45305 was sold to scrap merchants Albert Drapers and Sons Ltd. of
Hull. No. 5305 became the last locomotive on the scrap line of Drapers of Hull, who broke up 742 former BR locomotives. No. 5305 was to have been the 743rd and last, but the scrapyard's owner, Albert Draper, decided to save one of the yard's locomotives for posterity, and have it restored to full running order. He eventually chose 45305, simply because it was the cleanest engine in the yard. Albert Draper was, at the time, the president of Hull Kingston Rovers Rugby League Football Club, and it was his fond wish that No.5305 would one day head a special train from Hull to Wembley, where he hoped the club would be playing in the Rugby League Challenge Cup Final. No. 5305 was put in the care of the Humberside Locomotive Preservation Group and based at Hull Dairycoates MPD, where it was eventually brought up to full main line standard. 5305, restored to original LMS livery was steamed again in 1976. In 1984, 5305 was named
Alderman A E Draper by the
Mayor of
Hedon, Bill Tong. A.E. Draper was twice Mayor of Hedon and the Hedon coat of arms is on the nameplates. However, for reasons of authenticity, the engine does not always carry these nameplates. Between 1986 and 1992 5305 spent several summer seasons working over the
West Highland Line between
Fort William and
Mallaig, continuing the class's particular association with
Scotland. The locomotive left Hull Dairycoates in April, 1992 on the closure of that shed, first moving to the
Keighley and Worth Valley Railway, running there until its ten-year boiler certificate expired in December 1994. In 1996, the engine left the KWVR, first moving to RAF Binbrook in Lincolnshire, and then to the
preserved Great Central Railway at Loughborough in
Leicestershire, arriving there on 20 November 1996. Following a full overhaul at Loughborough works, the engine returned to service in August 2003, this time in BR guise as 45305. The locomotive remained in the ownership of the Draper family until 2025, when it was donated to the 5305 Locomotive Trust, the successor to the Humberside Locomotive Preservation Group. == Fame in preservation ==