STEAM train enthusiasts were able to catch a rare glimpse of a locomotive passing through local stations.

The 45596 Bahamas is back on the mainline this week for the first time in 2022 as it takes part in the Great Britain tour.

Video courtesy of Steven Little

Today (April 27), the Bahamas moved from the Grange over Sands to Cardiff section of the Great Britain tour.

It passed through Chester, Wrexham General and Chirk on its way down to south Wales. 

The Leader: Photo courtesy of Alan Roberts. Photo courtesy of Alan Roberts.

The 45596 was constructed in 1934 by the North British Locomotive Company in Glasgow for the London Midland & Scottish Railway (LMS). It was a standard Jubilee Class locomotive, designed by William Stanier, the chief mechanical engineer of the LMS. In June 1936, 45596 received the name Bahamas after the West Indian islands in the Atlantic Ocean which were part of the British Empire.

The Leader: Photo courtesy of Alan Roberts. Photo courtesy of Alan Roberts.

The Bahamas was saved from being turned into scrap after several members of the public came together to attempt to purchase it with the hope of using the locomotive to operate special excursion trains. British Rail showed a lack of enthusiasm when it was approached by the preservation society as the group encountered great difficulty in raising the funds.

In early 1967, British Rail had agreed the sale of Bahamas to a scrap merchant in Hull. But the society acquired enough money, largely due to the offer of a sympathetic businessman of a £3,000 loan to cover the purchase, and high-level intervention within British Rail resulted in the sale to the Bahamas Locomotive Society - in the hands of which it remains.

The Leader: Photo courtesy of Alan RobertsPhoto courtesy of Alan Roberts