However, I believe that age should not be the primary
issue when policy makers consider renewing rolling stock. The main factors
should be how much work trains are undertaking each year, their ability to be
upgraded when the business and trading environments change, and their capacities.
Indeed, while the 455s are getting on now, unlike their compartmented
predecessors the ‘open’ seating arrangement they were originally built with makes
them far more suitable for upgrading. Furthermore, there seems to be no reason
to dispose of them when they are mechanically sound, especially given that last
November SWT won the ‘Golden Spanner’ award for their reliability.[1]
Naturally, the link between rolling stock ages and
renewals is one that has been approached by railway managers since the industry’s
beginnings. As an illustration of this I will look at William George Beattie’s
tenure as the London and South Western Railway’s (L&SWR) Locomotive Superintendent
between 1871 and 1877. Beattie was employed by the company in 1862 as a draughtsman
and was later placed in charge of the company’s hydraulic equipment.[2] Therefore,
it seems unusual that a man with no locomotive design experience should be
placed in charge of the company’s locomotive department. However, there was one
factor in his favour. His father, Joseph, was the L&SWR’s locomotive
superintendent between 1850 and 1871. He had great talent and I presume the
directors felt that his son would have inherited some of his skill.
The directors were mistaken. Poor William should never
have been appointed and was the most inept locomotive superintendent the
company ever had. While he ran the company’s locomotive department
shambolically, the most serious problem was that he was not attuned to the
company’s locomotive traction needs in a time when passenger numbers were
increasing massively.[3] Indeed, between 1871 and 1877 the number of passengers
the L&SWR conveyed rose by 68.3% from 14,347,577 to 24,142,851.[4]
It could be said that part of Beattie’s failing was that the
rate of locomotive renewals slowed. The number of locomotives the company had
in its possession only increased between 1871 and 1877 from 272 to 377 (38.6%).
Furthermore, the average age of locomotives went from 8.54 to 9.90 years over
the same period. Lastly, when Beattie was superintendent only 1.09 locomotives
were renewed per year. Yet, between 1878 and 1882 under his successor, Adams, the
rate was 1.76. Nevertheless, despite these facts, the slowing of the renewal
rate wasn’t actually a serious problem for the company, as on average the
number of train miles each locomotive ran per year dropped between 1871 and
1877 from 24,154 to 22,834 miles.[5]
The real problem was the quality and suitability of the new
locomotives Beattie introduced. He perpetuated his father’s antiquated and small
locomotive designs, which, while suitable in the 1860s, became unsuitable in
the 1870s with the increased traffic numbers. Thus, trains were slower as the
number of carriages in each increased.[6] The noted railway commentator,
William Acworth, commented that ‘engines which had been in the van of progress
were mere pigmies by the side of the giants of the present time.’[7]
But his failings didn’t stop there. When in 1876 he could
no longer rely on his father’s designs, and because the company needed heavier
models, he was forced to design a heavier new locomotive type. However, ordered
twenty locomotives without a prototype and these were subsequently recognised
as monumental failures suffering problems in both design and construction.
Indeed, Bradley argued that Beattie had inadequate knowledge of locomotive design
to meet the L&SWR’s needs.[8]
Therefore, this historical case reinforces the fact that when
considering issues surrounding locomotive renewals, the age of rolling stock
should not be the primary concern. Rather, rolling stock’s suitability for the
trading environment and whether they meet the needs of the operators is far more
important.
----------------------
[2] The National Archives [TNA], RAIL 411/492, Clerical
staff character book No. 2, 1838-1919, p.62
[3] Bradley, D.L., L&SWR Locomotives: The Early
Engines 1838-53 and Beattie Classes, (Didcot, 1989), p.5-6
[4] Board of Trade Returns, 1871 and 1877
[5] TNA, RAIL 411/470, Locomotives, boilers, rolling
stock, etc: correspondence, 1882-1884, Statement of Engine Stock, renewals of
same and train Mileage during the past 14 years., Undated, p.59
[6] Bradley, L&SWR Locomotives: The Early Engines,
p.5-6
[7] Acworth, William, ‘The South-Western Railway,’
Murray's Magazine, Vol.3 No.18 (1888, June) p.802
[8] Bradley, L&SWR Locomotives: The Early Engines,
p.5-6
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