrawnNotes
1John Lyon1962Still stored at Neasden Depot in May 1969
2Oliver Cromwell1962Named Thomas Lord in 1953
3Sir Ralph Verney1962
4Lord Byron1962
5John Hampden1962Preserved in the London Transport Museum
6William Penn1962
7Edmund Burke1962
8Sherlock Holmes1962
9John Milton1962
10William Ewart Gladstone1962
11George Romney1962
12Sarah Siddons1962Preserved in working order
13Dick Whittington1962
14Benjamin Disraeli1962
15Wembley 19241951Scrapped following an accident
16Oliver Goldsmith1962Scrapped in 1966
17Florence Nightingale1943Scrapped following an accident
18Michael Faraday1962Scrapped in 1966
19John Wycliffe1948
20Sir Christopher Wren1954Scrapped following an accident

Accidents and incidents