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Great War truck

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OK, this photo is quite interesting as it covers a multitude of topics. It is relevant to WW1 but what is it and as it would also make an ideal candidate for a caption contest you could have a go at that as well if you like.

 

Tim (too)

 

DSCN0977.jpg

Edited by Great War truck
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Guest catweazle (Banned Member)

Who knows what islands of the welsh coast had narrow gauge track for shifting supplies,and where did we get them from.

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Miniature railway based on the Military narrow gauge railways used on the Western Front?

 

Yes you and NOS just about have it. Father and Steve are both members of the seven and a quarter inch society. Now before you ask that is the guage of the model railway and nothing else that you might have been thinking of.

 

There has been a rise in interest in models of military narrow gauge locos and rolling stock. These two bogie wagons are models of WW1 German narrow gauge bogies for carrying trees. The owner brought them over to a show in the UK from Germany and then sourced some local logs to put on them. I dont think anybody anticipated him and his wife laying on them.

 

I did like the idea about the Swan Vestas though.

 

Tim (too)

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Unfortunately I managed to lose the digital camera with photos that I had of it in steam on the demonstation line at Didcot in the summer.

 

But how many surviving standard gauge engines served in France in WW1, I can think of the E4 and two of the P class locos on the Bluebell, did the NRM's Dean Goods serve in France? Any others?

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The Baldwin 778 4-6-0 narrow gauge is a WW1 survivor and was steamed in 2007 at the Leigthon Buzzard Railway, Northants.

 

From the railway website >> http://www.buzzrail.co.uk/

 

 

 

778

Type: 4-6-0T (side tank)

Date: 1917

Builder: Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadelphia, USA (Works No. 44656)

One of 495 locomotives built by Baldwin, for the War Department Light Railways. They operated on the thousands of miles of narrow-gauge tracks that supplied the front line trenches in the First World War. It then worked in India until the 1980s, finishing at the Upper India Sugar Mills in Uttar Pradesh. The first of its type to steam in Britain since the 1940s, it entered service in 2007, following a major overhaul.

 

The number of men who fought in the First World War, and survived, is now down to just a handful. As the last living links with that momentous era finally vanish, the restoration to working order of some of the equipment they used becomes even more important, to allow future generations to understand what went on.

 

Central to the war in the trenches was the massive network of narrow-gauge railways, which was built to supply the front lines on both sides. Among the companies providing equipment to the War Department Light Railways were the Baldwin Locomotive Works, of Philadelphia, USA, and the Motor Rail & Tramcar Company of Bedford, England.

 

A working First World War Baldwin steam engine was last seen in Britain in the 1940s. Now War Department Light Railways No 778 is back in working order, and was launched into public service on 19th August 2007--almost 60 years to the day since the last time an engine of this type hauled passengers in Britain.

 

Now attention switches to WDLR No 2182, the only known survivor of the small number of Motor Rail 40hp “Simplex” petrol locomotives built with full armour plating, and in original mechanical condition. It has so far received cosmetic restoration, and an appeal to return it to full working order will be launched later in 2009.

Edited by CommanderChuff
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