With 985 having left, Beamish has had something of a void on the working steam railway engine in the town, so they had the one time North Yorkshire Moors resident Salmon visit for/over Easter. Salmon being on the move from the Swindon & Cricklade Railway to the Royal Deeside Railway based on part of the Balleter branch near Aberdeen. So here goes my motarge of Salmon at Beamish running with the former Great Eastern Inspection Saloon;
Thankfully the label "advertising" the Royal Deeside outfit is of the "fridge magnet" type sticker and can be moved/removed with out damaging the paintwork and by chance is just the right size to cover Salmons' name painted on the tankside!
Nice photos, is that the ex Aberdeen Gas Works one which was at Tanfield?
Stuart
A fool is a person who makes false conclusions from right principles; whereas a madman, on the contrary, draws right conclusions from wrong principles [Encyclopedia Britannica 1797]
Unfortunately not it and another called I think Swordfish were a pair built for one of the ironstone quarries in Northamptonshire. Mind you I not sure how many there were other than minimum of two built in 1941-2. Salmon was first preserved in the early years on the North Yorkshire Moors Railway being their No2 with Mirvale [now at the Middleton in Leeds] as No1 and a Burrows Well Tank Nellie from Wallsend Slipway as No3 now at Tanfield. Unfortunately none were suitable for major service on the Moors hauling 5-8 coach sets from Grosmont to Pickering and back. Nellies main claim to fame is when operating one of the "members" specials with one of the Hull & Barnsley Coaches it "Blew off" it's smokebox door as she had been converted to burn oil. The flame went out flooding the tubes/smokebox with a highly flamable vapour as it was quite hot still in the firebox vapourising the oil, which when it re-ignited, it "exploded" with spectacular results.
Last edited by 2392 on Sun Jun 21, 2015 5:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.