, Greater Manchester As the final War Department locomotives were being delivered, the
National Coal Board was placing orders for identical locomotives to be used at their collieries. Between 1948 and 1964, 77 new "Austerity" locomotives were built for the NCB. A further fourteen engines were ordered in 1952 by the British Army to supplement its 90 existing engines. The
Yorkshire Engine Company also built eight locomotives to this design in 1954 for use in ironstone quarries and at
Scunthorpe Steelworks. It has been suggested, although it has not been proven, that Hunslet sold some of the parts for the eight "Austerities" to the Yorkshire Engine Company as part of a subcontract settlement for the
GWR 9400 Class , ordered by the
GWR from Hunslet and partially subcontracted to the Yorkshire Engine Company. Hunslet rebuilt many NCB locomotives and when the Army started to sell off locomotives again in 1959, they bought 15 examples that were to be rebuilt and sold on. The NCB bought 13 of these, the 14th was sold directly into preservation and the final locomotive was scrapped without being rebuilt. Ultimately from first to last, a total of 485 examples were constructed between 1943 and 1964. The NCB continued to use Austerities in the 1970s and a small number remained in service until the early 1980s, notably at
Bickershaw Colliery,
Greater Manchester. Some of the examples that survived the longest were those fitted with
mechanical stokers and
Kylpor blast pipes or
Giesl ejectors to improve their performance and reduce smoke. ==Preservation==