The Great Western RailwaySwindon Class were broad gauge0-6-0 locomotives built for goods train work. This class entered service between November 1865 and March 1866, and were withdrawn between June 1887 and the end of the GWR broad gauge in May 1892. The entire class was sold to the Bristol and Exeter Railway between July 1872 and September 1874 and were numbered 96-109, but returned to the GWR when that railway was absorbed. The locomotives were then renumbered 2077-2090; their names were not restored.
Bath is a Georgian city 11+1⁄2 miles (18.5 km) east of Bristol which was reached by the Great Western Railway on 31 August 1840.
Birmingham (1866–1873)
This locomotive was named after the Midlands city, Birmingham, which was served by broad gauge trains from 1 October 1851..
Bristol (1865–1873)
This locomotive was named after the western terminus of the railway, Bristol.
Chester (1866–1873)
Chester never saw broad gauge trains but was served by the Great Western Railway from 1 September 1854 when it absorbed the Shrewsbury and Chester Railway.
This locomotive was named after the town mid-way along the Great Western Railway, Swindon, where the company built its workshops.
Windsor (1866–1873)
Windsor is the seat of the Royal Family near London and was served by a branch line from Slough that opened on 8 October 1849.
Wolverhampton (1866–1874)
Wolverhampton is in the Midlands and home to the Great Western's Northern Division workshops. It was served by broad gauge trains from 14 November 1854.
Reed, P. J. T. (February 1953). White, D. E. (ed.). The Locomotives of the Great Western Railway, Part 2: Broad Gauge. Kenilworth: RCTS. pp. B28 –B29. ISBN0-901115-32-0.