After tackling the GW pannier tanks in his 'Locomotive Portfolios' for
Pen & Sword, author David Maidment seeks out descriptions and
photographs of the GW 0-6-2 tank engines, the majority of which were
built by the Rhymney, Taff Vale, Barry and other Welsh railways from the
last decade or so of the nineteenth century onwards. The engines of
eight different companies, absorbed by the GWR in 1922, are described
and illustrated, and the way in which many were modernized and rebuilt
at Swindon or Caerphilly Works in the 1920s. Charles Collett was,
however, faced with a motive power crisis in the mining valleys at the
Grouping, as many of the companies had economized on essential
maintenance as the GW's take-over drew near, and he had to hurriedly
design a standard 0-6-2T to complement and bolster their work as the
powerful GW 2-8-0Ts were too heavy and wide for many of the Cardiff
valleys. These engines, the 56XX & 66XX classes, became part of the
South Wales scene between 1925 and 1964, mainly running the coal traffic
between pits and docks, although they dominated Cardiff Valley passenger
services until the influx of BR 3MT 2-6-2Ts and GW 41XX 2-6-2Ts in
1954/5. The book has nearly 40,000 words of text and around 300 black &
white photographs.