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  2. GWR steam rail motors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GWR_steam_rail_motors

    Number 93 at Staverton on the South Devon Railway. In February 1908, a steam rail motor was turned out from Swindon railway works and given the number 93. It was one of sixteen built to Diagram R, the last batch of steam rail motors. These were 70 feet (21 m) long and 9 feet (2.7 m) wide.

  3. Great Western Railway Power and Weight Classification

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Western_Railway...

    A preserved GWR 4500 Class steam locomotive, showing power classification "C" on a yellow route restriction disc, on the upper cab side-sheet. On 1 July 1905 the Great Western Railway (GWR) introduced a system for denoting both the haulage capabilities and the weight restrictions which applied to their various classes of locomotive.

  4. Locomotives of the Great Western Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locomotives_of_the_Great...

    The last engine of GWR design built by British Railways was 1600 class No 1669 in May 1955. [34] However, as the railway preservation movement grew, and many types of locomotive were preserved, some people conceived the idea of reconstructing locomotives of classes that had not survived - even in scrapyards - long enough to be preserved.

  5. Daniel Gooch standard-gauge locomotives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GWR_93_Class

    In 1854 the GWR absorbed two standard-gauge lines, the Shrewsbury and Chester Railway and the Shrewsbury and Birmingham Railway to become the GWR's Northern Division. . Consequently, from then until his retirement in 1864, Daniel Gooch (the company's Superintendent of Locomotive Engines, a post he had occupied since 1837), although a passionate advocate of the GWR's original broad gauge, of ...

  6. Steam locomotives of British Railways - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_locomotives_of...

    ex-Great Western Railway No. 6833 Calcot Grange, a 4-6-0 Grange class steam locomotive, at Bristol Temple Meads railway station. The steam locomotives of British Railways were used by British Railways over the period 1948–1968. The vast majority of these were inherited from its four constituent companies, the "Big Four".

  7. Autotrain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autotrain

    A preserved GWR autotrain, running with the locomotive sandwiched between two driving coaches on the South Devon Railway.. The Autotrain was a type of passenger train used in the early 20th century, where the steam locomotive could be remotely controlled from the rear of the train.

  8. Steam railcar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_railcar

    British steam railcars Railway Number of railcars Introduced Withdrawn; Bristol and Exeter Railway: 1: 1848: 1850 [2] Joint London, Brighton and South Coast Railway and London & South Western Railway: 2: 1902: 1919 [16] Great Western Railway: 99: 1903-08: 1935 (many were converted to auto-trailers) GWR steam rail motors [17] Taff Vale Railway ...

  9. File:Inside GWR Steam Railmotor 93 large saloon.jpg

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Inside_GWR_Steam_Rail...

    English: Inside the main saloon of restored Great Western Railway Steam Railmotor. The turn-over seats were recovered from Austrailian trams which used identical seats to the steam railmotors when they were first built. It is at Minehead ready for its first public trip on the West Somerset Railway.