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The Metropolitan Railway E Class is a class of 0-4-4T
steam locomotive A steam locomotive is a locomotive that provides the force to move itself and other vehicles by means of the expansion of steam. It is fuelled by burning combustible material (usually coal, Fuel oil, oil or, rarely, Wood fuel, wood) to heat ...
s. A total of seven locomotives were built between 1896 and 1901 for the
Metropolitan Railway The Metropolitan Railway (also known as the Met) was a passenger and goods railway that served London from 1863 to 1933, its main line heading north-west from the capital's financial heart in the City to what were to become the Middlesex su ...
: three by the railway at their Neasden Works and four by Hawthorn Leslie and Company in
Newcastle upon Tyne Newcastle upon Tyne, or simply Newcastle ( , Received Pronunciation, RP: ), is a City status in the United Kingdom, cathedral city and metropolitan borough in Tyne and Wear, England. It is England's northernmost metropolitan borough, located o ...
.


Overview

One locomotive became Metropolitan Railway No.1 and was a replacement for A Class (4-4-0T) No.1 which had been scrapped after an accident. The other locomotives were numbered 77 to 82. Number 77 is known to have been fitted with condensing apparatus. It is likely that condensing apparatus was originally fitted to the whole class, but later removed.


Displacement

The E Class were displaced from the main passenger trains by the 4-4-4T H Class in 1920, moving to lesser jobs such as trains on the
Chesham branch The Chesham branch is a single-track railway branch line in Buckinghamshire, England, owned and operated by the London Underground. It runs from a junction at Chalfont & Latimer station on the Metropolitan line for 3.89 miles (6.26 km) ...
, goods trains and engineering duties. Following the
Second World War World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
, one E Class locomotive was regularly stationed at Rickmansworth station to cover a failure of LNER locomotives working Metropolitan Line trains north of this point.


London Transport

The first locomotive was scrapped in 1935 before it could be given a new London Transport number, something that only four locomotives would receive. No.1 became L44, while numbers. 77, 80 and 81 became L46–L48.


Preservation

L44 (No. 1) worked the last steam-hauled LT passenger train in 1961, and survived in use until 1965; it is now preserved at the Buckinghamshire Railway Centre. L44 was preserved by a 19 year old London Transport Mechanical Engineering Apprentice Jim Stringer, who started the Met Tank Appeal Fund in 1962. The original objective was to save the only remaining 0-6-2T 'F' Class locomotive numbered L52 in the London Transport fleet. LT offered this locomotive to him for £500. The Met Tank Appeal Fund raised just over £1,000, but when Stringer went to hand over the cheque he was advised that an inspection had revealed a cracked mainframe, and the locomotive could no longer be 'steamed', and therefore no longer suitable for preservation. However, he was offered L44 in its place for the sum of £450. Stringer was helped by committee members of the London Railway Preservation Society, and a locomotive fitter named Gerald Fitzgerald. The LRPS had storage for the locomotive at Bishops Stortford, and also at Luton where it was subsequently moved to, but the Quainton Railway Society offered a secure and permanent base for it at their newly established museum in Buckinghamshire. L44 (now correctly referred to as Met Loco No. 1) was moved there in the mid-1960s. No. 1 was maintained in main-line condition and was occasionally on its old lines during the "Steam on the Met" events which took place between 1989 and 2000. It received a full overhaul in 2001. In 2007, No. 1 made its first visit away from Buckinghamshire Railway Centre since the 2001 heavy overhaul, arriving at the Bluebell Railway on 24 July in order to take part in the "Bluebell 125" celebrations. While there, it was paired with four original Metropolitan Railway carriages that were restored by the Bluebell. During August 2008, it visited Barrow Hill, and it travelled to Llangollen in October 2008 to participate in their heritage events. In 2010, an appeal was launched to fund the restoration of Number 1, and to fund its continued upkeep for the following ten years to enable it to participate in future heritage events. In 2013 for the 150th Anniversary of London Underground, No. 1 was loaned to the LT museum for several trips between Olympia and Moorgate via Edgware Road on successive weekends in January of that year to honour the actual anniversary of the first underground journey from Paddington (Bishop's Road) to Farringdon on 9 January 1863. The train was made up of Metropolitan Locomotive Number 1, Metropolitan Railway Milk Van Number 4, and the Metropolitan Railway Jubilee Carriage 353 (the oldest surviving operational tube carriage dating from 1892), both the property of the London Transport Museum. Coupled to these were the set of four 'Ashbury' Coaches of 1898 (ex Chesham Shuttle coaches 387, 412, 394 and 368, on loan from the Bluebell Railway) and Metropolitan Electric Railway Locomotive Number 12 ''Sarah Siddons'', owned by London Underground Limited. Several preservation bodies were involved in providing or restoring the rolling stock for the event and the operation was given added impetus by the enthusiastic support of then London Mayor Boris Johnson and his commissioner of Transport for London, Sir Peter Hendy CBE, himself a Transport enthusiast. The following year, No. 1 pulled a similar combination of carriages along with ''Sarah Siddons'' along the route of the Hammersmith & City Line on successive weekends in August to mark the 150th Anniversary of the opening of the Hammersmith and City Railway. On 22–23 June 2019, No. 1 steamed along a stretch of the District Line as part of celebrations marking the 150th anniversary of the opening of the
District Railway The Metropolitan District Railway, also known as the District Railway, was a passenger railway that served London, England, from 1868 to 1933. Established in 1864 to complete an " inner circle" of lines connecting railway termini in London, the ...
in 1868. Rolling stock used included former Metropolitan District Railway coach No. 100. This event was billed as being probably the last time a heritage steam train would be seen in central London on the Underground due to the impending installation of a new signalling system on the network.


References


External links


Information about No. 1
{{London Underground rolling stock E 0-4-4T locomotives Hawthorn Leslie and Company locomotives Railway locomotives introduced in 1896 Standard-gauge steam locomotives of Great Britain