Oxford Rail OR76J26001
London & North Eastern Railway J26 5738 London & North Eastern Railway Black
Class & Prototype
- Class: London & North Eastern Railway J26
- Traction: Steam
- Built: 1904-1905
- Total Built: 50
The North Eastern Railway Class P2 was a ground-breaking 0-6-0 freight locomotive designed by Wilson Worsdell in 1904. Fifty locomotives were built between 1904-1905 at Darlington and Gateshead works, featuring a revolutionary 5ft 6in diameter boiler - 15 inches larger than any previous NER design. This massive boiler required innovative engineering solutions including frame extensions and a distinctive sloping fire grate arrangement.
Built to handle the increasing size of coal trains from Yorkshire and Durham coalfields, the P2s served as long-distance goods locomotives before transitioning to secondary freight duties as larger classes entered service. All 50 survived into British Railways ownership (numbered 65730-65779) but were withdrawn between 1952-1962 with none preserved.
The class directly influenced the improved P3 design and established the "bigger boiler, better brakes" philosophy that characterized subsequent NER locomotive development.
- Running Number: 5738
- Name: -
- Ordered By: North Eastern Railway
- Built By: North Eastern Railway
- Built At: Darlington
- Built: 06/1904
- Withdrawn: 02/1959
- Length of Service: 54.7 years
- Running Numbers: NER 1159, LNER 5738, BR 65738
- Names: -
Operator & Livery
- Operator: London & North Eastern Railway
- Livery: Black
The London & North Eastern Railway emerged in 1923 as Britain's second-largest railway company, combining seven major railways including the Great Northern, North Eastern, and Great Eastern into a 6,590-mile network stretching from London's four terminals to the Scottish Highlands. Despite serving economically challenged industrial regions, the LNER achieved worldwide recognition for engineering excellence and speed records that remain unbroken today.
Under Chief Mechanical Engineers Sir Nigel Gresley, Edward Thompson, and Arthur Peppercorn, the LNER developed revolutionary locomotive designs characterised by three-cylinder layouts and streamlined aesthetics. Gresley's masterpieces included the A1 Pacifics featuring Flying Scotsman and the legendary A4 class, culminating in Mallard's world steam speed record of 126 mph in 1938.
The company pioneered luxury express services including the Silver Jubilee and Coronation streamliners, whilst investing in forward-thinking electrification schemes and massive marshalling yards. Notable achievements included operating the complete East Coast Main Line, introducing Britain's first regular 400-mile non-stop service, and commissioning Eric Gill's iconic typography that influenced railway design for decades.
Nationalised in 1948, LNER locomotives continued serving British Railways until the 1960s, with some A4 Pacifics working Scottish expresses until 1966. Today, the LNER's engineering legacy thrives through extensive preservation, new-build projects like Tornado, and comprehensive model ranges covering every major class in all popular scales, making LNER subjects essential for discerning railway modellers seeking authentic British steam-age atmosphere.
The LNER plain black livery emerged as a practical economy measure that ultimately became the most widely applied colour scheme in the company's history. Initially introduced for goods engines in 1928 to reduce painting costs and labour time, this austere unlined black finish dispensed with decorative red lining whilst retaining the basic yellow lettering and "L N E R" tender markings. The livery reflected the harsh economic realities facing the LNER, particularly as the company served Britain's struggling industrial regions during the depression years of the 1930s.
The plain black scheme reached its zenith during World War II when, from 1941 onwards, austerity measures mandated that all locomotive classes receive unlined black paint regardless of their previous prestigious liveries. The transformation was dramatic – even the magnificent streamlined A4 Pacifics like Mallard and Flying Scotsman were painted in stark black, their elegant engineering unchanged but their glamorous appearance replaced by wartime utility. The austerity deepened in October 1943 when tender lettering was reduced from "L N E R" to simply "N E", halving material usage and painting time whilst creating one of the most recognisable images of Britain's wartime railways. For modellers, this livery authentically represents the challenging economic and wartime periods, offering dramatic visual impact and historical accuracy when depicting late 1920s freight operations, 1930s depression-era scenes, or the austere years of 1941-1947 when Britain's railways prioritised function over form.