For many enthusiasts, the North Yorkshire Moors Railway’s (NYMR) autumn steam gala is one of the highlights of the year. The autumn colours of the moors has again resulted in fabulous photographs, while the line itself offers the opportunity to catch the visiting engines working far harder than they do elsewhere.
This year the event seemed guaranteed to be a winner with a top-notch line-up of visiting locomotives and the prospect of several home-based engines returning to traffic just ahead of the event, giving the possibility of up to 15 appearings.
In the event, while the visiting engines all turned up and performed as planned, there was a little more inconsistency in the home-based fleet. A month or so before the gala, for example, it was announced that Peter Best’s USATC S160 2-8-0 No. 2258Omaha, (not strictly a home-based engine nowadays as it is due to move to the Dartmouth Steam Railway on long-term hire), which had been undergoing running-in trials after completion of its restoration at Grosmont, was remaining on the NYMR until after the big event, meaning that it would be able to appear in the gala and bring the potential turnout to 16 steam locomotives.
However, with less than a week to go, it was then announced that the sole surviving single chimneyed BR 9F 2-10-0 No. 92134, one of the anticipated stars of the show together with Paul ‘Piglet’ Middleton’s Cockerill 0-4-0VBT tram engine No.8 Lucie, would not be run-in in time to appear, even though it had undergone its first trial steaming and made its first movements around the shed yard by then.
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Esta historia es de la edición Issue 260 de Heritage Railway.
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