Sydney Steam Motor Tram

The Sydney Steam Motor Trams were built for and operated by the New South Wales Government Tramways of Australia.

NSWGT Steam Motor Trams
(Sydney)
Baldwin Tram Motor No. 7 at Balmain, New South Wales
ManufacturerBaldwin Locomotive Works
Randwick Tramway Workshops
Henry Vale
T. Wearne
DesignerBaldwin Locomotive Works
Constructed1879-1923
Number built123
Specifications
Train length17 feet 2 inches (5.23 m)
Width8 feet 6 inches (2.59 m)
Maximum speed20 km/h
Weight14 t 2 cwt
Track gauge4 feet 8+12 inches (1,435 mm) standard gauge

History

Sydney Steam motor and trailer car. 1879

Steam trams were introduced when four steam tram motors imported to Sydney as a temporary transport for the International Exhibition of 1879. It was built at the Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadelphia, United States and hauled double decker trailers conveying passengers from the Redfern railway terminus to near the Botanic Gardens. [1]

A Beyer, Peacock & Company steam tram of 1885 was sent to Australia in 1886 as a trial unit by the New South Wales Government Tramways (NSWGT) for comparison against the Baldwin steam tram. The Baldwin design prevailed and this engine returned to England in 1889 to become Beyer Peacock works shunter No. 2. The engine is rumoured to have fallen into the sea on its return voyage.[2]

Design

The steam tram motor is essentially a small enclosed saddle tank locomotive steam motor with four driving wheels in an 0-4-0 arrangement. A wooden cab encloses the entire locomotive, which features five windows along each side. Access to the cab is through doors from either the front or back platform. The tram is powered by an orthodox locomotive type boiler, American bar type framing, conventional "D" type slide valves and spring suspension. Coke and later coal was carried in a bunker on the rear platform and water in the semi-circular saddle tank.

Typical specifications for an 11" Baldwin steam tram motor:

  • Cylinders: 11" diameter x 16" stroke
  • Tractive Effort: 120 psi steam, 5,500 lb at 10 mph
  • Weight: 14 tons 2 cwt
  • Length: 17 feet 2 inches
  • Width: 8 feet 6 inches

Service

The Redfern to Botanic Gardens tramway was planned to operate for the duration of the exhibition. Proving so popular an extension to Randwick was opened in 1880. The peak of steam working was reached during 1894, when the length of the tramway reached 40 miles (64.7 km) when there were over 100 steam trams in service. In 1905-6 steam tram routes were replaced by electric trams with steam trams gradually relegated to outer suburbs.

Steam trams also operated on regional New South Wales tramways at Newcastle,[3] Maitland,[4] and Broken Hill.[5]

The Steam Tram Motors in service were:

Steam Tram Motors
BuilderDateCyl Diam.Original Nos.Total
Baldwin187911 inch1-44
Baldwin188011 inch5-106
Baldwin188110 inch11, 13, 15-18, 267
Baldwin188111 inch12, 14, 19-259
Baldwin18819 inch27-304
Baldwin18829 inch31-333
Baldwin188211 inch34-41 (*)8
Baldwin188210 inch44, 452
Baldwin188310 inch46, 47-49, 51-54, 56, 57 (**)10
Baldwin188411 inch58-69 (***)12
Baldwin188511 inch77-9620
Baldwin189111 inch76 (2nd), 97, 98-11015
Henry Vale189011 inch50 (2nd), 70 (2nd), 757
Henry Vale189111 inch5 (2nd), 12 (2nd), 13 (2nd), 27 (2nd), 28 (2nd), 76 (2nd)6
T. Wearne188410 inch761
T. Wearne188610 inch97 (2nd)1
Randwick Workshops191611 inch126A-128A3
Randwick Workshops191711 inch129A, 130A2
Randwick Workshops192311 inch131A, 132A2
Randwick Workshops1957body only built for processions1

(*) Numbers 42 and 43 were two Kitson steam motors,[6] ordered in 1881,[7] that were unreliable in service.[8]

(**) Number 55 was an experimental steam motor, made by Merryweather & Sons, that arrived in 1881.[9][10]

(***) Numbers 70 to 75 were six 'Baldwin-Downe' steam motors, delivered 1883—1884, that were first bogies of combined motor-passenger cars known as 'Jumbos'.[3][11][12]

Demise and Preservation

The last NSWGT steam motor was withdrawn from service in 1937 and replaced by a trolley bus service. Preserved trams are:

The Beyer Peacock steam motor, known as "John Bull", survives at the National Tramway Museum.[2]

See also

  • McCarth & Chinn, "New South Wales Tramcar Handbook 1861-1961", 1974 SPER
  • Burke, David, "Juggernaut: A story of Sydney in the wild Days of the Steam Trams", Kangaroo Press, Roseville, N.S.W.,1997.
  • McCarthy, Ken, 'The Era of the Steam Tramway' in "Trolley Wire ", April 1973, Vol. 14 No.2.

References

  1. MacCowan, Ian. The Tramways of New South Wales.
  2. "The "Odd-Ball" Steam Tram Motor" (PDF).
  3. Newcastle to Plattsburg by Steam Tram The Trials and Tribulations of 1887 Trolley Wire issue 168 February 1977 pages 3-15
  4. "NSWGT, A-Class Steam Tram Motors 6A & 30A with trailers, preparing to depart Maitland for Newcastle, following the Maitland system's closure on 4 January 1927". Living Histories. Retrieved 10 September 2021.
  5. McCarthy, Ken (October 1983). "Trolley Wire, Steaming Down Argent Street" (PDF). Sydney Tramway Museum. pp. 3 to 12.
  6. McCarthy, K. (February 1981). "WORKING ON THE TRAMS IN THE 1880 s" (PDF). Trolley Wire. 192: 14.
  7. "PARLIAMENT". Daily Telegraph. 24 August 1881. p. 3. Retrieved 10 September 2021.
  8. "NEWS OF THE DAY". Sydney Morning Herald. 28 June 1883. p. 7. Retrieved 10 September 2021.
  9. "NSWGT, Experimental Merryweather Steam Tram Motor No. 55, Sydney suburbs, [1900s]". Living Histories. Retrieved 10 September 2021.
  10. "Tramway Locomotive". Daily Telegraph. 29 April 1881. p. 4. Retrieved 10 September 2021.
  11. "THE SYDNEY TRAMWAYS". Argus. 29 November 1883. Retrieved 11 October 2021.
  12. "A Compound Tramway Motor for Australia". Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser. 29 September 1883. Retrieved 11 October 2021.
  13. "Steam Tram Motor No. 1A, 1898". Powerhouse Museum.
  14. Steaming Down Argent Street - A History of the Broken Hill Steam Tramways 1902-1926.
  15. "Tram 103a". Valley Heights Steam Tramway.
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