An ordinary day… that turned out to be an historic occasion for Geoff White
article by: Ian Crowder

Reunion: Geoff White, a former fireman at Old Oak Common and now a volunteer on the Honeybourne Line, fired the last steam locomotive built for British Railways, on its first revenue-earning service: a fitted freight to London. Nearly half a century later, he is pictured here with that locomotive, no. 92220 Evening Star, which is on display at its Swindon birthplace in STEAM: The Museum of the Great Western Railway. Unlike its 250 sisters, Evening Star carries British Railways express green livery and its chimney is graced by a Great Western-style copper cap. Note that the smokebox number plate is made of brass, instead of the usual cast iron. This was also the only member of its class to carry a name (sister engine 92203 was named Black Prince when bought from BR by its owner, David Shepherd). Underneath the name plate is a plaque commemorating the fact that this was the last locomotive built by British Railways. Reference in the article is also made to shed codes – you can see the small oval plate on the lower half of the smokebox door. This reads 50A, which was York although the engine’s first allocation was Cardiff Canton (86C). Evening Star underlined its celebrity status when it worked The Red Dragon express (the headboard of which the engine is carrying in this photograph) on a few occasions and on one day was noted touching 90mph. When Western Region control learned of this they soon put a stop to ‘freight engines’ working express passenger trains. 92220 celebrates her 50th birthday in March 2010 (Photograph: Paul Stratford)

Geoff ('Chalkie') White is a senior driver, trainer, engineer
and highly respected member of the locomotive department at the
Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway. He is steeped in steam:
he joined British Railways in August 1953 at Leamington Spa (84D)*,
working his way through the firing links, moving to London and
becoming a fireman at Old Oak Common (81A)*, the former Great
Western Railway's premier shed, on 18th March .
It was while at Old Oak Common that Geoff first
encountered the last steam locomotive built for British Railways,
no. 92220 Evening Star - although at the time, he didn't
appreciate the significance of the engine.
Old Oak Common had a huge allocation of mostly Great Western
locomotive classes, as well as some BR Standard 9F 2-10-0s.
No. 92220 Evening Star was delivered new to Old Oak Common
where it stayed for a short time, before moving to its first shed
allocation at Cardiff Canton (86C)*. In fact, while at
Canton, Evening Star acquitted itself well with some turns
on the crack 'Red Dragon' express to Paddington achieving speeds of
up to 90mph, until Control got wind of a freight engine being used
for an express turn - but that's another story.
Geoff recalls his encounter very well and this is his reflection
of what was in retrospect, a quite remarkable occasion. The
date was Saturday, 2nd April 1960.
"I'd booked on to Old Oak as 9 o'clock spare, which meant that I
could find myself doing almost anything - or nothing. But
sometimes these turns produced a surprise and today was to be one
of the biggest surprises of all, even though on the face of it, it
was a quite ordinary job.
"I was in the mess room when the foreman came in and peered
through the cigarette-smoke fug looking for me and a spare driver,
a decent bloke called Jack Wiggins (who we used to call the 'Black
Prince' because never changed his overalls until they were
black!). He told us we were to go to Swindon 'on the
cushions' and pick up a freight engine - a 9F - although that's all
we knew about the engine, and bring it back.
"Well, that's quite a nice job really, a comfy ride down to
Swindon and an easy light-engine working back to the shed, so off
we went.
"We arrived at Swindon shed and booked on with the Foreman who
just said: 'Oh, the engine's a new Nine, no. 92220, it's out in the
yard, help yourself."
"So we signed the paperwork and went to find the Nine, a class
that we knew Swindon was turning out at the time. Jack and I
looked round the yard looking for a plain black Nine, but couldn't
see one although we did spot a green loco with a nameplate which we
assumed was a Britannia pacific. It's only when we looked
more closely that we saw that it had ten driving wheels and was the
Nine we'd come to collect.
"I said to Jack, 'What's going on here? Swindon turning
out freight engines in green and look! It's even got a copper
cap on the chimney!' Anyway, there it was, all shining and
new so I tidied the fire ready for our easy trip back to
London. We rolled out to the shed exit and called the
Bobby. 'Light engine for Old Oak,' I announced.
