Kowie Railway 4-4-0T Explained

Kowie Railway 4-4-0T
Powertype:Steam
Designer:Hunslet Engine Company
Builder:Hunslet Engine Company
Serialnumber:294-295
Builddate:1882
Totalproduction:2
Uicclass:2'Bn2t
Driver:1st coupled axle
Leadingdiameter:NaN0NaN0
Coupleddiameter:480NaN0
Wheelbase:18feet
Leading:4feet
Coupled:70NaN0
Over Couplers:290NaN0
Height:12feet
Locoweight:27sigfig=4NaNsigfig=4
Fueltype:Wood or coal
Fuelcap:1lt
Watercap:650sigfig=3NaNsigfig=3
Pitch:5feet
Lengthinside:9feet
Smalltubediameter:115: NaN0NaN0
Fireboxtype:Round-top
Boilerpressure:1600NaN0
Safetyvalvetype:Ramsbottom
Firearea:9.75square feet
Totalsurface:556square feet
Tubearea:495square feet
Fireboxarea:61square feet
Cylindercount:Two
Cylindersize:130NaN0 bore
200NaN0 stroke
Valvegear:Stephenson
Coupling:Johnston link-and-pin
Tractiveeffort:8450lbf @ 75%
Operator:Kowie Railway
South African Railways
Numinclass:2
Officialname:Grahamstown & Bathurst
Deliverydate:1882
Firstrundate:1882

The Kowie Railway 4-4-0T of 1882 was a South African steam locomotive from the pre-Union era in the Cape of Good Hope.

In 1882, two "American" type tank locomotives entered passenger service on the private Kowie Railway which was under construction between Port Alfred and Grahamstown.

The Kowie Railway

The private Kowie Railway between Port Alfred and Grahamstown was built and operated by three successive private enterprises, all of which ran into financial difficulties.[1]

In 1881, the Government of the Cape of Good Hope passed a Bill to authorise the London-based Grahamstown and Port Alfred Railway Company to construct a railway from Port Alfred to Grahamstown. The contract for construction was awarded to Pauling & Co. and the first sod was officially turned on 21 October 1881.[1] [2]

The surveyed route of the line crossed the Kowie River at Blaauwkrantz, where a high bridge needed to be constructed. It had been estimated that the line would be completed by the end of 1883, but since the construction of the Blaauwkrantz Bridge delayed progress, the 43miles line was only partially opened to traffic from Port Alfred as far as Blaauwkrantz on 24 December 1883. Here, passengers had to disembark and complete the journey to Grahamstown on the post cart.[1] [2]

On 1 October 1884, the bridge was completed and opened to traffic. The Kowie Railway linked up with the Cape Government Railways at Grahamstown on 11 November 1884.

Manufacturer

In 1882, two locomotives, with works numbers 294 and 295, were delivered from Hunslet Engine Company to the Grahamstown and Port Alfred Railway Company. The locomotives were acquired for passenger working and were named Grahamstown and Bathurst respectively. They were designed for wood-burning and were equipped with large American-style balloon smokestacks which incorporated spark arresters.[2]

Liquidation

Partly as a result of the difficulties experienced with harbour development at Port Alfred, the Grahamstown and Port Alfred Railway Company soon experienced financial difficulties and was forced into liquidation in 1887. In 1888, a group of Grahamstown residents formed a syndicate and took over the operation of the line to Port Alfred until 1895, when they sold out to the Kowie Railway Company.[1]

The Kowie Railway was never prosperous. After the Cape Government eventually abandoned its attempts at harbour development at Port Alfred in 1898 due to the continuous silting up of the Kowie River, the line's financial difficulties increased. Track maintenance was neglected and the situation was aggravated by a series of minor accidents.

The Blaauwkrantz disaster

The Kowie Railway's death blow came on 22 April 1911 as a result of the Blaauwkrantz Bridge disaster. A mixed train from Port Alfred, made up of six goods trucks, three passenger carriages and a guard's van, came to grief when one of the goods trucks derailed on the Blaauwkrantz Bridge and, with the three carriages and the guard's van, plunged into the ravine 2000NaN0 below. Of the 55 passengers, 31 were killed and 23 seriously injured. The resultant claims against the Kowie Railway Company forced it into bankruptcy.[1] [3] [4]

South African Railways

On 1 April 1913, the line was taken over by the Union Government and became part of the South African Railways. The two passenger locomotives, along with the two goods engines Port Alfred and Kowie, and three Cape 4th Class 4-6-0TT locomotives which had been purchased from the Cape Government Railways around 1904, remained in service on this line until they were scrapped.[1]

Notes and References

  1. The South African Railways - Historical Survey. Editor George Hart, Publisher Bill Hart, Sponsored by Dorbyl Ltd., Published c. 1978, pp. 12-13.
  2. Espitalier, T.J.; Day, W.A.J. (1943). The Locomotive in South Africa - A Brief History of Railway Development. Chapter II - The Cape Government Railways (Continued). South African Railways and Harbours Magazine, November 1943. pp. 811-812, 818.
  3. http://www.heritageportal.co.za/article/port-alfred-grahamstown-railway Heritage Portal: The Port Alfred to Grahamstown Railway
  4. http://steam-locomotives-south-africa.blogspot.com/2010/08/port-alfred-kowie-railway-1883-1913.html The Port Alfred Kowie Railway 1883-1913