North British Locomotive Company


The North British Locomotive Company was created in 1903 through the merger of three Glasgow locomotive manufacturing companies; Sharp, Stewart and Company, Neilson, Reid and Company and Dübs and Company, creating the largest locomotive manufacturing company in Europe and the British Empire.
Its main factories were located at the neighbouring Atlas and Hyde Park Works in central Springburn, as well as the Queens Park Works in Polmadie. A new central Administration and Drawing Office for the combined company was completed across the road from the Hyde Park Works on Flemington Street by James Miller in 1909, later sold to Glasgow Corporation in 1961 to become the main campus of North Glasgow College.
The two other Railway works in Springburn were St. Rollox railway works, owned by the Caledonian Railway and Cowlairs railway works, owned by the North British Railway. Latterly both works were operated by British Rail Engineering Limited after rail nationalisation in 1948.
In 1918 NBL produced the first prototype of the Anglo-American Mark VIII battlefield tank for the Allied armies, but with the Armistice it did not go into production.

Steam locomotives

NBL built steam locomotives for countries all over the world. This included North America, South America, Europe, Sub-Saharan Africa, Kenya/Uganda/Tanzania, Malawi, Rhodesia ; Middle East, Asia ; and Australasia.
The New South Wales Government Railways purchased numerous North British locomotives, as did the Victorian Railways as late as 1951. the Western Australian Government Railways also purchased many North British Locomotives, such as the P class.
, Glasgow. During World War I the building was temporarily converted into a hospital by the British Red Cross. It was latterly the campus of North Glasgow College.
Between 1903 and 1959 NB supplied many locomotives of various classes to Egyptian State Railways. They included 40 of the 545 class 2-6-0 in 1928.
Between 1921 and 1925, NBL supplied New Zealand Government Railways with 85 NZR AB class locomotives. The whole fleet of AB class engines numbered 143, as built, of which 141 entered service. Two were lost at sea.
In 1935 NB supplied six Palestine Railways P class 4-6-0 locomotives to haul main line trains between Haifa and the Suez Canal.
In 1939 NB supplied 40 4-8-2 locomotives to the New Zealand Railways Department ; some of which were later converted to JB class oilburners. In 1951 NB supplied another 16 JA class, though these did not have the American-style streamlining of the J class. Together with the NB predecessor firms, North British supplied about a quarter of the steam locomotives used by the NZR.
In 1949 South African Railways bought more than 100 2-8-4 locomotives from NBL and these became the Class 24; some operated tourist trains on the George-Knysna line until 2000. Additionally South Africa also purchased some of its Class 25, 4-8-4 engines from the company between 1953–55. These successful engines with various in-service modifications survived until the end of steam in South Africa in 1992. NB also introduced the Modified Fairlie locomotive in 1924. In total South Africa purchased over 2,000 locomotives from the North British Locomotive Company.
As of January 2010, Umgeni Steam Railway operates SAR Class 3BR engine 1486, and now named "Maureen", on the line between Kloof and Inchanga, a distance of about. She hauls vintage sightseeing trains some coaches of which date back to 1908.
In 1953, RENFE in Spain acquired 25 2-8-2 locomotives from the North British Locomotive Company. One example, 141F 2111 is preserved in working order.
Locomotives made for railways in Britain and Ireland included the Barry Railway ; Caledonian Railway ; Furness Railway ; Glasgow and South Western Railway ; Great Central Railway ; Great North of Scotland Railway ; Great Northern Railway ; Great Southern and Western Railway ; Highland Railway ; London and North Western Railway ; London, Tilbury and Southend Railway ; Maryport and Carlisle Railway, Midland Great Western Railway ; Midland and South Western Junction Railway, North British Railway ; North Eastern Railway ; Taff Vale Railway ; War Department. After 1923, customers included the Great Western Railway ; London, Midland and Scottish Railway ; London and North Eastern Railway; ; Northern Counties Committee ; Southern Railway ; War Department.

