4th March, 2014
The Isle of Purbeck will be going back more than a century when the volunteer-led Swanage Railway stages its first London and South Western Railway Weekend - starring a unique Victorian steam locomotive from the National Collection.
It will be the first time that a Victorian-designed T9 class steam locomotive has hauled a passenger train through Corfe Castle since the early 1960s and the days of British Railways.
The special two-day event takes to the five-and-a-half mile Purbeck line from Norden Park & Ride to Corfe Castle, Harman's Cross, Herston and Swanage on Saturday and Sunday, 15 and 16 March, 2014.
It will also be the first time that a Victorian-designed M7 tank locomotive has been seen o perating through Corfe Castle with the T9 since the early 1960s - a pairing that was a familiar sight on the Swanage branch from the 1930s.
The star of the special weekend will be the only working T9 steam locomotive in the world - the unique No. 30120 - which is based on the Bodmin and Wenford Railway in Cornwall and on loan from the National Railway Museum's National Collection.
Swanage Railway General Manager Richard Jones said: "A special timetable is being introduced so the two Victorian locomotive-hauled trains pass each at Corfe Castle station - beneath the Medieval ruins - to maximise the spectacle and photographic opportunities as the Victorian days of old are re-created.
"We are very grateful to the Bodmin and Wenford Railway - and the National Railway Museum - for allowing the T9 to visit the Swanage Railway, bringing part of our national heritage collection to Dorset.
"The visit of No. 30120 is important and very historic because it will be the first time that a T9 steam locomotive hauls passenger trains to Corfe Castle since the British Railways days of the early 1960s," he added.
In a rare branch line re-creation, the Drummond Locomotive Society's Swanage Railway-based M7 tank No. 30053 will be hauling a two-coach passenger train of two restored 1940s Southern Railway Bulleid carriages.
It will be the first time in some 20 years that two Bulleid coaches have together carried passengers on the Swanage Railway while the M7 tank is the only working M7 class steam locomotive in the world.
Richard explained: "Along with the Dugald Drummond-designed M7 tank No. 30053, No. 30120 is the archetypal Southern branch line steam locomotive with the T9s having hauled passenger and freight trains to Corfe Castle and Swanage for some 40 years from the 1920s.
"The T9s were nicknamed 'Greyhounds' because of their turn of speed and, when first built, were used on express trains between London and Plymouth when there was fierce competition between the London and South Western Railway and the Great Western Railway for transatlantic liner passengers.
"The T9s worked widely over many parts of the Southern Railway network - including, of course, on the Swanage branch," he added.
Built at Nine Elms in London in 1899 by the London and South Western Railway, T9 No. 30120 hauled main line express trains in the south and west of England.
When it was in a Southern Railway green livery and numbered No. 120 in 1991, the T9 was loaned by the National Railway Museum at York and spent three years hauling trains between Swanage and Harman's Cross.
M7 tank No. 30053 was designed for the London and South Western Railway in 1897 and built at Nine Elms during 1905.
The London and South Western Railway Weekend will see the shop and buffet coach - serving drinks and snacks - open at Swanage station. There also a buffet coach at Norden station.
At Corfe Castle station, the exhibition and cinema coach next to the goods shed museum will be open.
Special fares apply for the Victorian weekend and day rover tickets - giving unlimited travel for a day - are £15 for adults and £10 for children.
Swanage Railway train times - and special event details - are available online at by following the menu links on the left of this page or by telephone on 01929 425800.