T. D. Judah: Difference between revisions
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T.D. Judah was the name of a 4-2-2 steam locomotive owned by the Central Pacific Railroad. It was named in honor of the railroad's first chief engineer, Theodore Dehone Judah, who surveyed a passable route over the Sierra Nevada Mountains for the Transcontinental Railroad.
History and career
Like its sister engine, C.P. Huntington, T.D. Judah was originally built by the Cooke Locomotive Works in 1863 for a railroad that was unable to pay for it. Later, the two were seen in the Cooke shops by Collis Huntington and purchased for use on the Central Pacific Railroad (CP), becoming the road's third and fourth locomotives respectively. Two other, larger engines, Gov. Stanford (number 1, built by Norris Locomotive Works) and Pacific (number 2, built by Mason Machine Works) had been purchased earlier.
Having originally been a 4-2-4 Forney type, a Forney type being a locomotive and tender on one frame, in 1872, the engine was rebuilt as a 4-2-2 with separate tender and may have been given other mechanical upgrades like its sister engine. The rebuild reduced the locomotive's overall weight to 30,000 lb., with 15,000 lb. on the drivers.
T.D. Judah was sold to the Wellington Colliery Company on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, where it found service as Wellington Colliery Railway's Queen Anne. It was subsequently scrapped in 1912.
References
- Diebert, Timothy S. and Strapac, Joseph A. (1987). Southern Pacific Company Steam Locomotive Conpendium. Shade Tree Books. ISBN 0-930742-12-5.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Dunscomb, Guy (1963). A Century of Southern Pacific Steam Locomotives 1862–1962. Guy L. Dunscomb & Son.
- Yenne, Bill (1985). The History Of The Southern Pacific. Bison Books Corp. ASIN B000ICKVU4.