Below are the names and numbers of the steam locomotives that comprised the LB&SCR B1 class, that ran on the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway, and latterly the Southern Railway network. The class names mainly relate to politicians and railway officials, or places served by the LB&SCR. All 36 locomotives were built at Brighton Works.
1st LBSC No. | LBSC Name | Built | 2nd LBSC No. | 1st SR No. | 2ns SR No. | Withdrawn | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
172 | Littlehampton | 01891-04-01April 1891 | — | B172 | 2172 | 01933-09-01September 1933 | Last of class in service |
173 | Cottesloe | 01891-04-01April 1891 | — | B173 | — | 01926-12-01December 1926 | |
174 | Fratton | 01890-12-01December 1890 | — | B174 | — | 01926-12-01December 1926 | |
175 | Hayling | 01890-12-01December 1890 | — | — | — | 01926-12-01December 1926 | |
176 | Pevensey | 01890-11-01November 1890 | — | B176 | — | 01929-02-01February 1929 | |
177 | Southsea | 01890-11-01November 1890 | — | B177 | — | 01926-11-01November 1926 | |
178 | Leatherhead | 01890-06-01June 1890 | — | — | — | 01912-12-01December 1912 | |
179 | Sandown | 01890-05-01May 1890 | — | B179 | — | 01929-06-01June 1929 | |
180 | Arundel | 01890-03-01March 1890 | — | B180 | — | 01925-04-01April 1925 | |
181 | Croydon | 01890-02-01February 1890 | — | B181 | — | 01929-12-01December 1929 | |
182 | Hastings | 01889-12-01December 1889 | — | — | — | 01910-07-01July 1910 | |
183 | Eastbourne | 01889-11-01November 1889 | — | — | — | 01929-01-01January 1929 | |
184 | Carew D Gilbert | 01889-09-01September 1889 | — | B184 | — | 01930-06-01June 1930 | Renamed Stroudley in September 1906 |
185 | George A Wallis | 01889-09-01September 1889 | — | — | — | 01923-02-01February 1923 | |
186 | De La Warr | 01889-06-01June 1889 | — | — | — | 01911-10-01October 1911 | |
187 | Philip Rose | 01889-06-01June 1889 | — | B187 | — | 01930-12-01December 1930 | |
188 | Allen Sarle | 01889-04-01April 1889 | — | B188 | — | 01925-06-01June 1925 | |
189 | Edward Blount | 01889-03-01March 1889 | — | — | — | 01912-12-01December 1912 | |
190 | Arthur Otway | 01888-12-01December 1888 | — | B190 | — | 01930-04-01April 1930 | |
191 | Gordon-Lennox | 01888-11-01November 1888 | — | B191 | — | 01929-12-01December 1929 | |
192 | Jacomb-Hood | 01888-10-01October 1888 | — | — | — | 01927-12-01December 1927 | |
193 | Fremantle | 01888-10-01October 1888 | — | B193 | — | 01930-09-01September 1930 | |
194 | Bickersteth | 01888-06-01June 1888 | — | B194 | 2194 | 01931-07-01July 1931 | |
195 | Cardew | 01888-06-01June 1888 | — | — | — | 01912-12-01December 1912 | |
196 | Ralph L Lopes | 01888-05-01May 1888 | — | — | — | 01912-12-01December 1912 | |
197 | Jonas Levy | 01888-05-01May 1888 | — | B197 | 2197 | 01932-08-01August 1932 | |
198 | Sheffield | 01887-12-01December 1887 | — | B198 | — | 01930-12-01December 1930 | |
199 | Samuel Laing | 01887-12-01December 1887 | — | — | — | 01925-07-01July 1925 | |
200 | Beresford | 01887-12-01December 1887 | — | B200 | — | 01929-04-01April 1929 | |
214 | Gladstone | 01882-12-01December 1882 | 618 | B214 | — | 01927-04-01April 1927 | Purchased by the Stephenson Locomotive Society on withdrawal, Preserved at the National Railway Museum, York. |
215 | Salisbury | 01883-12-01December 1883 | — | — | — | 01910-04-01April 1910 | |
216 | Granville | 01883-12-01December 1883 | — | — | — | 01911-10-01October 1911 | |
217 | Northcote | 01883-12-01December 1883 | 620 | — | — | 01927-06-01June 1927 | |
218 | Beaconsfield | 01885-10-01October 1885 | — | — | — | 01913-06-01June 1913 | |
219 | Cleveland | 01885-10-01October 1885 | 619 | B619 | — | 01928-12-01December 1928 | |
220 | Hampden | 01887-12-01December 1887 | — | — | — | 01911-01-01January 1911 |
Famous quotes containing the words list of, list, class and/or locomotives:
“Sheathey call him Scholar Jack
Went down the list of the dead.
Officers, seamen, gunners, marines,
The crews of the gig and yawl,
The bearded man and the lad in his teens,
Carpenters, coal-passersall.”
—Joseph I. C. Clarke (18461925)
“Every morning I woke in dread, waiting for the day nurse to go on her rounds and announce from the list of names in her hand whether or not I was for shock treatment, the new and fashionable means of quieting people and of making them realize that orders are to be obeyed and floors are to be polished without anyone protesting and faces are to be made to be fixed into smiles and weeping is a crime.”
—Janet Frame (b. 1924)
“We must not discriminate between things. Where things are concerned there are no class distinctions. We must pick out what is good for us where we can find it.”
—Pablo Picasso (18811973)
“The flower-fed buffaloes of the spring
In the days of long ago,
Ranged where the locomotives sing
And the prairie flowers lie low:”
—Vachel Lindsay (18791931)