Ajax (locomotive)

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Locomotives named Ajax have included:

  • L&MR 29 Ajax (1832), an 0-2-2
  • L&SR Ajax (1838), an 0-4-2
  • GWR Ajax (1838), a broad gauge Premier class 0-6-0; withdrawn 1871.
  • KFNB Ajax (Jones, Turner and Evans, 1841), one of a pair of 0-4-2 locomotive built for the Emperor Ferdinand Northern Railway, believed to be the oldest preserved steam locomotive on the European mainland; displayed in the Technisches Museum Wien
  • L&SWR 41 Ajax (Jones, Turner & Evans, 1841) a Hercules I class 0-4-2 goods locomotive
  • MS&LR 24 Ajax (1846), a 2-2-2 locomotive
  • ELR 17 (1847), a Pegasus class
  • SSR 21 (1855)
  • L&SWR 41 Ajax (Nine Elms, 1855) a Hercules II class 2-4-0, withdrawn 1883
  • LC&DR Ajax (1860) a Dido class 0-6-0, later numbered 144
  • SDR Ajax, (Slaughter, Grüning & Co. 395 of 1860) one of the eight South Devon Railway Dido class broad gauge 0-6-0ST locomotives, later GWR 2149; withdrawn 1884.[1]
  • Logan and Hemingway (civil engineering contractors) 5 Ajax (1864), later sold to the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway
  • L&SWR 41 Ajax (Nine Elms 124 of 1874) a Vesuvius II class 2-4-0 passenger locomotive
  • L&NWR 509 (Crewe Works 2799 of 1885), a Dreadnought class 2-2-2-0 passenger locomotive scrapped in 1904.[2]
  • Woolwich Arsenal Ajax, an 18-inch gauge 0-4-0T
  • L&NWR 639 Ajax (Crewe Works 4445 of 1904), an LNWR Precursor class 4-4-0, later LMS 5190; withdrawn 1928
  • Ajax (Andrew Barclay Sons & Co. 1605 of 1918), an 0-6-T preserved on the Isle of Wight Steam Railway as their No. 38
  • LMSR 6139 Ajax (North British Locomotive Co. 23634 of 1927), an LMS Royal Scot Class 4-6-0 express locomotive, Renamed The Welch Regiment in 1936, rebuilt in 1946 and withdrawn 1962
  • LMS 5689 Ajax (Crewe Works 287 [second series] of 1936), an LMS Jubilee Class express locomotive, withdrawn 1964
  • Chatham Dockyard Trust Ajax (Robert Stephenson & Hawthorns 7042 of 1941), built for Chatham Dockyard. Preserved.
  • BR D446, later 50046 (English Electric 3816 and Vulcan Foundry D1187 of 1968), one of the fifty class 50s, all of which were named after warships

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ Reed (1953), p. B38.
  2. ^ Baxter (1979), p. 195.

Cited sources[edit]

  • Baxter, Bertram (1979). Baxter, David (ed.). British Locomotive Catalogue 1825–1923, Volume 2B: London and North Western Railway and its constituent companies. Ashbourne, Derbyshire: Moorland Publishing Company. ISBN 0-903485-84-2.
  • Pike, Jim (2000). Locomotive Names: an illustrated dictionary. Stroud: Sutton Publishing Limited. p. 2. ISBN 0-7509-2284-2.
  • Reed, P. J. T. (February 1953). White, D. E. (ed.). The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway, Part 2: Broad Gauge. Kenilworth: RCTS. ISBN 0-901115-32-0.