
Ex Butlin’s Limited 4-6-2 ‘Princess Royal’ Class
outline diesel hydraulic locomotives and coaches.
These two miniature locomotives were ordered by Mr Billy Butlin for use in transporting visitors over the 21 inch gauge lines at his holiday camps at Skegness and Clacton, the locomotives were 2/5 th scale outline models of Stanier’s ‘Princess Royal’ class 4-6-2 locomotives built at Crewe and introduced in 1933 to haul the fastest expresses trains over the London, Midland & Scottish Railway main lines.
Named after the two Royal Princesses by special permission of His Majesty King George VI, who asked to see the drawings before giving his consent, the first to be completed on 14th March, 1938 was
No. 6201 ‘Princess Elizabeth’ which was turned out in a London, Midland & Scottish Railway crimson lake livery with ‘Skegness Special’ painted around the top of the smokebox and ‘Butlin’s Holiday Camp Special’ on either side of the chimney, whilst the second No. 6203 ‘Princess Margaret Rose,’ was completed on 19th April and painted in an untypical London & North Eastern Railway green livery with,
in her case, the top ring of the smokebox lettered ‘Clacton Express.’

6203 ‘Princess Margaret Rose’ receives some last minute
adjustments in the Hudswell Clarke & Co. Ltd. works yard
in Leeds on 28 th April, 1938.
(Leeds News Agency [R. W. Ledbetter Collection] courtesy P. Rimmel and Alan Rimmer)
After completion the two locomotives, along with eight air-braked ‘toast-rack’ type carriages on four wheeled bogies - each seating 30 passengers three abreast - went initially to the Empire Exhibition, Scotland, 1938 which was opened at Bellahouston Park, Glasgow on 3rd May by Her Late Majesty Queen Elizabeth, The Queen Mother, after which the Royal party and other distinguished guests enjoyed a trip round the 950 yard single track circuit. This had a passing place half way around and a 30ft radius circular loop at each end, and the line was worked by token. Both trains operated when the park was busy, the normal speed being around 6 m.p.h.
No less than half a million other visitors also had a ride during the course of the exhibition, including the Rochdale born singer Gracie Fields and the miniature railway engineer Henry Greenly.
After the Glasgow Empire Exhibition closed 6201 ‘Princess Elizabeth’ went with one of the rakes of four coaches to the first Butlins camp at Skegness which had been the first to open at Easter in 1936. Here up to 4,500 campers could stay for a week for only £2.25p each, which not only included accommodation and four meals a day but also entertainment by Butlins famous ‘Redcoats’ and later on such budding celebrities as Des O’Connor, Tommy Steele, Cliff Richard and Max Bygraves.
6203 ‘Princess Margaret Rose’ went initially to the Clacton camp in Essex which had opened only that year near to an existing Butlins amusement site. Here she ran on a miniature railway circuit laid from a station built opposite the dining room past the boating lake to the sea, a distance of about one mile.
Closed during the Second World War, the existing holiday camps re-opened and proved so popular that more camps were built by Butlins to cater for the need for more of this relatively cheap and popular style of family holiday.

Red-liveried 6203 ‘Princess Margaret Rose’, her original rake
of four coaches packed with holidaymakers from the Pen-y-chain
camp arrives at the Beach Station at Pwllheli. (Courtesy Butlin’s Limited)
As to the engines, both are recorded as being together at Skegness by 1949-50, but 6201 ‘Princess Elizabeth’ was later moved to the Heads of Ayr camp in Scotland which opened in 1947.
By 1956 6203 ‘Princess Margaret Rose’ had moved to the Pwllheli camp in Wales along with her original set of four coaches and, now repainted in L.M.S. red livery, she operated on a new line built to link the main camp at Pen-y-chain to the beach some two miles away. This new 250 acre camp, opened in 1947, could take 9,300 visitors and had been adapted by Butlins from wartime navy accommodation known as ‘H.M.S. Glendower.’
In May 1963 the full sized Stanier 4-6-2 ‘Princess Margaret Rose’ herself arrived at the Phllheli camp site, having been purchased from British Railways following her withdrawal from traffic. Repainted in a representative L.M.S. crimson lake livery at Crewe Works she was delivered to the camp by rail and displayed on a length of track in the children’s playground area as a popular visitor attraction. As a result it seems that a decision was made to re-name the 21 inch gauge engine No. 6203 ‘Queen Elizabeth’ and a tin plate bearing a painted version of that name was fixed over the ‘Princess Margaret Rose’ nameplate on one side. She was certainly so re-named by June 1966.
6201 ‘Princess Elizabeth’ later moved with three of her original coaches to Butlin’s Minehead camp, which had opened at Christmas, 1962 and she remained there until around 1970. Now needing major repairs, she was moved to the Pwllheli camp to join 6203, her tender following later.
Working Life - Restoration - Preservation
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