Darnall engine shed
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Contents
History
Knowing that facilities at Neepsend were too cramped to operate efficiently the L.N.E.R. set about finding a suitable site for new facilities with easy access to their system in Sheffield. A site at Darnall was chosen and planning for the new engine shed commenced in 1936. Opening did not take place until 1943 with much machinery, due to wartime restrictions on new purchase, being brought from Neepsend. Photographs published in the "LNER Journal" showed the new facilities but, due to information restrictions at the time, it was captioned as being "somewhere in the north of England".
Layout
The building was a 10 track straight through brick shed, with a large coaling plant and turntable. After the electrification of the local railways, an electric locomotive shed was also built and, in 1958, a 300 feet (91 m) by 60 feet (18 m), 3-road, brick and glass diesel depot was added to service 60 new diesel multiple units.[1]
Closure
It closed on 4 October 1965 when Tinsley Marshalling Yard and its depot opened. The depot buildings were then used as a wagon-repair depot until the late 1980s.
Locomotives
Locomotive classes allocated to Darnall in 1952 included:
- LNER Thompson Class B1
- LNER Class O4
- LNER Class J11
- LNER Class J39
- LNER Class N4 0-6-2T
References
- ↑ Railway Magazine June 1958 p. 432