Edward Bury, locomotive builder and superintendent of the
London and Birmingham Railway, was engaged in 1838 as consultant for motive power, workshops and stationary engine for the Lickey Incline. He promptly organised the purchase of two second hand engines, the
Leicester and the
Southampton to assist in line construction and ordered four from
George Forrester, the first two arriving in November. In 1838, during the construction period thought was being given once again to the working of the Lickey Incline by locomotives. Although Brunel,
Robert Stephenson and Bury declared this to be impossible or advised against it. Captain Moorsom said that he had seen locomotives working similar gradients in the US, An order was placed with engine builders called
Norris Locomotive Works in
Philadelphia for a number of 4-2-0 locomotives. The key requirement for the B&GR was for three 12 ton
Class A Extra locomotives to assist trains up the Lickey Incline, but astute and possibly duplicitous salesmanship by the Norris team resulted in additional sales of seven
Class B and three
Class A of eight and ten tons respectively. After the initial deliberations about engines fit for the Lickey incline, several American engines were obtained. The prototype Norris engine was described as a Class A Extra locomotive, supposedly capable of taking up the Lickey incline at . Three more of these were ordered. Norris's British agent persuaded the B&GR to purchase smaller "Class B" locomotives, and the prototype,
England, was trialled on the
Grand Junction Railway (as the B&GR was not ready) in March 1839, and found to be non-compliant with the specification as to load haulage. Undeterred, the B&GR purchased six of the class B engines. A Class A Extra locomotive,
Philadelphia, was delivered at the end of May 1840; it had a sandbox and water tub "for wetting the rails to improve adhesion". In a trial on the uncompleted Lickey incline, it performed better than a Bury locomotive, taking 24 tons up at . However Rake comments that, "The American locomotives were, however, afterwards superseded, as it was found that an ordinary tank engine, assisted by a pilot, worked the traffic in a perfectly satisfactory manner." Moreover, the fireboxes and boiler tubes were iron, and soon had to be replaced with brass fittings. On opening there were four
locomotives built by Forrester; they were named
Cheltenham,
Worcester,
Bromsgrove and
Tewkesbury. They had driving wheels. There were four of the American 4-2-0 locomotives, which had driving wheels. The four non-driven wheels were mounted on a bogie. They were named
Philadelphia,
England,
Columbia, and
Atlantic. In addition there were four ballast engines. ==Early business performance==