Baby Sivok: The pride of Ghum Museum

Get up-close and personal the Orenstein & Koppel at Ghum Museum

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Take a virtual walk around Baby Sivok, stationed at the Ghum Railway Museum.

Baby Sivok (1979) by DHRS ArchiveDarjeeling Himalayan Railway Society

The 0-4-0 tank locomotive ‘Baby Sivok’ on display outside Siliguri Junction station, where it was from 1957 to 1999.

Although it carries the plate 1881, this signifies the opening date of the DHR, not the year this locomotive was built. It started life, probably in 1913, as a standard design of contractor’s engine from Orenstein & Koppel, in Germany.

It is believed to have been used during the building of the DHR’s Teesta Valley and Kishenganj branches, gaining the name 'Sivok' from Sivoke station on the Teesta line. Its subsequent history is rather obscure, until it was rebuilt at Tindharia in 1945 and went in 1953 to New Delhi for the Indian Railways Centenary exhibition.

The saddle tank and bunker are thought to have been added for the exhibition to better resemble the 'B' Class engines.

Baby Sivok (2000) by DHRS ArchiveDarjeeling Himalayan Railway Society

In 1999, Baby Sivok was removed from its plinth at Siliguri Junction and taken to Tindharia works to be returned to service.

It steamed again in January 2000 and is seen in steam here st Tindharia Shed with its new plate ‘Rebuilt Tindharia Workshop 1999’. It was operated on a few occasions, but being a small contractor’s engine was not powerful enough to be capable of any useful work on the very steep DHR main line.

Baby Sivok by Dave HarrisDarjeeling Himalayan Railway Society

Baby Sivok, seen here in 2006, in company with a retired 1960s built coach. Though slightly faded, the blue is a lighter shade than that used for the most recent repaint.

Baby Sivok was finally retired to the new museum at Ghum, which opened in November 2000, where it has been on display until the present.

It is a standard design of contractor’s engine from Orenstein & Koppel from 1913, not as the Museum signage suggests, a "Sharp Stewart from 1881" – this is the year the DHR opened.

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The entrance to the Ghum Museum, within the Ghum Railway Station of DHR. The site is what had formerly been a small loco shed and the goods warehouse or Godown. Both were part of the 1999 UNESCO listing and were naively demolished in 2000 "because they were old". It would be acceptable under World Hertiage rules to rebuild, however, on a visit in 2016, David Charlesworth discovered that the site was no longer big enough - land had been taken away from the back of the site.

Baby Sivok (2016-11) by David CharlesworthDarjeeling Himalayan Railway Society

Baby Sivok has been repainted several times since 2000, but no other maintenance has been done. The same applies to the 1960s coach behind it – this is in such poor condition only the paint seems to be holding it together. Movement will practically be impossible.

Douglas by David ChurchillDarjeeling Himalayan Railway Society

Douglas on the Talyllyn is as Baby Sivok would look without the saddle tank and bunker.

Baby Sivok (2016-11) by David CharlesworthDarjeeling Himalayan Railway Society

The climate in Ghum is very damaging to the museum's outdoor artefacts.

The purpose of the visit on this particularly sunny day, in November 2016, was to look at the possibility of a new undercover museum with the UNESCO/CCMP team. The lady at the end of the footpath is an award-winning architect and a member of the team.

Credits: Story

Written and compiled by David Charlesworth GRA. Editor of The Darjeeling Mail and a Director and founder Member of the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway Society. Technical words were by David Churchill, the Society's Technical Officer.

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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