" 'Oh no you're not,' the Bobby (signalman) replied.
'You've got a fitted freight to take back with you.'
"So that was the first revenue-earning turn for Evening
Star but I still didn't realise the significance of the loco.
I didn't know that this was the last engine built for British
Railways and that it was specially turned out in green and named to
mark the occasion."
In fact, 92220 was completed in March 1960 and officially named
Evening Star by K.W.C. Grand, on behalf of British
Transport Commission, following a competition amongst staff at
Swindon Works. As well as the last steam locomotive completed
for British Railways, it was also the 999th British
Railways 'Standard'** locomotive to be built.
Following the glare of publicity and the popping of Champagne
corks, the engine was put on public display in Swindon Works.
And a fine sight it made too, because a 9F is a very impressive
machine with its ten-coupled wheels, high running board and
high-pitched boiler. The 251st member of the class
and the only one named was painted in fully-lined-out express green
livery, complete with copper-capped chimney - in stark contrast to
its 250 plain black sisters. Ironically, Evening
Star is now back at its birth place, again on public display
at STEAM: The Museum of the Great Western Railway, where it will
spend its 50th birthday in March 2010. 2010 is also the
year that marks the 175th anniversary of the founding of
the Great Western Railway.
Geoff continues: "We had an uneventful run back to London and
took the loco back to Old Oak shed. The next day, the foreman
asked driver George Coles and I to pull the engine out of the shed
and we used pannier tank no. 8773 for the job. George said
that 'it was for the photographers'. So we positioned
Evening Star for all the press photographers who were
asking us to pose in front of it. It was only then that I
noticed and read the little plaque under the nameplate on the smoke
deflector." The plaque reads:
No. 92220 built at Swindon
March 1960
The last steam locomotive for British Railways
Named at Swindon on March 18 1960 by
K.W.C. Grand, Esq.
Member of the British Transport Commission
"That trip was my one and only encounter with Evening
Star. The engine stayed with us for a couple of weeks
and worked some specials before going to its home shed in Cardiff.
Interesting to say, the first members of the class I saw were
four members of the class in grey paint, being towed through
Banbury - quite a sight.
"But seeing that plaque really brought home that steam was
coming to an end and there were all sorts of rumours about engines
being withdrawn and the first diesels taking over. And it did
begin to change. I finished in 1962 after a trip on a '600'
Warship diesel to Wolverhampton - I had mistakenly thought that a
digit had been missed off the roster board and that it was the
usual 'King' - but it wasn't. I and many other footplate crew
really didn't like the diesels and left the railway. I found
a career in engineering instead but that is another story for
another day."
Evening Star was withdrawn in 1965, after just five
years of revenue-earning service and was subsequently acquired by
the National Collection.
There are a few 9Fs still surviving, and 92203 Black
Prince (named by its owner, David Shepherd, after he bought it
from British Railways in 1967) being a regular performer on the
Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway. 922203 was built in
1959, the 17th-to-last of the class.
Most of the 9Fs performed their designed-for task very well but
for much less than a decade before most went under the cutter's
torch - well short of the 30 years originally expected of
them. That fate would certainly have met Black
Prince if it had not been for the intervention of David
Shepherd.
You can follow the links below for the story of the 9F class and
of Black Prince.
* These are shed codes. Each locomotive depot had a shed
code and for the former Great Western Railway, the codes were in
the 80, each with an alpha suffix, 'A' being the principal shed in
a particular geographic group. Click
here for the full list of British Railways Western
Region shed codes and their un-numbered sub-sheds (for example,
Cheltenham was a sub-shed of Gloucester).
**There were 12 British Railways standard class locomotives, all
incorporating common design principles and introduced from
1951. They were intended to replace many ageing classes
throughout the UK and provide a modern fleet of steam locomotives
to carry British Railways though to a gradual transition to modern
traction. The Standard locomotives were distributed
throughout the national network. They ranged from Class 2 -
both tender and tank locomotive versions - through to the 9Fs,
although with the Modernisation Plan most worked many years short
of their design life.