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GWR Route: Banbury to Wolverhampton

Fenny Compton: gwrfc1853

GWR 38xx Class 4-4-0 No 3835 'County of Devon' passes through Fenny Compton on an up express service

GWR 38xx Class 4-4-0 No 3835 'County of Devon' passes through Fenny Compton on an up express service. Known to railwaymen as 'Churchwards rough riders', the 'County' class of locomotives looked very much like a shortened version of the 'Saint' class. The reason for the design was to work the cross country services on the Shrewsbury to Hereford line, a line which was jointly owned by the GWR and the London and North Western Railway. The LNWR refused to allow 4-6-0 locomotives on this line and so Churchward designed an engine with enough power in reserve should the need arise for it's use on other lines, but as Sir William Stanier noted that "Churchward was not going to be instructed by Webb, the Locomotive Superintendent of the LNWR, and designed an engine that had plenty of power to run the service but which had a front end too powerful for the wheelbase". The first two batches of 1904 and 1906 were built with the square frame ends whereas the last batch were fitted with the curved framing. Previous versions were then modified to the newer design. As with most other GWR engines, superheating was added from 1909 and top feed from 1911. As common with other 4 - 4 - 0 locomotives of this period, greater reliance was given to 4 - 6 - 0 locomotives for express passenger services and 2 - 6 - 0 Moguls for other mixed traffic work, and withdrawals began in February 1930 with number 3833 County of Dorset. The last engine to be withdrawn was number 3834 County of Somerset in November 1933.

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