Palestine Military Railway locomotives For standard gauge use overseas the British Government requisitioned many
London and North Western Railway "Coal Engine" 0-6-0s and 50
London and South Western Railway 395 Class 0-6-0s. The British Government sent 42 LNWR and 36 LSWR locomotives to the PMR In 1918 the PMR ordered 50 new locomotives. British factories were fully occupied so the order was placed with Baldwin in the USA. They were
4-6-0s of a simple wartime design, widely used elsewhere including on
railways in Belgium. The first ten were delivered to Palestine in April 1919. They had driving wheels suitable for mixed traffic use. The PMR suffered at least one serious accident. In about 1918 the older of the Manning Wardle saddle tanks that the PMR had acquired from J. Aird & Co. was shunting at Jerusalem when the weight of its train became too much for it to hold on the gradient. The train ran away downhill towards Bittir and collided with an LSWR 395 Class that was climbing towards Jerusalem. The resulting collision
"practically demolished" the saddle tank.
Palestine Railways locomotives The LNWR 0-6-0s were old, worn out and performed very badly in Palestine, so PR retired all of them for scrap by 1922. The LSWR 0-6-0s performed better, so PR kept most of them in service until 1928 and retained the last nine as shunting locomotives until 1936.
M class The four Manning Wardle saddle tanks from the Inland Waterways and Docks Department were identical so PR designated them class M. These were satisfactory as
shunting locomotives and PR kept them in service for many years. The J. Aird & Co. Manning Wardles were dissimilar and the PMR had already lost the older one in 1918 in a collision on the Jerusalem branch with an LSWR 395 class (see above). PR disposed of the Hanomag well tank and the former Aird 1902 Manning Wardle for scrap in 1928.
K class The
Baldwin 4-6-0 locomotives were successful on most of Palestine's standard gauge network but could not haul adequate loads on the steep gradients from Jaffa
via Lydda to Jerusalem. In 1922 PR obtained six engines from
Kitson and Company in
Leeds,
England, specifically designed to be powerful enough for the Jerusalem service. They were
2-8-4T
tank locomotives designated class K. They had driving wheels, a diameter suitable for low-speed freight work and also for mountain gradients. The track gauge on the tight curves on the Jerusalem branch was widened from to as much as but unfortunately even with this adjustment the heavy eight-coupled class K was unsuitable and suffered a number of derailments.
H, H2 and H3 classes PR designated the
Baldwin 4-6-0s class H. In 1926 six were shipped to
Armstrong Whitworth and Company in
Newcastle upon Tyne, England who rebuilt them as
4-6-2T tank locomotives, designated class H2. In 1933 PR opened its own railway workshops in Haifa. In 1937, with the help of some parts supplied by
Nasmyth, Wilson and Company in
Salford, England, the Qishon works converted five class H 4-6-0s to
4-6-4T tank locomotives, designated class H3.
Sentinels In 1928 PR bought one vertical-boilered
0-4-0T shunting locomotive and two vertical-boilered steam-powered
railcars for local services from
Sentinel-Cammell in
Shrewsbury, England. Each railcar unit had two coach bodies articulated over three bogies. The shunter was capable of only light duties and by the end of the
Second World War PR had stored it out of use. PR found the railcar format inflexible, as if passenger numbers exceeded the capacity of a railcar it was not practical to couple up an extra coach. In 1945 PR removed the Sentinel engines and converted the railcars to ordinary coaching stock.
N class After 1928 PR retained a few 395 class 0-6-0s for shunting, but they were approaching 50 years old so in 1934 PR obtained three purpose-built 0-6-0T shunting locomotives from Nasmyth, Wilson to start replacing them. These were designated class N and PR took delivery of seven more in the period 1935–38.
P class H class 4-6-0s hauled the Haifa – El Kantara service until 1935, when the
North British Locomotive Company in
Glasgow,
Scotland supplied six more powerful 4-6-0s that PR designated
class P. These had a tractive effort of : 16% more than the of classes H, H2 and H3. Class P also had driving wheels: a mixed-traffic diameter by British standards but larger than those of the H series and therefore more suitable for higher speed traffic.
Reliability PR suffered frequent locomotive failures. In 1934 its locomotives averaged between failures, whereas the figure for locomotives in Great Britain for the same year was . Staff error caused 17% of failures but far more were caused by poor water, which PR's General Manager reported was
"the most pressing of all the railway problems". PR sought to alleviate this by building
water softening plants at the main watering points on its network, frequently chemically testing the water and eventually fitting all locomotives with blowing down apparatus with which the driver could purge sludge from the boiler.
World War II locomotives Steam in
Glasgow in 1941, in Israel Railways service taking water at
Zichron Ya'akov on 4 January 1949 PR had fuelled its locomotives with
Welsh coal but in June 1940
Italy declared war on the Allies and France surrendered to Germany and Italy, leaving the Mediterranean extremely dangerous for British merchant shipping. Early in 1942 PR belatedly began to convert its locomotives to burn oil, but it did not complete the conversion programme until 1943. In 1941 Britain started to supply two types of
2-8-0 Consolidation freight locomotive to its Middle East Command. One was the
ROD 2-8-0 class that had been designed in 1911 as the
Great Central Railway Class 8K and that the
UK's War Department (WD) had adopted as a standard design to be mass-produced for military traffic in the First World War. The other was the
London, Midland and Scottish Railway Stanier 8F that had been designed in 1935 and that the WD now adopted as a standard design to be mass-produced for military use in the Second World War. As Allied forces concentrated on defending Egypt and the Suez Canal from Italian and German attack the first shipments of 2-8-0s were delivered to Egypt, but in March 1942 both types started to arrive in Palestine and by June 1942 24 ROD locomotives were working on PR and the Haifa – Beirut – Tripoli (HBT) line. In 1944-45 the ROD locomotives were transferred out of Palestine and replaced by LMS locomotives that had been in service on the
Trans-Iranian Railway. Other LMS locomotives were overhauled in Palestine in 1944 before being deployed either elsewhere in the Middle East or to the part of Italy now under Allied control. In the second half of 1942 the USA started to supply locomotives to the British Middle East Command. By December 1942, 27
USATC S200 Class 2-8-2 Mikados were working the PR and HBT main lines and two
USATC S100 Class 0-6-0T
switchers were supplementing PR's shunting fleet.
Diesel ,By June 1943 12
Whitcomb 65-DE-14 650 HP
diesel-electric locomotives from the US were working on the HBT and by 12 December more were working on the PR. The latter were an effective replacement for PR's Baldwins on the steeply graded Jerusalem line but within a few months all had been transferred to double the diesel fleet on the HBT. Whitcomb diesels were the HBT's principal motive power until the middle of 1944, when they were replaced with ROD 2-8-0s and transferred to Italy. ==1936–1939 Arab Revolt==