LMS Fowler Class 3F


The London Midland and Scottish Railway Fowler 3F 0-6-0T is a class of steam locomotive, often known as Jinty. They represent the ultimate development of the Midland Railway's six-coupled tank engines.

Introduction

Design of this class was based on rebuilds by Henry Fowler of the Midland Railway 2441 Class introduced in 1899 by Samuel Waite Johnson. These rebuilds featured a Belpaire firebox and improved cab. 422 Jinties were built between 1924 and 1931; this class was just one of the Midland designs used on an ongoing basis by the LMS. The locomotives were built by the ex-L&YR Horwich Works and the private firms Bagnall's, Beardmores, Hunslet, North British and the Vulcan Foundry.

Details

When new, they were numbered 7100–7149, 16400–16764. Numbers 7150–7156 were added when the LMS absorbed the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway locomotives in 1930. In the 1934 LMS renumbering scheme, the locomotives were assigned the series 7260–7681. On the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 they were initially chosen as the standard shunting locomotive for the War Department, but later the more modern Hunslet "Austerity" 0-6-0ST was chosen in preference. Nevertheless, eight were dispatched to France before its fall in 1940, and only five returned in 1948. Two, 7456 and 7553, were converted to the Irish broad gauge in 1944 and 1945 for use on Northern Counties Committee lines in Northern Ireland, becoming the NCC Class Y, and numbered 18 and 19. A total of 412 thus entered British Railways stock in 1948, rising to 417 by the end of the year.
British Railways numbers were the LMS numbers prefixed with '4'. Numbers 47477, 47478, 47479, 47480, 47481, 47655 and 47681 were fitted for push-pull train working.

Withdrawal

The first withdrawals started in 1959 and by 1964 half had been withdrawn. The final five survived until 1967, with a further one, 47445 continuing with the National Coal Board.
YearQuantity in
service at
start of year
Quantity
withdrawn
Locomotive numbersNotes
194042287589, 7607/11/13/17/59–60/63.to WD 8 to 15
194441227456, 7553to NCC 18/19
1948412547589, 47607/11/59–60.Repatriated from SNCF
19594172547274/91/96/99,
47301/09/15/29/31/37/39/46/63–64/70/82/87/94,
47407/09/11/40/77/89,
47538.
19603924847260/62/65/71/82,
47303/11/23/35/47/52/74,
47401/36/43/46/63/86/98,
47509–10/23/25/27–28/37/41/60–61/63/67–69/73/75–76/85–86/91/95,
47600/35–36/39/50/52/70/72.
19613443447263/68/77,
47312/34/69/98,
47403/05/18/20–21/38/48/62/84,
47508/13/29/40/59/70–71/80,
47605/07/19–20/24–26/32/34/37.
19623107547261/69–70/75/90/92,
47302/04/10/16/19/28/32/40/42/48/51/53/58/66/76/81/92,
47402/04/14/17/22/24–26/31/33/55/57/66/70/73–75/79/83/88/91/97,
47504/14/16/22/26/36/42/45–46/48/52/54–56/62/72/74/88/93,
47601/04/08/10/21/30/33/42/44/78.
19632354047264/67/78/81/83/87/94,
47300/22/60/79/86,
47412–13/19/41/49/58–60/64/81/90/96,
47502/18/32/39/47/51/81–83/89.
47618/38/51/54/57/79.
19641954947284/88/97,
47306/08/20/33/43–45/49/54–55/65/68/72/75/80/85/90,
47430/34/61/67/69/76/78/92,
47501/03/11/15/17/24/49–50/57–58/79/84/87/94,
47609/22–23/28/40/48/53.
19651466347285–86/95,
47305/21/25/30/38/50/59/61–62/71/78/95/99,
47400/08/23/28–29/32/39/42/51–52/54/64/68/80/85/87/95/99,
47500/05/12/19–20/43–44/64/77–78/96–97,
47606/14/16/45–47/55–56/60/64–66/76–77/80–81.
1966837747266/72–73/76/79–80/93/98,
47307/14/17–18/24/26–27/36/41/57/67/73/77/84/88–89/91/93/96–97,
47406/10/15–16/27/35/37/44–45/47/50/53/71–72/82/93–94,
47503/07/21/30/33/35/65–66/90/92/98–99,
47602–03/11–12/15/27/31/41/43/49/58–59/61–62/67–68/71/73–75.
47445 to NCB
19676647289, 47313/83, 47531/34, 47629.

Preservation

Thanks to their large numbers, renowned performance and late withdrawals, nine of these engines have been preserved, along with a spare set of frames and a boiler. Many were restored within a few years of leaving the scrap heap, and most have a further working life ahead of them. All have steamed in preservation, with the exception of 47445.
One member of the class has operated on the main line in preservation. This was 7298/47298, which took part during the Rainhill celebrations in 1980 when it hauled a number of Steamport residents from the museum in Southport to Rainhill and also took part in the cavalcade. Owned by Ian Riley, in February 2017 it was undergoing its "ten-yearly overhaul" and was expected to return to operation "in a couple of years".
Locations and condition are shown below :
Original NumberS&D NumberBR NumberBuiltBuilderWithdrawnBaseStatusNotes
711947279Aug 1924Vulcan FoundryDec 1966Keighley and Worth Valley RailwayStatic DisplayOn display inside the museum at Oxenhope.
713847298Oct 1924Hunslet Engine CompanyDec 1966Ian Riley EngineeringUndergoing Overhaul
1640747324Jun 1926North British Locomotive CompanyDec 1966East Lancashire RailwayUndergoing Overhaul
164102347327Jul 1926North British Locomotive CompanyDec 1966Midland RailwayStatic DisplayCurrently painted in S&DJR Prussian Blue. Appeared in the film Train of Events, as a London yard shunter.
1644047357Jul 1926North British Locomotive CompanyDec 1966Midland RailwayAwaiting Overhaul
1646647383Oct 1926Vulcan FoundryOct 1967Severn Valley RailwayStatic Display,
Awaiting Overhaul
Last to be withdrawn. On display inside The Engine House at Highley.
1648947406Dec 1926Vulcan FoundryDec 1966Great Central RailwayStatic Display, Awaiting OverhaulCurrently on display inside Mountsorrel Railway's Museum.
1652847445May 1927Hunslet Engine CompanyApr 1966Midland RailwayUnder RestorationSold to NCB after withdrawal.
1657647493Feb 1928Vulcan FoundryDec 1966Spa Valley RailwayUnder Overhaul

In fiction

An engine of this type can be seen in the Rev. W. Awdry's The Railway Series book 'The Eight Famous Engines'. The character's name was Jinty, and came from the "Other Railway" to help out when the main engines went on a journey to England.
In the videogame Transport Tycoon of Chris Sawyer, the Jinty is offered as the cheapest and most basic engine of the game.

Models

An OO gauge model of the Class 3F was first produced by Tri-ang in 1952 and production continued after the company became Hornby Railways in the 1970s. Hornby released a retooled version in 1978 with better detailing and continue to produce that model for their "Railroad" range.
In the 2000s Bachmann Branchline released a more detailed OO model. In N gauge Graham Farish produced a model as a "GP Tank" in various liveries including some of other railway companies before later tooling an accurate 'Jinty' model. In O gauge and Gauge 1 Bachmann Brassworks produce an example. In O gauge, Connoisseur Models produces an etched brass kit. In HO scale Firedrake Productions produced a small run of 20 kits.
Darstaed, a model train company in Great Britain, currently produces O gauge tintype models of the LMS Fowler Class 3F, affectionately referring to them by the nickname of Jinty.
Dapol has produced a Jinty for the O gauge market which was released in September 2017