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LMR 600 Gordon

181 bytes added, 11:20, 11 July 2023
Add note, TVR 85 previously carried the Gordon name
The locomotive was the second of the class, built at the North British Locomotive Company's Hyde Park Works in Glasgow as works number 25437. It entered service in December 1943 as War Department No. 3651. During 1944 it was renumbered 73651 following an instruction to increase the WD numbers by 70,000.<ref name=Rowledge16/> Although the majority of the 2-10-0 class were shipped overseas, 73651 only saw wartime service in Great Britain.
Post-War, the locomotive was mainly confined to the [[:Category:Rolling stock associated with the Longmoor Military Railway|Longmoor Military Railway]] where it was used by the Royal Engineers as a driver-training engine and for other general duties. It was given the Army number 600 in 1956<ref>[[Bibliography#Other References|Rowledge (1987)]] p. 49.</ref> and was named after the Royal Engineers' famous General, Charles Gordon ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_George_Gordon|General Gordon of Khartoum]). <ref group="note">An earlier carrier of that name was [[Steam Locomotives visiting the SVR for galas#2000-2009|Taff Vale Railway 0-6-2T No 85]], which visited the SVR in 2003.</ref> During the 'Suez crisis' in the same year, Gordon was reputed to have worked highly secret overnight trains carrying Government materials between Longmoor and Southampton Docks, crewed by the Army and accompanied by a BR pilotman.<ref>[[Bibliography#Other References|Rowledge (1987)]] p. 52.</ref>
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