Ipswich engine shed

Map showing layout in 1883.

Ipswich engine shed was an engine shed located in Ipswich in Suffolk in the UK on the Great Eastern Main Line located just south of Stoke tunnel and the current Ipswich railway station. Locomotives accessed the site from Halifax Junction which was also the junction for the Griffin Wharf branch of Ipswich docks. The depot opened in 1846 and closed in 1968 although the site remained in railway use for a further thirty years.

In British Railways days it was allocated the code 32B.

History

Opening and early years

Locomotive activity started on the depot site with the opening of the original Ipswich station located at Croft Street and (presumably the newly named) Station St in June 1846 by the Eastern Union Railway. Locomotives belonging to sister company the Ipswich and Bury Railway would also have used the facilities when their line opened in November 1846 although the two railway companies were worked as one from January the following year.

In June 1851 the EUR had 31 locomotives breaking down thus:[1]

Builder Wheel Arrangement Number in service Notes
Sharp Brothers 2-2-2 13 Some with 5' driving wheels, others 5' 6".
Hawthorns 2-2-2 3 Introduced 1846, 6' driving wheels
Stothert & Slaughter 2-2-2 4
Stothert & Slaughter 0-4-2 6 Goods engines
Sharp Brothers 2-2-2T 4 Branch line use
Kitsons2-2-2WT1An inspection engine called "Ariel's Girdle" was bought.

All locomotives carried a green livery.

In 1854 the EUR was taken over by the Eastern Counties Railway and in 1860 the new Ipswich railway station opened after the tunnel was completed.[2] It was at this time a carriage and wagon works was established on the site of the old station.

The initial engine shed was a two road shed with associated sidings and a small (befitting the size of engine of the time) turntable. The history of the shed for the next 90 or so years was a case of poor facilities being provided for what was a busy engine shed, and head of a significantly sized organisational district including major sub-sheds at Colchester and Parkeston as well as a host of smaller sheds.

The site was always cramped and poorly equipped with every day servicing of engines taking place in the open.[3]

Great Eastern

The Great Eastern Railway was formed in 1862 by the amalgamation of several East Anglian Railways.

In August 1878 there was a fire in the four road engine shed which resulted in a number of workmen losing their tools. The company replaced these with a grant and the shed was repaired.

At the end of 1922 the shed at Ipswich had an allocation of 131 locomotives being the third biggest shed on the Great Eastern behind Stratford (555) and Cambridge (178) sheds. The allocation consisted of:[4]

Class (LNER classification) Wheel Arrangement Number allocated
B12 4-6-0 22
D13 4-4-0 5
D14 4-4-0 3
D15 4-4-0 16
E4 2-4-0 14
F3 2-4-2T 9
F4 2-4-2T 1
F5 2-4-2T 2
J14 0-6-0 1
J15 0-6-0 32
J65 0-6-0T 5
J66 0-6-0T 7
J67 0-6-0T 4
J69 0-6-0T 3
J70 0-6-0T Tram 7

London North Eastern years

The London and North Eastern Railway came into existence in 1923.

Whilst Great Eastern types provided the majority of the types allocated to Ipswich shed, newer LNE types and engines from other LNER constituent companies were allocated.

During the Second World War a US Army Class S160 (USATC S160 Class) 2-8-0 was allocated to the shed for a few weeks in 1943. Most of the class were allocated to Stratford and March and other members of the class visited Ipswich during this time.[6]

BR Years

In the early years of British Rail Ipswich shed was host to visiting Southern Railway Battle of Britain class 4-6-2 locomotives before the introduction of the Britannia class in the early 1950s.

Working conditions in the shed were extremely poor and the Shed Foreman later wrote "The conditions in which the boiler washers and tube cleaners worked in winter beggared description with boilers being emptied and blown down, others being washed out and steam and water everywhere" [7] This state of affairs led to the preparation of plans to modernize the depot.

