Darragh Posted April 29 Posted April 29 I was looking into Conniberry Jct. (the junction for the Kilkenny and Mountrath lines at Portlaois) and stumbled across this peculiar photograph. 207, in Laois, not only that but at Conniberry Jct. I can see she has CIE sprayed on her buffer beam and that she may be in use on the Dublin-Cork, but how did 207 end up here? Was she on a railtour, or special outing? I cant image an ex GNR mainline loco to be working the Portlaois to Kilkenny route. Quote
Galteemore Posted April 29 Posted April 29 It was a railtour to Cork. Smaller GN locos did make it to fairly odd parts of the Laois rail system, most notably an old U at Mountmellick. 1 1 Quote
Darragh Posted April 29 Author Posted April 29 Thanks, you've cured the curiosity. God, thats mad, in Mountmellick! 1 Quote
GSR 800 Posted April 29 Posted April 29 33 minutes ago, Darragh said: Thanks, you've cured the curiosity. God, thats mad, in Mountmellick! She made it as far South as Cork, visited Maedbh in Thurles too! Quote
Irishswissernie Posted April 29 Posted April 29 I have a fair number of photos of ex GNRI locos on railtours to Cork or Limerick in the early 1960's on the Archive. z185 1960-09-17 Mountmellick Limerick Junc 174 1961 img187 CIE 1962-03-17 Thurles GNRI 207 'Boyne' SPL JGD620336 CIE 1962-03-17 Cork, Glanmire Rd, ex GN VS207 IRRS SPL JGD620234 6 1 Quote
Mayner Posted April 29 Posted April 29 Ex-GNR (express passenger) locos are likely to have been used on the 'Trial Train' (newly overhauled coaches) between Inchacore and Portarlington up to the end of steam on CIE or sold to the UTA. So potentially a legitimate reason for running an S Class, Compound & Vs at speed other than an enthusiasts special on the GSWR main line 2 Quote
jhb171achill Posted April 30 Posted April 30 56 minutes ago, Mayner said: Ex-GNR (express passenger) locos are likely to have been used on the 'Trial Train' (newly overhauled coaches) between Inchacore and Portarlington up to the end of steam on CIE or sold to the UTA. So potentially a legitimate reason for running an S Class, Compound & Vs at speed other than an enthusiasts special on the GSWR main line Absolutely. Even when the last steam survivors were banished from Inchicore and sent to Broadstone, just about anything could turn up on the Dun Laoghaire Pier mail shuttle. It could be a filthy lethargic Crossley “C”, an elderly 1897-built J15, or a blue 4.4.0 barely fifteen years old. 2 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.