Victorian Railways M class


The Victorian Railways M class were 4-4-0T steam locomotives for suburban passenger service, a pattern engine being supplied in 1879 by Beyer, Peacock & Co to the Victorian Railways in Australia. Twenty-one further locomotives of this model were built by the Phoenix Foundry of Ballarat, in three batches, from 1884 to 1886. These were numbered 40, 210-240, and 312-320. They were classed M in 1886. Their relatively small coal bunker capacity proved inadequate for the rapidly expanding suburban network of the 1880s, therefore between 1901 and 1905 they were rebuilt at the Newport Workshops as 4-4-2T locomotives, with an enlarged bunker of capacity on extended frames supported by a trailling radial axle. At the same time, the opportunity was taken to replace the troublesome leading Bissell truck with one of the design being used successfully on the contemporary 'New' A and D class locomotives, as well as increasing the cylinder diameter from 17 to 18 inches. When rebuilt, these locomotives were regarded as equivalent to the Victorian Railways' ubiquitous E class 2-4-2T suburban engines for rostering purposes, and were known as the ME class, although the original 'M' class plates carried on the locomotives were not altered. These engines proved most successful in service, and withdrawals did not commence until 1913, following the introduction of the larger DDE class suburban tank engines from 1908. The last ME locomotives were scrapped in 1922, having been rendered surplus by the conversion of suburban lines to electric traction from 1919 onwards; none have been preserved.