Metropolitan Number 1
Mystery on the Met
A Victorian Case of Double Identity


Metropolitan No. 1 Mystery Presented Mystery Solved Claims to Fame Please Read Me



Metropolitan Number One

Metropolitan Number 1 is the second steam locomotive of the Metropolitan Railway to bear the number 1. It is a Class E engine dating back to 1898 (link), so it has a quite a history attached. It now belongs to the Quainton Railway Society (QRS) at the Buckingham Rail Centre (link) which ensures that Metropolitan Number One is an active ambassador for the QRS at various railway events and on various heritage lines.



Met number one makes one of its frequent appearances on the Epping-Ongar Railway.
Here is Met 1 at North Weald, about to set off with a train for Ongar.
This is a quiet moment on the actually very busy afternoon of 17th July 2017.



Mystery Presented

When the QRS acquired Met. No. 1, they realized that Met. No. 1 presented two puzzling aspects. Here indeed was an intriguing situation!



Mystery Solved

Metropolitan Class A Locomotives were the original steam motive power. No cab roof, but condensing apparatus and of course the famous spectacle plate. The Inner Circle was a steamy affair, with smoke and ash particles everywhere.



Metropolitan Class A Number 23
is a look-alike to the original ill-fated number one.
It is seen at the London Transport Museum in Covent Garden.

It was Number One - of all Class A Locos - that had an accident at Baker Street in 1898. This apparently happened at the junction between the Paddington to the City line and the line to the north.

I wonder when the Management found all this out!



Claims to Fame

So, this locomotive has a number of claims to fame.

  1. It was the subject of a Victorian cover-up.
  2. It bears the number 1.
  3. It is the second Metropolitan steam locomotive to carry the number "One".
  4. It was the last Metropolitan locomotive to be manufactured in-house at the Neasden Works.
  5. It had NO locomotive "manufacturing plates"
  6. Met. No. 1 is the only operational Metropolitan steam locomotive to survive.
    (Class A Number 23 is in the London Transport Museum in Covent Garden.)
Quite a tally of claims to fame!