Wednesday, 27 January 2021

Essential maintenance

Toddington - the unloading road.

Work on this was paused during last year, but its half finished state is an operational hindrance, and a bit of a safety hazard for people using that bit of the yard (mainly contractors finishing off the mess room).

It was therefore decided to complete the concreting job, using a contractor and a couple of volunteers to prepare it. An initial section was concreted a week ago, as in the picture.

Here is the section completed last week. It includes the area between the containers and the mess room extension, on the right.

 

The canopy team was then requested to place the edging strips that they had made (we are not allowed to work on the canopy completion as it is not 'essential') and here they are carrying out the strips which were then welded (temporarily) to the running rails.

Today the concrete supplier came again, this time working from the car park end. Here is the concrete pump, and the lorry making on the spot concrete for it.

At the business end of the supply pipe the concrete started to come out in spurts, and it was raked level by the contractors.


Around lunch time this is as far as they had advanced. In the foreground is a cross drain which will take away the water that used to stand in large puddles along here. By the end of the day it was hoped to reach the sliding door of the goods shed, leaving a third and final section still to do.

Before the concrete came, Neal and yours truly hurriedly dug out the guide rail below the original sliding door along the side. It was about to be buried in 9 inches of concrete. The guide rail is of cast iron and was set in granite blocks, which proved a challenge to undo without damage, but we got there.

On the left the cast iron guide rails after removal, om the right Neal struggling the granite blocks, trying to recover the rail without breaking it. Now it is safe, and we plan to refit it into the new concrete once it has gone off.

 

 

 

 A quick look into the loco shed shows these two bits, marked with a large L and R. Well, that's clear. They are off 2807. Is this what they call 'stuffing boxes'?

 




Outside the new mess room - still being fitted out as we write - here is a detail of the new replica lamps. We are very pleased with the quality. These have a door underneath, rather than on top, such as the budget ones we fitted at Broadway. You can also get them with the correct side doors.




 

Finally a picture from Sunday, when there was a light snowfall:

The Cotswolds Edge is still pretty, despite winter and lockdown. This picture was taken near Dover's Hill on Sunday. We have to do regular walks, as staying at home and writing blogs is clearly fattening. Sadly.



 

 

Cromford & High Peak in colour

Derek continues with his tales of steam in 1963.

Continuing with my bike tour of Derbyshire and here are some more views of the Cromford & High Peak Railway in July 1963.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Between the top of Sheep Pasture incline and the bottom of Middleton incline the railway passes a massive outcrop known as Black Rocks.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The next view is taken from the top of Hopton Incline which was originally operated with a winding engine similar to the other inclines but in 1877 it became single track and relied on locomotive power to ascend the 1 in 14 gradient. It was still in use at the time of my visit but I did not capture any workings. There was an occasion when a derailment occurred on the approach to the foot of the incline when, taking a run at it, the locomotive became derailed by spreading the track through excessive nosing, unfortunately with fatal consequences. 

 

I mentioned last week how the route has characteristics similar to those that might have been found with a canal. Below is Gotham Curve which has a radius of 2.5 chains and turns the line through 80 degrees.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Continuing northwest here is Hindlow tunnel on part of the route that the LNWR straightened out and doubled the track.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Getting closer to the end of the original route and the part of the line that had been abandoned, and here is the north portal of Burbage tunnel. No, I didn't fancy looking beyond the tunnel mouth. It was very dark. 

 

Back on the section of line upgraded by the LNWR and 4F 0-6-0 44339 is seen shunting at Parsley Hay. Just south of here the upgraded line diverges towards Ashbourne, away from the original C&HPR route.

LMS 4F 44339 shunting at Parsley Hay and its wooden platforms.

 

 

 For our classic diesel friends:


Whilst still on my week in Derbyshire I also spent time looking at the Derby to Manchester Midland mainline. A chance bonus at the beginning of a new film and I pointed the camera expecting to get a blank picture, but instead here is a Peak class heading north light engine, near Rowsley.


Then a walk to Haddon Tunnel by an obscure (!) route gave me the next three pictures. First, heading a southbound freight approaching the tunnel, is ex WD 2-8-0 90204.

Turning to face the tunnel mouth Standard Class 5 73137 is heading a northbound freight.

I guessed that this would have a banker, so with camera at the ready..... lo and behold Fairburn 2-6-4T 42225 arrived. I am sure the crew were relieved to be back out in the fresh air.