The shed was completely rebuilt in 1954 into a concrete 6 track straight through road shed. In 1955 the locomotive allocation totalling 79 locomotives was as follows:[8]

Class Wheel Arrangement Number Allocated
B1 4-6-0 11
B12 4-6-0 8
B17 4-6-0 10
D15 4-4-0 2
F3 2-4-2T 1
F6 2-4-2T 3
J15 0-6-0 10
J17 0-6-0 2
J39 0-6-0 16
J65 0-6-0T 1
J66 0-6-0T 3
J67/J69 0-6-0T 3
L1 2-6-4T 7
2MT 2-6-2T 1

The 0-6-0T engines were generally used for shunting and local trip work. J15, J39 and J17 were freight locomotives. All other locomotives were primarily passenger but it was not unknown for some of them to work freight trains as well. The Ivatt designed 2MT 2-6-2T no 41200 was allocated to the shed for tests on local branches including the Aldeburgh Branch Line. Later that year the first Diesel Multiple Units worked in the area and no other members of this class were allocated.

In 1959 Ipswich received its first allocation of mainline diesels.

On 11 June 1959 class J19 0-6-0 locomotive number 64641 was the last steam locomotive to be repaired at the depot.[9]

5 March 1960 - last steam working from Ipswich shed headed by J15 0-6-0 no 65389 which worked the last freight train to Snape.[10]

However a pair of B1 4-6-0s (61059 numbered departmental 17 and 61252 numbered 22) were retained as a carriage heating units. No 17 operated between 1964 and succeeding No 22 which had undertaken the role since December 1963.[2][11]

In November 1963 Class 15 no 8221 crashed through the buffer stops and into Croft Street.[2]

The following diesel classes were allocated to Ipswich engine shed.

In 1963 the diesel allocation at Ipswich consisted of 55 locomotives which broke down thus:[12]

BR Class Wheel arrangement Number allocated
03 0-6-0 Diesel Mechanical 4
04 0-6-0 Diesel Mechanical 1
05 0-6-0 Diesel Mechanical 4
DY1/1 0-4-0 Diesel Mechanical 3
15 Bo-Bo Diesel Electric 9
24 Bo-Bo Diesel Electric 12
31 AIA-AIA Diesel Electric 22

The class 03,04,05 and DY1/1 locomotives were all shunting engines. The class 15 engines were generally employed on local freight workings whilst class 24 and class 31s were employed on mixed traffic (i.e. both freight and passenger workings).

Closure

The depot was closed on 1968 with fuelling facilities for locomotives being provided at Ipswich railway station. The last diesel locomotive - a Class 15 - underwent maintenance at the depot on 5 May 1968.[13]

Maintenance of the remaining shunter fleet was undertaken at Colchester.

A number of withdrawn British Rail Class 15 locomotives were stored on site during the 1970s.[14]

During the early 1980s the site was used as the electrification depot for the extension of the overhead wiring from Colchester to Harwich. Ipswich (May 1985) and Norwich.

The site was used for the celebration of 150 years of the Eastern Union Railway in 1996.

After closure of the depot the Carriage and Wagon Works continued for many years closing in 1994. The site was used to store some locomotives between 2000 and 2001 before demolition c 2003. Wagon repairs were carried out in Ipswich Lower Yard after this date.

Class 37 locomotive 37379 was named 'Ipswich WRD, Quality Approved' in recognition of the work the depot undertook.

The site today is occupied by a housing estate.

Operations

During BR days Ipswich shed was in the Norwich division and was allocated the code 32B. It had a number of sub-sheds including Felixstowe, Framlingham, Aldeburgh and Laxfield.

Staffing

After signing on and before signing off engine crew would often have to walk to or from Ipswich station before commencing duty or finishing their duties. This must have meant some shifts must have not been very productive in terms of time worked.

In the 1950s shed staff numbered 440-450 although by 1959 this had reduced to just under 200.[15]

Details and stories of Ipswich enginemen can be found in the 1998 book "Ipswich Engines and Ipswich Men" published by the local Over Stoke History Group.

Routes worked

The following routes were worked by Ipswich men. These may have varied from year to year and are not specific to any one era.

Main Lines

In 1929 the Manchester working was one of the most prestigious workings starting at 06:30 on a Monday morning. The train departed at 08:30 calling at Bury St Edmunds, Ely, March (where two carriages for Birmingham were detached), Spalding, Sleaford (water stop), Lincoln (where carriages for York were detached), Worksop, Sheffield Victoria to Wooley Bridge (where Manchester drivers took over). The Ipswich drivers overnighted at the dormitory at Gorton then after working a local train returned to Ipswich later that day.[16] This train was worked by a LNER B17 4-6-0 locomotive.

