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GWR 4073 Class 5080 Defiant

GWR 4073 Class 5080 Defiant is a GWR 4073 Class steam locomotive built for the Great Western Railway at Swindon Works in May 1939. It was originally named Ogmore Castle.

Allocations

The following is a list of 5080's shed locations during her career with the GWR and British Railways over time.[1]

Renaming

Prior to 5080's transfer to Cardiff Canton from Swindon, the engine was renamed Defiant in January 1941, commemorating one of the many types of aircraft which had taken part in the Battle of Britain. The engines original name Ogmore Castle was also used on an earlier member of the class and later used by two sister engines; the name was originally allocated to 5056 before it was renamed Earl of Powis in Sept 1937. Following 5080's renaming, the Ogmore Castle was transferred to No. 7007 (later renamed Great Western in January 1948) and 7035.

British Railways

After the arrival of the Britannia Class Pacifics on the Western Region, it was moved to Carmarthen in 1959, staying there until its final move to Llanelli in May 1961.

Withdrawal and Preservation

It was withdrawn in April 1963 and acquired by Woodham Brothers scrapyard in Barry, Vale of Glamorgan, South Wales in October that year.[2]

It was sold to the Standard Gauge Steam Trust (since renamed Tyseley Locomotive Works), initially as spare parts for 7029 Clun Castle, and left as the 62nd departure from Barry in August 1974. Its restoration was completed in July 1987, and it ran for a number of years, appearing on various preserved lines such as the Llangollen Railway Easter 1996. After its boiler certificate expired in 1997, it was sent to be displayed at the Buckinghamshire Railway Centre, where it remained until May 2017 when it was returned to Tyseley.

Defiant is at present stored at Tyseley Locomotive Works, but makes appearances at Tyseley's open weekends as a static exhibit. A group called "The Defiant Club" are raising money to fund an overhaul of No. 5080 for a return to service on the mainline to work excursion trains.[3][4] As of March 2024, 5080's tender is undergoing overhaul with completion expected before the end of 2024 and the engines boiler is due to be assessed in 2024 to ascertain how much it will cost.[5] To speed up 5080's return to service, Tyseley's intention is to only overhaul the engines boiler and leave it's bottom-end intact. The engine will be overhauled only for use on heritage railways but once enough money has been raised to cover a full mechanical overhaul for 5080, the engine will be overhauled to mainline standards.[6]

Gallery

Below are a set of photos showing 5080 during its career with British Railways alongside its time at Barry Island and in preservation.

References

  1. ^ "5080's shed allocations for GWR & BR". BRDatabase.
  2. ^ Daniel, John (16 April 2013). "The Barry Scrapyard story, part 1". The Great Western Archive.
  3. ^ "5080: Defiant Club". Vintage Trains Ltd. Archived from the original on 18 April 2018. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  4. ^ "The Defiant Club" (PDF). Vintage Trains Ltd. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 April 2018. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  5. ^ 5080 Update Trackside issue 32 March 2024 page 13
  6. ^ 5080 Update on future Trackside issue 33 April 2024 page 9

External links