With thanks I willingly bend to your superior knowledge about the location, John. Apart from 57663 are any of the others at Balornock?
Martin and Dave. I'm now convinced that loco is Sunstar! I'll excise my reservation when I update the description.
J36 65258 on shed at Haymarket on 10th September 1961. It had been allocated to St Margarets since 1948 and according to BR Database was withdrawn from there in March 1962. SLS agrees with the withdrawal date. However Rail UK report withdrawal from Haymarket although it agrees on the date. My Locoshed Books advise the allocation as St Margarets up to 1959 although there's a gap in my collection between 1959 and late in 1962 by which time the loco was no longer listed. It was scrapped at McLellans, Langloan, in November 1962. (Rail UK and BR Database).
Rail UK also report that 65258 was employed as a banker at Haymarket from April 1961 and stored at Bathgate in April 1962.
65258 St Margarets, Haymarket 4/4/61, Wdn 5/3/62. Scrapped 18/10/62. Since it was scrapped at Langloan (Coatbridge) it may well have been stored at Bathgate on its last journey westward.
McIntosh 782 Class 0-6-0T 56298 on shed at Polmadie on 10th September 1961. It had been a Polmadie engine since at least 1948 and was withdrawn from there on 25th October 1961. (BR Database). SLS agrees regarding the withdrawal date. Rail UK advise the withdrawal date to be 31st October and agrees with the final allocation. Disposal was at McLellans, Coatbridge, in November 1962.
Princess Coronations 46232 Duchess of Montrose and 46251 City of Nottingham (last seen in post #2662) on shed at Polmadie on 10th September 1961. BR Database record 46232 as being allocated to Polmadie since at least 1948 and withdrawn from there in December 1962. SLS agrees with the withdrawal date. The loco went to Crewe Works for disposal which was completed in November 1963. (Rail UK). Rai UK also advise that this loco suffered bomb damage at Berkhamsted in 1940 but I've investigated this no further. It'll be of particular interest to me, personally, though, as my current abode is only 15 minutes away from that centre of industrial excellence. (And those who know of Berko will wonder how it ever came to be bombed. The nearest air field was quite a few miles away at Bovingdon or Cheddington and had no industry of any consequence. It couldn't have been a strategic target.)
Some thoughts on the Berko Bomb. I suspect that it is unlikely to be a jettison from a Britiish bomber. Most RAF bomber airfields were positioned to the eastern side of Britain and so Berko is an unlikely overflight at this stage of the war as range was extremely limited until the big four engined aircraft arrived.
Another factor is that the bombs of the RAF at this stage were useless. the most common bomb was the 250lb GP. These had a distressing habit of the fuse dropping out most times they were dropped. If this bomb hit a hard object it tended to bounce off without any bang. The brave boys who died in the Blenheims, Battles and Wellingtons died for nothing. If the 250GP went off it caused little damage as the Casing/Explosive ratio was patheticly small. By mid 1940 a new range of bombs (MC for Medium Capacity) were in development and under test.
Finally the Luftewaffe bomber force were mostly in Northern France until they went off to Russia. A track from the Midlands to N France would go reasonably close to Berko.
46251 was a long way from home which had been Crewe North since October 1957, then Camden in March 1963 and back to Crewe North in May the same year where it was withdrawn in September 1964. (SLS). It was scrapped at Cashmore's, Great Bridge, during December the same year. (BR Database)
Brian