Botanic Gardens TMD

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LocationKingston upon Hull, England
Coordinates53°44′54″N 0°21′41″W / 53.7484°N 0.3614°W / 53.7484; -0.3614
Botanic Gardens TMD
Location
LocationKingston upon Hull, England
Coordinates53°44′54″N 0°21′41″W / 53.7484°N 0.3614°W / 53.7484; -0.3614
OS gridTA081292
Characteristics
OperatorNorthern Trains
Depot codeBG (1973–)[1]
TypeSteam, Diesel, DMU
History
Opened1901
OriginalNER
Pre-groupingLNER
BR regionNorth Eastern region until 1967 then Eastern Region
Former depot code
  • 53B (1948–1960)
  • 50C (1960–1973)[1]

Botanic Gardens TMD is a traction maintenance depot in Kingston upon Hull in Yorkshire, England. As built it was one of the principal steam engine sheds in the Hull area, Botanic Gardens was the one closest to the main Hull Paragon station and its locomotives were responsible for working passenger services in the area. This entry also covers the engine sheds in the Paragon area that preceded Botanic Gardens.

Paragon station opened in May 1848 replacing an earlier terminus at Manor House although this continued as a railway station until 1854. This station had workshops and an engine shed belonging to the Hull and Selby Railway.

The new station at Paragon was provided with a three road engine shed with each road being approximately 125 feet long. A 45-foot diameter turntable was provided to enable arriving locomotives to be turned. These facilities were located on the north side of the station.

By the late 1850s the shed was struggling to cope with traffic levels and an additional shed was authorised in 1865 and opened for traffic in 1867. This was a square covered roundhouse with a turntable and 20 radiating roads. The shed was located just south of St Stephens Square.

Towards the end of the century, passenger traffic was still growing and the NER decided to add two platforms to the north side of the station. Replacement facilities were provided at Botanic Gardens which opened in 1901. The original shed was demolished in 1901 to make way for the new platforms but whether the 1867 shed was demolished at this time is not known (the land was not required for the expansion of the station).[2]

Botanic Gardens opens (1901–1923)

With the growth of Hull and associated rail traffic in the 1890s, the NER wished to extend Hull Paragon Station and to do that it wanted to add more platforms where the current sheds were located on the north side. Preparation of the site began in 1898 and the entrance lines were actually approved in that year. Another factor driving the new depot was the increase in locomotive sizes from short 2-4-0 locomotives to longer 4-4-0 and 4-6-0 classes.

Named after the closed (in 1887) Hull Botanical Gardens, the shed had three turntables – one was provided at the Paragon station end for visiting locomotives to be turned quickly for return trips. The large shed building consisted of two separate 55-foot (17 m) turntables with radiating stabling roads.

Generally, Botanic Gardens locomotives worked as far afield as Sheffield Victoria, Doncaster, York, Scarborough, Leeds and the branches to Hornsea and Withernsea.[3]

London and North Eastern Railway (1923–1947)

Following the Railways Act 1921 the NER became part of the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) on 1 January 1923. The table below shows the allocated locomotives on that date – all locomotives were of NER origin.[4]

Class
(LNER classification)
Wheel
Arrangement
Number
allocated
Remarks
D17/14-4-010
D194-4-01This was a unique one off locomotive NER Class 3CC.[5]
D204-4-05
D224-4-011
D234-4-011
F82-4-2T3Branch line locomotives
G50-4-4T4Branch line locomotives
G60-4-4T2Branch line locomotives
X22-2-4T1BTP class dating from 1874 – used on special duties such as hauling the local inspection saloon.[6]

Following the closure of the former Hull and Barnsley Railway Hull Cannon Street station in 1925, Botanic Gardens received an allocation of 4-4-0 locomotives from Springhead engine shed (Hull), thus concentrating all passenger working engines on one site. These locomotives continued to work services over the HBR.

In 1927 the shed received its first allocation of Sentinel steam rail cars and locally named examples included Valiant, Tally-Ho and Liberty.[5]

In 1932 a concrete coaling bunker was added to the depot improving the previous coaling facilities.[5]

In October 1946 the association with the LNER rail cars ended (the year before all of these vehicles were withdrawn).

British Railways (1948–1996)

The privatisation era (1996–present)

References

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