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Front cover of Steam Days Magazine, October 2021 Issue
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Steam Days Magazine, October 2021 Issue

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Contents Listing - Articles & Features in this issue

Trains of thought
North Country Compounds - Norman Hindle’s 1930s photOs of the Leeds to Carlisle line allows Andrew Wilson to examine the work of the Midland/LMS Compounds.
All change: Edinburgh’s ‘Caley’ approaches - Returning to old haunts of the 1950s and 1960s, David Anderson offers eye-opening contrasts in the Scottish capital.
Rhondda’s TVR engine sheds and their duties, Part One: Treherbert D K Jones offering an introductory overview before turning the spotlig the largest of the four ex-Taff Vale Railway sheds.
STEAM DAYS in Colour 202: G&SWR routes serving Greenock, Paisley and Renfrew - From Glasgow (St Enoch) station we take in the Greenock Princes Pier line, the route through Corkerhill, the Glasgow & Paisley Joint line (G&SWR and Caledonian) and the Paisley & Renfrew Railway.
Steam Days subscriptions
Travels with the Ivatt tanks - A total of I 30 of the Ivatt 2-6-2Ts were built between 1946 and 1952, and here Keith Widdowson summarises his journeys with them in BR service.
The Border Railway: An operating review - While offering an overview of goods operations on the Newcastle & Carlisle line in the early 1950s, ‘Swedebasher’ covers long-distance and branch passenger traffic before the advent of dieselisation.
Tail Lamp - readers’ letters

Cover: Stockport (Edgeley)-based Ivatt ‘2MT’ 2-6-2T No 41204 has been bulled up for an RCTS (West Midland Branch) brake van tour on 29 October 1966. It began from Stoke-on-Trent and took in the Cheadle branch before running round in Stoke. This view was taken from the north end brake van in that 25-minute lunchtime break, and then it was onwards to Leekbrook Junction and Caldon Low.
Contents page photo: The Bournemouth allocation of Ivatt ‘2MT’ 2-6-2Ts had a range of work from carriage shunting at Bournemouth (Central) station to branch line duties from Brockenhurst to Lymington Pier, and between Wareham and Swanage. On Monday, 9 May 1966, No 41295 pauses at Corfe Castle with a Swanage-bound service. I saw this locomotive on my visit to its home shed in the following October. 

Article Snippets
Article Snippets
TRAINS of thought
In this issue of Steam Days, Keith Widdowson, whose many travels behind specific locomotives have been recorded in previous issues of this magazine, now looks at his travels when hauled by the Ivatt 2-6-2Ts that were used through much of the BR system.
Built for cross-country duties and branch line work, the first ten Ivatt 2-6-2Ts appeared on the scene from Crewe Works in December 1946 as LMS Nos 1200-1209, and these engines did not receive their BR numbers (with the ‘4’ prefix) until the period November 1948 to December 1950. In due course, 130 of these lightweight versatile tank engines were built -120 at Crewe Works, with Derby Works taking over the construction of the last ten in 1952. Their design was adopted for the 30 British Railways Standard ‘2MT’ 2-6-2Ts in the ‘84000’ series which were constructed at Crewe (20) and Darlington (10).
In their early years, batches of the Ivatt engines were sent to Bolton’s Plodder Lane shed, Bath’s Somerset & Dorset shed, Wakefield, Farnley Junction, Nuneaton and Fleetwood, and others were scattered throughout the BR regions, apart from the Scottish Region, and only to Abergavenny (86K) on the Western Region. Although tracking down a few London Midland examples, Keith’s association with these Ivatt engines only started in 1964 and before long it was a case of diminishing numbers, although the Southern Region notably found a reasonable amount of work for the class through 1966 and beyond.
My earlier spotting days were rather limited regarding travelling far and wide throughout the BR system due to lack of transport, apart from my bicycle or rail travel from Worcester when I could afford it. Most of my sightings of these handsome locomotives and their BR ‘2MT’ equivalents in the ‘84000’ class were restricted to the latter years of steam when out with my notebook, pen and camera, at a time when those Ivatt tanks remaining in traffic were still scattered throughout the country when I was ‘chasing’ steam from early 1966 onwards.
Sadly, I did not witness many of these Ivatt tanks engines in action, as my spotting days from 1966 mainly concentrated on engine sheds, sometimes on organised coach trips with the Worcester Locomotive Society, and at other times by car with my son and a few friends. The Welsh scrap yards revealed very few, such as the solitary No 41313 at Woodham Brothers yard in Barry docks and No 41270 at a Bridgend scrap yard. My other sightings were on Eastleigh shed on 2 October 1966 where we found Nos 41287, 41294, 4 1299 and 41319, on Bournemouth shed (Nos 41224, 41295, and 41316) and on Weymouth shed (Nos 41284, 41298, and 41301) on that same day, indicating that the Southern Region was the place to see these handsome tank engines as the end of steam approached. However, on 19 November 1967 we caught a glimpse of No 41264 on Carlisle (Upperby) shed. Only four of the Ivatt tanks have been saved from the cutter’s torch, Nos 41241, 41298, 41312 and 41313, but all will be affectionately remembered. Enjoy your read and your own memories of these attractive tank engines.
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