Locomotives named after the Severn Valley Railway

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Locomotives named in honour of the Severn Valley Railway

31413 Severn Valley Railway

Built as a Class 30 A1A-A1A by Brush Traction of Loughborough, Works Number 313. Entered service in August 1961 as number D5812. Modified and reclassified as a Class 31 in June 1967. Renumbered to 31413 on 1 January 1973.[1]

31413 hauled a special service from Birmingham New Street to Kidderminster and Bewdley on Friday 22 April 1978. It was named “Severn Valley Railway” by Mr Sidney Newey, Director of Provincial Services for BR, at a ceremony at Bewdley.[2]

31233 Severn Valley Railway

Built as a Class 30 A1A-A1A by Brush Traction of Loughborough, Works Number 260. Entered service in October 1960 as number D5660. Modified and reclassified as a Class 31 in February 1967. Renumbered to 31233 on 1 January 1973.[3]

31233 Severn Valley Railway appeared at the Diesel Gala in May 1993.[4]

47828 Severn Valley Railway

Brush Class 47 Co-Co built in 1965. Variously numbered D1966, 47266, 47629 and 47828.[5][6]

While operated by Virgin Trains, 47828 was named at a ceremony at Kidderminster on 28 April 2001 during the 2001 Diesel Gala.[7] The full name was displayed as Severn Valley Railway Kidderminster Bewdley Bridgnorth, the longest name carried by any Class 47.[8]

By 2009 47828 was being operated by Cotswold Rail and had been renamed ‘Joe Strummer’.

66763 Severn Valley Railway

E.M.D. Class 66 Co-Co Number 66763 attended the Diesel Gala in May 2016, courtesy of GB Railfreight. The locomotive was given the name Severn Valley Railway at a ceremony during the gala.

220025 Severn Voyager

Bombardier Class 220 Voyager 220025 attended the 2002 Diesel Gala, courtesy of Virgin Trains. The unit was named Severn Voyager at the event, replacing its previous name ‘Virgin Voyager’[9]. As with all other units of the class, the name was removed on transfer to Cross Country trains in 2007 [10].

Locomotives names with local connections

Whilst not named after the SVR itself, the following locomotives have names relating to the area around the SVR.

GWR

A number of GWR classes of locomotive had themed names reflecting locations near (or not so near!) the company's lines.

Other

  • 6880 Betton Grange, a manor house located between Berrington and Shrewsbury. 6880 was planned but never built by the GWR, and is now under construction as a new-build locomotive at the Llangollen Railway.
  • Ironbridge No 1, Peckett 1803/1933. Worked at Ironbridge power station, now preserved at Foxfield Light Railway.
  • Ironbridge No 2, Peckett 1893/1936. Worked at Ironbridge power station, now preserved at Coleford GWR Museum.
  • Ironbridge No 3, Peckett 1990/1940. Worked at Ironbridge power station, now preserved at Telford Steam Railway.
  • Kinlet, Andrew Barclay 782/1896. Worked at Kinlet Colliery, now preserved at Blists Hill, Ironbridge Gorge Museum.
  • WD 193 Shropshire, Hunslet 3793/1953. Worked on the WD-operated Shropshire & Montgomeryshire Light Railway, named 'Shropshire' while a SVR resident. Now preserved at Ribble Steam Railway.
  • 31147 Floreat Salopia
  • 47822 Pride of Shrewsbury
  • 58005 Ironbridge Power Station
  • 58442 Ironbridge Power station
  • 67012 A Shropshire Lad

See also

References

Links

SVR Wiki

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Welcome to the Severn Valley Railway Wiki

From this week's featured article
Eardington is situated on Eardington Bank, mid-way between Bridgnorth and Hampton Loade. In recent years, rebuilding the platform was completed in 2019 and the water tower was dismantled in 2021. Although the station no longer features in daily operations, it resumed use during gala events in 2023 more than 40 years since regular timetabled trains ceased. (Full article...)
Schematic Map of the SVRSevern Valley Railway
BridgnorthEardingtonHampton LoadeCountry Park HaltHighleyThe Engine HouseArleyVictoria BridgeNorthwood HaltWyre Forest LineBewdleyStourport BranchBewdley TunnelConnection to Network RailKidderminsterMaps#Schematic maps of the pre-closure SVRMapandlinks3.png
Click on the map for a
larger interactive version

For 101 years between 1862 and 1963, the Severn Valley Railway formed part of the national railway network, running for 40 miles between Hartlebury and Shrewsbury. Established as a separate company, it was mainly operated by the Great Western Railway (GWRGreat Western Railway) and later by British Railways (BRBritish Rail or British Railways).

The present day Severn Valley Railway (SVRSevern Valley Railway) was established in 1965 to preserve part of the line as a heritage railway. Today it has six stations and two halts and runs for 16 miles along the Severn Valley between Bridgnorth in Shropshire and Kidderminster in Worcestershire, following the course of the River Severn for much of its route. Operations involve a mixture of steam and heritage diesel-hauled services.

This unofficial website is a project aimed to collect information and record events relating to the SVRSevern Valley Railway, both past and present.

For timetables, fare information, and news about special events, please visit the SVR Official Website. Other news and information of interest to members, shareholders and enthusiasts can be found on SVRLive.

In April 2023 the SVRSevern Valley Railway announced the launch of a Survival Fund to enable it to overcome the current financial crisis and implement longer-term plans for its future. Information and details of how to donate may be found on the SVRSevern Valley Railway's Survival Fund page.

Categories of article

History of the Severn Valley Railway

Current events on the SVRSevern Valley Railway

Information about the SVRSevern Valley Railway

Miscellaneous


Query Corner

Unsurprisingly, there are a large number of questions about the SVRSevern Valley Railway, both in pre-preservation days and for a number of historical items since then. Take a visit down to Query Corner to see if you have a recollection relating to some long forgotten event, or know of a reliable source (maybe an early edition of the SVR News?) that might have the information we need!

In addition are a number of stub articles requiring further input.

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