Southern Railway 542

Southern Railway 542 is a steam locomotive built in 1903 by the Baldwin Locomotive Works for the Southern Railway. It is a 2-8-0 Consolidation of Southern's J class.[1]

Southern Railway 542
No. 542 sitting at the North Carolina Transportation Museum roundhouse prior to restoration.
Type and origin
Power typeSaturated Steam
BuilderBaldwin Locomotive Works
Serial number22570
Build date1903
Specifications
Configuration:
  Whyte2-8-0
Gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
Driver dia.57 in (1.448 m)
Fuel typeCoal
Boiler pressure200 psi (1.38 MPa)
CylindersTwo, with Outside Admission D-valves
Cylinder size21 in × 28 in (533 mm × 711 mm)
Valve gearStephenson
Performance figures
Tractive effort37,485 lbf (166.74 kN)
Career
OperatorsSouthern Railway
ClassJ
NumbersSOU 542
A&Y 542
RetiredJuly 1953
Current ownerNorth Carolina Transportation Museum
DispositionOn static display in Spencer, North Carolina

History

542 first operated in North Carolina on the Southern Railway in 1903, between the cities of Statesville and Winston-Salem. It was one of twenty-five similar locomotives built by Baldwin Locomotive Works in 1903 for the Southern to haul freight.

Between April 3–6, and August 23 - 24th, 1937, the locomotive was leased to the Atlantic and Yadkin Railway (A&Y), a subsidiary company of Southern Railroad. In June 1946, the A&Y requested #542 once more, this time in replacement of its sibling locomotive #531, a locomotive leased to the A&Y by Southern. Although 542 needed $6,000.00 in boiler work, the A&Y convinced Southern, after several weeks of negotiations, to lease the locomotive. 542 was delivered a second time to the A&Y on June 14, 1946 and was transferred to lease in place of 531.[2] After the A&Y ceased operations in 1950, #542 returned to the Southern.

After returning to Southern, 542's final assignment was being rostered in Spencer as a yard goat. 542 stayed on the job until July 1953 when it was retired from a revenue life of 50 years. In 1954, the Southern donated the locomotive to the Tanglewood Park in Clemmons, North Carolina for static display.

542 remained in Clemmons until 1991, when it was traded for the ex-Illinois Central 0-8-0 #1894 by the North Carolina Transportation Museum. The locomotive was eventually given a cosmetic restoration, in order to be presentable to the general public at the N.C. Transportation Museum (NCTM) in Spencer, North Carolina. In 2007, the locomotive was renumbered to 604 while using a tender from a Buffalo Creek and Gauley 2-8-0, in order to appear for the movie Leatherheads. As of 2022, the locomotive has been renumbered back to 542, and is on static display in Spencer, NC.[3]

References


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