Branch Lines

Shunt turns

A shunt turn is where a shunting locomotive is allocated to shunting a yard or set of sidings. Some shunt turns required 'trip' working between yards or sidings.

1943

1968 (shortly after closure)

Engineering Facilities

The shed was capable of carrying out repairs to steam locomotives and the following facilities were located on site.[17]

Incidents

Ipswich men John Barnard (driver) and William Macdonald (fireman) were killed in the 'Westerfield Junction boiler explosion' on 25 September 1900. Further information on that accident can be found on the Westerfield railway station page.

John Barnard's son William Barnard (driver) and Stanley Keeble (fireman) were killed in a collision at Colchester in 1913.[2]

On 1 January 1927 there was a train crash at Woodbridge station. A wagon coupling had broken at Bealings station and when the engine stopped at Woodbridge, the rear portion running downhill smashed into the back of the stationery train. Only one minor injury was recorded. Fireman L Rayner of Ipswich was recorded as being knocked off his feet - the driver's name is unknown, but it is almost certain he came from Ipswich as well.[18]

The Ipswich-based driver of B1 4-6-0 61057 locomotive was involved in a rear end collision in foggy conditions in Witham on 7 March 1950. The driver was seriously injured and the fireman W 'spot' Haggar was killed.[2]

Class 15 locomotive D8221 overran the buffer stops and ended up in Croft Street in 1963. It was rescued by one of Ipswich's B1 departmental steam locomotives no 22.[11][19]

References

  1. Richard S, Joby (January 2000). "Brassey, Bruff, Locke and the Norwich Extension". Great Eastern Journal. 101: 29.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Jill Freestone and Richard W Smith "Ipswich Engines and Ipswich Men" ISBN 0-9532257-0-4 (1998)
  3. Great Eastern Engine Sheds Volume 2 - Chris Hawkins and George Reeve (WILD SWAN 1987 ISBN 0 906867 48 7)
  4. W B Yeadon "LNER Locomotive Allocations 1st January 1923" ISBN 1 899624 19 8(Challenger Publications 1996)
  5. 1 2 3 H.I. Quayle & G.T. Bradbury The Felixstowe Railway The Oakwood Press (1977)
  6. Fry, Eric (January 2009). "USA Class S16 2-80 locomotives on the Great Eastern 1943 and 1944". Great Eastern Railway Society Journal. 137.
  7. Hardy, R H N (1971). Steam in the blood. Shepperton: Ian Allan. p. 115. ISBN 07110 0654 7.
  8. Ian Allan "Locoshed Book"(1955)
  9. National rail Museum. "Ipswich Engine Shed 1959 (Photo)". Retrieved 18 October 2013.
  10. R Adderson and G Kenworthy "Branch Lines to Felixstowe and Aldeburgh" The Middleton Press (2007)
  11. 1 2 "Mpd & Diesel Depots With Locos". Abrail.co.uk. Retrieved 2013-06-16.
  12. Ian Allan "Locoshed Book"(1963)
  13. Wilby, Percy (January 1998). "The coming of the diesels to Ipswich". Great Eastern Journal. 93: 7.
  14. Dr Ian C Allen - Diesels in East Anglia ISBN 0-86093-105-6 (1980)
  15. Wilby, Percy (April 1992). "Ipswich Locomotive Depot Part 1". Great Eastern Journal. 70: 3.
  16. Wright, A A (January 1990). "railways in the blood part 7 Ernie Dunnett". Great Eastern Journal.
  17. Wilby, Percy (April 1992). "Ipswich Locomotive Depot Part 1". Great Eastern Journal. 70: 3.
  18. East Suffolk Railway JOHN M COOPER (Oakwood Press 1982 ISBN 085361 285 4)
  19. Great Eastern Railway Society Journal No 82 page 29 The Ipswich Breakdown Train by Percy Wilby(April 1995)

Coordinates: 52°02′42″N 1°09′09″E / 52.0451°N 1.1524°E / 52.0451; 1.1524

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