PR had fuelled its locomotives with
Welsh coal but in June 1940
Italy declared war on the Allies, making the Mediterranean extremely dangerous for British merchant shipping. PR therefore began converting its locomotives to burn oil, but it did not complete the conversion programme until 1943. Palestine Railways was strategically important to the British Mandate authorities, so paramilitaries frequently attacked it during the
1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine and especially the 1946–48
1947–1949 Palestine war. El Kantara – Haifa trains were a particular target and Zionist paramilitaries bombed them three times during the 1947–1949 Palestine war. The P class survived these attacks and PR's Quishon workshops in Haifa managed to repair any damage. After the UK withdrew from Mandate Palestine in May 1948, all six P class passed into Israel Railways stock. After the War of Independence and subsequent
1948 Arab–Israeli War, mainline services were truncated to the territory within the new State of Israel. By 1956 diesels had taken over the main line services and steam workings were largely confined to the central part of the country around
Lod (formerly Lydda). The P class remained in service until the official end of steam on Israel Railways in 1959. All six were scrapped in about 1960 but the tender of number 62 is preserved at the
Israel Railway Museum in Haifa. ==References==