Hello JackDownUnder
here is my listing of the allocations at York shed for July 1926.
York Shed @ July 1926, code YRK: - 148 locomotives
L.N.E.R. Classes
A7 - 2 - #1113, #1195
B13 - 5 - #744, #761, #766, #775, #2005,
B14 - 1 - #2115,
B15 - 9 - #787, #788, #797, #799, #813, #817, #821, #822, #823,
B16 - 27 - #844, #845, #847, #848, #849, #908, #911, #921, #923, #927, #933, #936, #942, #1371, #1374, #1377, #2364, #2366, #2368, #2370, #2372,
#2373, #2374, #2376, #2378, #2380, #2382,
C1 - 2 - #4424, #4447,
C2 - 1 - #3986, - this loco is described a allocated to "York", not described as allocated to "York G.N.R." applying to two other former G.N.R C2 Atlantics.
C6 - 6 - #532, #698, #699, #702, #1680, #1792,
C7 - 23 - #706, #716, #717, #721, #727, #729, #2163, #2164, #2165, #2166, #2167, #2168, #2169, #2170, #2171, #2172, #2195, #2198, #2199, #2202,
#2204, #2206, #2208
D2 - 4 - #4372, #4387, #4396, #4180,
D3 - 1 - #4348,
D20 - 13 - #707, #711, #712, #713, #1232, #1260, #1665, #1672, #2018, #2021, #2022, #2027, #2101,
G6 - 2 - #63, #255,
J21 - 8 - #34, #534, #1596, #1803, #1804 – Sat+W #807, #1516, #1807 – Sup+W
J24 - 1 - #1844,
J25 - 4 - #1973, #1989, #1991, #2068,
J26 - 7 - #412, #442, #525, #554, #818, #1130, #1200,
J27 - 2 - #2342, #2383,
J71 - 8 - #237, #347, #399, #1085, #1134, #1140, #1167, #1758,
J72 - 11 - #500, #1720, #1746, #2307, #2309, #2313, #2328, #2331, #2332, #2333, #2334,
J77 - 7 - #138, #324, #999, #1000, #1346, #1348, #1431,
K3 - 3 - #39, #52, #53,
T1 - 1 - #1656
York shed, the former N.E.R. shed at the large E.C.M.L. junction station had an immense allocation of locomotives in July 1926. There is a challenge when considering York against the N.E.R.A.'s reproduction of the L.N.E.R. N.E. Area Carriage Roster of July 1926 since it was a N.E. Area publication dealing with L.N.E.R. N.E. Area stock working within the area, stock from the area working out of the area to "foreign parts" and "foreign" stock working from outside the area with a destination at a N.E. Area station. Any passenger trains whose consist neither started in the N.E.Area nor finished within it is completely invisible, immediately removing all East Coast workings between Kings Cross and Scotland. You won't find the 1926 L.N.E.R. Flying Scotsman set in the N.E. Area 1926 carriage roster book.
With one hundred and seventeen of the one hundred and forty-eight locomotives being tender engines there is a considerable weighting towards longer distance trains. This is no surprise with York being a main changeover point for locomotives working along the East Coast Main Line since the first line reached the city.
There are some surprises though. York has no allocation of any eight-coupled goods/mineral tender locomotive, despite the large yards located to the west of the main passenger station. The vast L.N.E.R. pool of O4 2-8-0s saw members of the class visiting daily from the south but none were allocated to York shed in the 1920s. There is a commensurate lack of any former N.E.R. eight-coupled 0-8-0 of Class Q5, 6 or 7 allocated to York in 1926. the vast loose-coupled mineral and goods traffic to and from the north of the city would appear to have been largely in the charge of visiting locomotives. Newport Yard on Tees-side, with Croft Spa yard near Darlington on the E.C.M.L were the two "hubs" for this traffic. The nearest sheds to each were Newport and Darlington.
Twenty-nine Atlantic 4-4-2 locomotives formed a core of "top link" engines for working E.C.M.L. express passenger trains as far as the next locomotive changeover point at Newcastle. This work was shared with visiting locomotives bringing E.C.M.L trains south from Newcastle. Gateshead shed being the majority source, with Heaton shed the minority partner. Additionally, three former G.N.R. Atlantic 4-4-2s and five former G.N.R. 4-4-0s are allocated to York, for services to the south. A further two C2 Alantic 4-4-2s, not shown here, are described as allocated to "York G.N.R.".
Forty-two 4-6-0 tender locomotives were on shed, with twenty-seven being the newest Raven 3-cylinder B16. This provides a large pool for fitted express goods trains, and as with the passenger services, this allocation will share duties between York and Newcastle with Gateshead and Heaton locomotives which have brought trains south.
Former N.E.R. 4-4-0s are represented solely by the thirteen D20s. At the grouping there were also several D21s, but these were transferred away during 1924 and 1925. Other former N.E.R. 4-4-0s were seen in the York area, particularly on the Scarborough line, but they were not York engines. The D20s would be suitable for most secondary and local passenger services radiating from York and had a very long association with York, right from their arrival at the end of the 19th century. Even at York, the 0-6-0 tender engine is present, with eight J21 having Westinghouse brakes, three of which were the superheated version. The remaining twenty-two 0-6-0 tender engines were goods tender engines, of classes J24 to 27. Gresley's K3 2-6-0s were new arrivals at York.
Tank engines are dominated by the shunting engines. Twenty-six 0-6-0T of classes J71, J72 and J77 would be working right across the York district, with some Westinghouse brake fitted engines on station pilot duties. The single Class T1 was a shunting monster, though it was assisted by the two A7s, which also were powerful goods tanks. Passenger tank engines are represented merely by two elderly G6 0-4-4Ts, employed on former N.E.R. Steam Autocars. As with other services, if you saw a local passenger train at York in charge of a tank engine then it was most likely a visiting locomotive.