BRITISH RAILWAY LOCOMOTIVE DEPOTS, WORKS AND STABLING POINTS.
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TEBAY LOCOMOTIVE DEPOT (11E/11D/12H/12E) - The London & North Western Railway opened an engine shed at Tebay in the 1860's when the need arose to provide banking engines to enable increasingly heavy trains to surmount the 1 in 75 gradient up to Shap Summit. A new 4 road dead-end shed was built in 1947. The allocation of engines here was never large. 2-6-4T's were favoured for banking duties as they did not need turning and provided better protection for their crews in the ferocious local winters and, in March 1959, Tebay was home to 5 of them:banking engines could perform their duites a number of times on any given day. There were also 4 Class 4MT 2-6-0's, which largely worked on the services going east over Stainmore Summit and 2 LMS Class 4F 0-6-0's. By the time that the shed closed in January 1968, diesel and electric loco's rarely needing to be banked, these duties were being performed by 5 BR Standard Class 4MT 4-6-0's. Two of the successors to the 2-6-4T's stand in the shed yard, No.75037 nearest the camera.