Locomotives 22878, 22879 and 22880

In 1922 the New Zealand Railways Department ordered a batch of its very successful AB class Pacifics from NBL, to be built and shipped as soon as possible. The trio 22878, 22879 and 22880 were built amidst this batch. 22878 and 22879 were loaded aboard and she sailed for Auckland, New Zealand, but she got into difficulty at Rosalie Bay, on the east coast of Great Barrier Island and sank. Remnants of both locomotives, and the Wiltshire can be seen on the sea floor.
22880 was dispatched on a subsequent sailing and was put into service in New Zealand as AB class number 745. This locomotive was in service for more than 30 years but then hit a washout near Hawera. It was then left in the mud for nearly 50 years but has now been exhumed with the intention of restoration. It was moved to the nearby town of Stratford, New Zealand for preservation by Taranaki Flyer Society. Due to the TFS headquarters being sold from under them, 22880 was put on the market, and has been taken into storage by Rimutaka Incline Railway Heritage Trust, after the Taranaki Flyer Society was liquidated in December 2013.

Diesel locomotives

Whilst highly successful as designers and builders of steam locomotives for both its domestic market and abroad, North British failed to successfully manage the transition to diesel and electric locomotive production in the wake of the British Railways 1955 Modernisation Plan. It did build a Paxman engined diesel locomotive, British Rail 10800, originally ordered for the London, Midland and Scottish Railway before the 1948 nationalisation of British Railways, but not delivered until 1950. This was closely followed by eight Bo-Bo diesel-electric locomotives for the Ceylon Government Railway.
Another Paxman engined locomotive was PVH1, built in 1953 as 'Paxman Voith Hydraulic 1' for the Emu Bay Railway, Tasmania, and survives today preserved at the Derwent Valley Railway. Its wheel formation is -D- being a hydraulic transmission locomotive, so in appearance it looks like an 0-8-0. It also built eight Paxman engined shunters British Rail Class D2/1.
In the late 1950s North British signed a deal with the German company MAN to construct further diesel engines under licence. These power units appeared in the late 1950s' British Railways designs pre-TOPS British Rail Class D3/1, and later designated Class 21, Class 22, Class 41, Class 43 and Class 251 None of these were particularly successful: constructional shortcomings with the MAN engines made them far less reliable than German-built examples. A typical example of this was the grade of steel used for exhaust manifolds in the Class 43s – frequent manifold failures led to loss of turbocharger drive gas pressure and hence loss of power. More importantly, the driving cabs of the locomotives would fill with poisonous exhaust fumes. BR returned many North British diesel locomotives to their builder for repair under warranty and they also insisted on a three-month guarantee on all repairs.

Electric locomotives

In the early 1950s, The General Electric Company won a contract to build 40 electric locomotives for the South African Railways – NBL receiving the sub-contract to manufacture the locomotives with GEC-supplied electrical components.
in 2005.
GEC and NBL co-operated again in the construction of early 25 kV AC electric locomotives for the West Coast Main Line electrification project of the early 1960s. GEC won a contract for ten locomotives and sub-contracted the mechanical design and construction to NBL: Class AL4 E3036–E3045 entered traffic in 1960–61. As with its diesel locomotives, the class suffered poor reliability and spent long periods out of service. A partial reprieve came when money was made available to extend the electrification of the WCML north to Glasgow but no immediate funds were available for more electric locomotives. The Class 84s were refurbished in 1972 and pressed back into service, being finally withdrawn between 1978 and 1980 following delivery of Class 87 locomotives.

Decline

In 1959 GEC, Clydesdale Bank and HM Treasury invested in a restructuring programme at North British to enable the transition of the company from steam to diesel-electric and electric locomotive manufacture, centred around production of the Class AL4. Perhaps unwisely, North British supplied many of its diesel and electric locomotives to BR at a loss, hoping to make up for this on massive future orders that never came. This and the continuing stream of warranty claims to cure design and workmanship faults proved fatal – North British declared that it was entering voluntary liquidation on 19 April 1962. Because of the unreliability of its UK diesel and electric locomotives, all were withdrawn after comparatively short lifespans. The Atlas works site is now an industrial estate and the Hyde Park works site is now the campus of North Glasgow College. The Queens Park works site on Aitkenhead Road in Polmadie is now given over to a variety of industrial and commercial uses.

Preservation

Thailand
Locomotive Number 21816 with NBL plate stands outside Lopburi Railway station.
A locomotive with NBL plate on stands outside Chumphon Railway station.

Australia

South Africa