New Hope & Ivyland 40


New Hope & Ivyland 40 is a 2-8-0 "Consolidation" type steam locomotive built in 1925 by the Baldwin Locomotive Works for the Lancaster and Chester Railroad in Lancaster, South Carolina.

History

40 was ordered by the Lancaster and Chester Railroad of Lancaster, South Carolina from the Baldwin Locomotive Works and was completed on December 2, 1925. Very little is known about 40's career on the Lancaster & Chester other than that it was primarily used to haul textiles.
In 1947, 40 was sold to the 3.7 mile long Cliffside Railroad, a short line in North Carolina. During its entire tenure on the Cliffside, the relatively diminutive 80-ton 2-8-0 was the largest locomotive the railroad owned.
In 1962, the Cliffside Railroad sold the 40 to Steam Trains Inc., located in New Hope, Pennsylvania. 40 was moved to the Reading Company shops in St. Clair, PA with the rest of Steam Trains Inc.'s equipment, including their other steam locomotive, Canadian National Railway 4-6-0 No. 1533. In 1966, Steam Trains Inc. was reorganized as the New Hope & Ivyland Railroad and moved all of its equipment, including 40, to the former Reading Company yard in New Hope, PA.
Even though 40 was operational at the time, it only saw limited service in the summer of 1967 as stablemate 1533 was reportedly easier to run and fire and was more popular with engine crews. In 1974, 40 was rebuilt by the New Hope & Ivyland's new owners, the McHugh Brothers and returned to service. In the late 1970s in addition to 40 being taken out of service for repairs, the New Hope and Ivyland's passenger operations were handed over to the newly formed New Hope Steam Railway. From 1981 to 1986, 40 was the New Hope Steam Railway's workhorse, pulling the majority of their trains until the group's leadership changed in late 1986.
In 1990, the New Hope and Ivyland Railroad came under new ownership and 40 was rebuilt to operational condition by shop forces from the Strasburg Rail Road, returning to operation in June 1991.