0-4-4T Class H SECR Profile and Models

0-4-4T Class H SECR

263 on the Bluebell Railway in April 2018. ©Peter Skuce

The South Eastern and Chatham Railway (SECR) H Class is a class of 0-4-4T steam locomotive originally designed for suburban passenger work, designed by Harry Wainwright in 1904. Most of the sixty-six members of the class were later equipped for push-pull working for use on rural branch lines. The majority of the class replaced Q class locomotives on the London suburban services of the SER and remained on these duties until after they entered Southern Railway stock in 1923. They began to be displaced by the electrification of these lines in 1925/6, when they began to be used on stopping trains further afield in the Eastern Section of Southern Railway in Kent. 64 entered British Railways stock in 1948. Forty five of the survivors were equipped for push-pull train working between 1949 and 1960, and the class was increasingly used on motor-trains on rural branches. One has been preserved.

(Information provided via Wikipedia)

Type of Locomotive

Steam

Builder

SECR Ashford Works

Build Date

1904 to 1915

Total Built

66

Tractive Effort

17,360 lbf

Wheel Configuration

0-4-4T

Operated By

South Eastern & Chatham Railway
Southern Railway
British Railways

Main Duties

Local Passenger

In Service Until

1964

Surviving Examples

1