Thank you gents for your input. This morning I licked my calculating pencil (aka Google sheets) and looked at the loadings involved (please make allowances for my amateur engineer status).
The interweb tells me that the loading on a plain bearing is a combination of the bearing area (1/3rd of the total bearing area being considered in respect of a radial load) and the rotational speed... aka "PV" and that the loading (in American units) that SAE 660 PhBronze (what I am using) can tolerate is 75,000 psi sFt/min.
The Leak Compound (my version) has three 1.25" dia main bearings each about 2" long, so I think we can say there is about 2.66sqin of bearing surface in play per bearing - The engine is meant to develop about 10hp at ~600rpm and has a 2"+5"x 3" configuration running at a maximum boiler pressure of 200psi. The two toothed-belt pulleys are 6.33" dia driving and 5.55" dia driven.
I
think this means that each of the three main bearings can withstand a load of about 993lbs radial loading (I guess in reality most of the belt load will be born by the bearing adjacent to the pulley.) - However, perhaps Fred or Bart can work my figures with a little more accuracy!! (please).
So, it seems to me, that we stand a fighting chance of the bearings being OK with the loading, but I might see if I can squeeze in one more pillow-block as an outrigger (although a total of
four 1.25" ID deep groove RHP pillow-blocks and two 4" long cutlass bearings does feel like we are straying into overkill territory and the job of getting them all sufficiently well aligned to ensure they do not increase the loads might be a challenge

)