Canadian National class S 2-8-2
Canadian National Railway (CN) Class S locomotives were a Class of 2-8-2 wheel arrangement in the Whyte notation, or 1′D1′ in UIC classification. These locomotives were designed for 16° operating curvature. The first examples of this very successful class were built for the Grand Trunk Railway in 1913. Major purchases of the class continued through 1924. Sub-classes S-3 and S-4 employed higher pressure boilers with smaller diameter cylinders to achieve similar tractive effort with higher efficiency. The class remained in freight service until the final replacement of steam with diesel-electric locomotives. 53 were renumbered between 4045 and 4097 in 1956.[1]
Canadian National class S | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Sub-classes
Sub-class | Builder | Works numbers | Dates | CN numbers | Notes[1] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
S-1-a | CLC | 1353–1402 | 1916–1917 | 3200–3249 | 50 built as CGR numbers 2800–2849
3239 preserved in Canadian Railway Museum. preserved. Rest scrapped |
S-1-b | CLC | 1459–1508 | 1917–1918 | 3250–3299 | 50 built as CGR numbers 2850–2899. 3254 preserved in Steamtown.
Rest scrapped |
S-1-c | MLW | 58347–58376 | 1917 | 3300–3329 | 30 built as CGR numbers 2900–2929 |
S-1-d | CLC | 1535–1594 | 1918–1919 | 3330–3389 | 60 built as CGR numbers 2930–2989. 3377 source parts for 3254. Rest scrapped |
S-1-e | CLC | 1673–1687 | 1920–1921 | 3390–3404 | 15 built |
S-1-f | ALCO | 52788–52812 | 1913 | 3405–3429 | 25 built as GT numbers 500–524 |
S-1-f | BLW | 40210–40211 40255–40258 40269–40274 40339–40342 40365–40370 40379–40381 |
1913 | 3430–3454 | 25 built as GT numbers 525–549 |
S-1-f | MLW | 53920–53969 | 1913 | 3455–3504 | 50 built as GT numbers 550–599 |
S-1-g | CLC | 1449–1458 | 1917 | 3505–3514 | 10 built as GT numbers 485–494 |
S-1-g | ALCO | 59950–59954 | 1918 | 3515–3519 | [lower-alpha 1] 5 built as GT numbers 480–484 |
S-1-h | ALCO | 58315–58319 | 1918 | 3520–3524 | [lower-alpha 1] 5 built as GT numbers 495–499 |
S-1-j | CN | 53928, 53954 | 1926 | 3198–3199 | [lower-alpha 2] 2 built |
S-2-a | MLW | 64475–64509 | 1923 | 3525–3559 | 35 built but S-2-a 3538 was wreck in 1950 Canoe River train crash |
S-2-b | CLC | 1712–1721 | 1923 | 3560–3569 | 10 built |
S-2-c | MLW | 65633–65662 | 1924 | 3570–3599 | 30 built |
S-3-a | ALCO | 59563–59577 60300–60324 |
1918 | 3700–3739 | [lower-alpha 3] 40 USRA Light Mikados built as GT numbers 440–479. 3734 preserved. |
S-3-b | ALCO | 64510–64517 | 1923 | 3740–3747 | [lower-alpha 3][lower-alpha 4]8 built |
S-3-c | ALCO | 65317–65326 | 1924 | 3748–3757 | [lower-alpha 3]10 built |
S-4-a | CN | 1623 | 1930 | 3800 | [lower-alpha 2][lower-alpha 5] 1 built |
S-4-b | CLC | 1914–1918 | 1936 | 3801–3805 | [lower-alpha 5] 5 built |
Preservation
Number 3239 was preserved by the Canadian Railway Historical Association. Number 3254 by W.F. Barron of Ashland, Pennsylvania. No. 3254 first operated in excursion service at the Gettysburg Railroad in Gettysburg and Mount Holly Springs from 1985 until being put into storage again in 1986, it was then sold to Steamtown National Historic Site in Scranton were it ran from 1987 to 2012 when it was taken out of service indefinitely due to severe frame issues. No. 3377 was first owned by the Edaville Railroad, but soon moved to Steamtown, and eventually became a source of spare parts for No. 3254. Number 3734 (renumbered 4070) is now owned by the Midwestern Railway Preservation Society in ex Baltimore and Ohio Railroad roundhouse in Cleveland Ohio.
Notes and references
- Numbers 3515–3517 and 3520–3523 were converted to 0-8-2 switchers in 1936 and 1937
- Built in Canadian National Railway Pointe-Saint-Charles shops
- Boiler pressure increased to 200 lbf/in2 (1.4 MPa) and cylinder diameter reduced to 26 inches (660 mm).
- Ordered as GT numbers 600–607, but delivered to CN
- Boiler pressure increased to 265 lbf/in2 (1.83 MPa) and cylinder diameter reduced to 24 inches (610 mm).
- Clegg, Anthony; Corley, Ray (1969). Canadian National Steam Power. Trains & Trolleys: Montreal. pp. 91–95.