Caught earlier this year at Pickering. 44806 was an
early candidate for preservation, moving directly from
BR to the "Steamtown" collection at Carnforth, housed
in the same loco depot where steam's final fires
had been dropped shortly before.
Black Five 44806 built at Derby in 1944. In preservation
she was also unusually well-travelled between museums
and lines, although staying in the North West of England.
In 1973, 44806 was based for a short time at the newly
reopened Lakeside and Haverthwait Railway, as their
largest and only tender engine. Whilst at Haverthwaite,
44806 was adopted by the ITV children's TV series
Magpie and named "Magpie". The Magpie programme
was always in competition with the BBC's comparable
Blue Peter, who had earlier adopted the LNER A2
Peppercorn 532 Blue Peter, conveniently built
under that name.
A crack was found in the boiler, in the outer firebox.
Haverthwaite did not have the workshop facilities for
an engine of this length or weight, so she was moved
yet again, this time to "Steamport" in Southport. These
were busy times for the British steam preservation
movement, with many new projects and scrapyard
rescues all competing for attention, time and money.
As a result, 'Magpie' languished. In 1983, with a wind
down of Steamport owing to pressure over the site,
Magpie moved to Manchester and the Museum of Science
and Industry, as a purely static exhibit. In 1993, 44806 and
her 20-year old firebox crack travelled to the Llangollen
Railway,where repair work began. This work took almost
three years to complete, with a return to steam on 15th
September1995. She worked on the Llangollen for nearly
ten years, first back as 4806 in black LMS livery with red
lining, then once again as 44806 wearing the BR
"ferret and a dartboard" tender badges with red
and white lining.
44806 was one of the last locomotives to be withdrawn
from service, surviving until 1968, the last year of steam
on British Railways. Since her initial preservation, 44806
had been privately owned by one man, Ken Aldcroft, who
sadly died in 2003. The 40th anniversary of the end of
British Railways steam and of 44806's own preservation.
came in 2008. In July 2013, the locomotive was offered
for sale, and has been purchased by the North Yorkshire
Moors Railway. At the NYMR, it is destined to be certified
to run to Whitby after it overhaul in 2017.
Many thanks to Wikipedia for some of the above notes.
and of course to http://www.nymr.co.uk/
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