LCDR Tiger class explained

LDCR Tiger class
LCDR G class
Powertype:Steam
Builddate:August 1861 – August 1862
Totalproduction:25
Whytetype: rebuilt as
Uicclass:1B n2
Fueltype:Coal
Diameterinside:4feet
Lengthinside:10feet
Boilerpressure:120lbf/in2
Totalsurface:1200square feet
Cylindercount:Two, inside
Cylindersize:16x
Valvegear:Gooch
Withdrawndate:January 1892 – March 1907
Disposition:All scrapped

The LCDR Tiger class was a class of twenty-four steam locomotives. They were designed by Thomas Russell Crampton for the London, Chatham and Dover Railway (LCDR) as general purpose passenger locomotives.

Between 1859 and 1860, the LCDR board considered the need for new locomotives to operate lines then under construction. After consultation with various engineers, including Charles Patrick Stewart (of Sharp, Stewart and Company), Robert Sinclair (of the Eastern Counties Railway) and Crampton, they decided upon forty new locomotives: eight first class fast locomotives, seventeen general purpose passenger locomotives, and fifteen goods locomotives. After discussion with William Martley, the quantities needed for the two passenger types were revised to 5 and 24 respectively. Tenders were sought, and these were considered in July 1860, when orders were placed with several firms for what were to become the Echo, Tiger and Acis classes.

The Tiger class, comprising 24 general purpose passenger locomotives, were ordered from three firms: Peto, Brassey and Betts were to build ten at £3,280 each; Slaughter, Grüning & Co. were to build six at £3,300 each; and R. & W. Hawthorn & Co. would build eight at £3,415 each. As with the Echo and Acis classes, the locomotives were equipped with the Cudworth coal-burning firebox. They were delivered to the LCDR between August 1861 and August 1862. During 1862–65, the locomotives were rebuilt with the wheel arrangement.

Like other LCDR locomotives delivered prior to 1874, the locomotives had no numbers at first, being distinguished by name. In November 1875, William Kirtley (who had replaced Martley following the latter's death in 1874) allotted the class letter G. The locomotives were then given the numbers 3–26. Withdrawal began in January 1892, and by the time that the South Eastern and Chatham Railway (SECR) was formed at the start of 1899, nine remained in service. Of these, four were transferred directly to the duplicate list and had their LCDR numbers suffixed with the letter A; four had their numbers increased by 459 to avoid duplication with former South Eastern Railway locomotives; and one was both increased by 459 and suffixed A. The last one was withdrawn in March 1907.

Name Builder Works no. Built Rebuilt LCDR Number SECR Number Withdrawn
Falcon Peto, Brassey & Betts 1863 3
Vulture Peto, Brassey & Betts 1862 4 4A
Heron Peto, Brassey & Betts 1864 5
Stork Peto, Brassey & Betts 1864 6
Swift Peto, Brassey & Betts 1862 7
Dottrel Peto, Brassey & Betts 1864 8 8A
Swallow Peto, Brassey & Betts 1863 9 9A
Ostrich Peto, Brassey & Betts 1863 10 10A
Petrel Peto, Brassey & Betts 1863 11 470
Pelican Peto, Brassey & Betts 1865 12
Lynx Slaughter, Grüning 446 1863 13
Gorilla Slaughter, Grüning 447 1865 14
Tiger Slaughter, Grüning 448 1863 16
Leopard Slaughter, Grüning 449 1865 18 477
Jackall Slaughter, Grüning 450 1863 19
Panther Slaughter, Grüning 451 1863 21 480
Cerberus Hawthorn 1120 1864 15
Gorgon Hawthorn 1121 1864 17
Harpy Hawthorn 1122 1864 20
Pegasus Hawthorn 1123 1865 22 481
Satyr Hawthorn 1124 1865 23
Lethe
later Sphynx
Hawthorn 1125 1865 24
Siren Hawthorn 1126 1865 25; 25A from July 1892
Xanthus Hawthorn 1127 1864 26 485A
Lethe was renamed Sphynx in August 1862, because the railway staff found the name difficult to pronounce.

References