Chesapeake and Ohio 1308 explained

Chesapeake & Ohio 1308
Powertype:Steam
Hatnote:References
Builder:Baldwin Locomotive Works
Ordernumber:48001
Serialnumber:74277
Builddate:1943
Totalproduction:10
Whytetype:2-6-6-2
Driverdiameter:560NaN0
Wheelbase:48.82NaN2
Length:99.72NaN2
Weightondrivers:366700lb
Locoweight:434900lb
Tenderweight:208200lb
Locotenderweight:643100lb
Tendertype:12-RC
Fueltype:Soft coal
Watercap:12000USgal
Tendercap:16ST
Boiler:96inches
Boilerpressure:2102NaN2
Feedwaterheater:none
Firearea:72square feet
Totalsurface:4830square feet
Superheatertype:Type A
Superheaterarea:991square feet
Cylindercount:Four, compound: LP front, HP rear
Lpcylindersize:35x
Hpcylindersize:22x
Valvegear:Walschaerts
Tractiveeffort:987002NaN2
Factorofadhesion:4.66
Locobrakes:Air
Trainbrakes:Air
Fleetnumbers:1308
Operator:C&O
Operatorclass:H-6
Preservedunits:September 1962
Retiredate:February 29, 1956
Currentowner:Collis P. Huntington Railroad Historical Society, Inc.
Disposition:On static display, based in Huntington, West Virginia
Embed:yes
Chesapeake and Ohio 1308 Steam Locomotive
Location:1401 Memorial blvd., Huntington, West Virginia
Coordinates:38.4051°N -82.4772°W
Built:1949
Architect:Baldwin Locomotive Works
Architecture:H-6 Locomotive
Added:January 31, 2003
Refnum:02001571

The Chesapeake & Ohio Railway No. 1308 is an articulated 2-6-6-2 "Mallet" type steam locomotive built by Baldwin Locomotive Works in 1949. It was the next to the last Class 1 mainline locomotive built by Baldwin, closing out more than 100 years of production, a total of more than 70,000 locomotives. Its other surviving sister locomotive, No. 1309, has been restored to operation at the Western Maryland Scenic Railroad in Cumberland, Maryland.

History

While the engine was built in the 1943, it was among the last of a series of 2-6-6-2s that the C&O used, starting in 1911. A very similar design, the USRA 2-6-6-2 was chosen by the United States Railroad Administration as one of its standard designs thirty years earlier during World War I. The advantage of the design was that it could be used on the relatively light, tightly curved, branch lines in West Virginia and Kentucky coal country, and that's where it worked for its seven-year working life, making the two-hour run from Peach Creek, near Logan, West Virginia to the Ohio River at Russell, Kentucky with an occasional trip to Hinton, West Virginia. Its use in heavy mountain railroading is emphasized by its two cross compound air compressors mounted on the smokebox door to supply enough air for frequent heavy braking.

The class was unusual for the time in that they were true Mallets, since their steam was expanded once in their smaller rear cylinders and then a second time in their larger front cylinders. While compound locomotives are more efficient than single expansion, their extra complication led to very few United States railroads using them after the turn of the century. The C&O had a long history with Mallets and they were ideal for slow speed work in West Virginia.

After its last run on February 29, 1956, it was stored at Russell until the C&O gave it to the Collis P. Huntington Railroad Historical Society, Inc., a group founded in 1959. Collis P. Huntington is best known as one of the Big Four who built the Central Pacific Railroad from San Francisco to Promontory, Utah, but following that he spent at least ten years as a leading figure of the C&O.<ref name="decasto" /> The town where 1308 sits is named for him. The C&O donated the engine to the New River Train Group in 1962 as has been on since been on static display at the Collis P. Huntington Railroad Historical Society, Inc.

The locomotive was added to the National Register of Historic Places as Chesapeake and Ohio 1308 Steam Locomotive in 2003.

See also