 

The same scenes today give these pictures:

WD 90204 came along here, at the tunnel's upper end.


The western approach to Haddon tunnel, with the former headshunt on the right in the bushes.


Here is where 73137 came out of the tunnel mouth, and again that headshunt on the right.

Note how shallow the tunnel roof is.

This is because there was actually no need for the tunnel, the owner of Haddon Hall just wanted the trains to disappear while passing through his property. So the line runs behind the hall, underground but only just, for just over 1000 yards.

Haddon Hall today. Worth a visit, despite the aversion to steam.

Also, as an update to Derek's 1963 pictures of the Middleton Top incline, here are two pictures from 2015 which show the situation today:

A wagon by the Middleton Top engine house, with the incline falling away steeply by the signal.
The engine house still exists, and you can rent cycles here to follow the old trackbed.

Middle Peak quarry
You can also see the chimney of Middleton Top engine house in this picture, taken across the gigantic quarry after a short walk up from Wirksworth village, home to the EVR.




Turntable update

Good progress has been made with finding this a new home. Two candidates stepped forward to take it over as a job lot, and a final selection has now been made. We now await arrangements to have it moved to its new owners. We won't give the name away for the time being, but they may well make this known by themselves.

An on-site inspection took place today to take some measurements, and to find out exactly what there is. We also had a party interested in the vacuum motor alone, but that was not a feasible option. First of all, the turntable was offered and taken as a job lot, and secondly the inspection today revealed that the vacuum motor is an integral part of the structure, and cannot be removed from it. It's not just a bolt on power unit, but the drive on it forms one of the four wheels underneath. You can't take that away on its own.

Here are some pictures of the vacuum motor, which we found an interesting piece of technology:

The vacuum motor, inside.

Maintenance instructions


Operating instructions



 

 

This is why vacuum motor and turntable can't be separated. The cogwheel on the right is connected to the running wheel on the left, which is one of 4 that run along the ring rails.

The vacuum supply hose is in the foreground.

Do you 'supply' a vacuum ??? It sucks, doesn't it?


 

 

If you look closely you can see that the running wheel was not positioned correctly on the ring rail during its service life, and the ring rail has bitten into the cogwheel that is driven by the vacuum motor.

We also found that the motor was supplied by Cowans Sheldon of Carlisle, but the main running wheels are marked Ransomes & Rapier, Ipswich. Was the motor sub contracted, or did the firms merge / work together? The worksplate is no longer there to see.


More next week.

Wednesday, 20 January 2021

Eastbank

Eastbank....

 .... was the name of the stationmaster's house in Broadway when it first set up as a B&B in 1979. We had a nice email - we always appreciate emails with a bit of history, especially if there are old pictures attached - as a result of the last blog, which featured a picture of Pannier 8491 at Chalford. This prompted Neil Evans to send us a bit of history of the stationmaster's house, after the station closed.

By way of background we give below a picture during the time the first new people, the Eaketts family, owned it, having bought it off a property company in the 1960s after the station closed to passengers.


Trackside view of the former station site in the 1970s, with the new brick wall and the Eaketts' Wolseley parked below the house
 From the Tony Harden collection.


 

 

 

Station forecourt, showing the new brick wall for the lower car parking area of the stationmaster's house
 From the Tony Harden collection.

 

Stationmaster's house from the rear in the 1970s













Copyright: Lorna Eaketts.


Stationmaster's house, Christmas 1979. A sectional concrete garage has now appeared on the left.
Copyright: Neil Evans.

 

Neil explains:

My brother and his wife purchased the Station Master's house at Broadway (then called "Eastbank") in the late 1970's and for many years ran it as a B&B. I remember that not long after he bought it, the GWSR had started re-building the railway at Toddington and I asked him if he was looking forward to the railway and station being reinstated at Broadway; he replied "nothing will ever be built at the bottom of my drive". Sadly, he is no longer alive, but I wonder what he would make of the fantastic heritage development the GWSR has now created at Broadway?

With respect to the Broadway stationmaster’s house, my brother purchased the property in, I believe, 1979 and whilst I was working away in the middle east. Consequently, I never had the opportunity to meet the previous owners (Mr & Mrs Eaketts) and indeed, I never heard my brother mention that particular name. My brother and his wife significantly extended the house in the early 1980’s and ran a B&B business from there until they moved away in the early 2000’s. Over Christmas 1979, I stayed with them whilst on leave and took the photo of the house from the Platform 2 side of the GWSR trackbed. You can see this photo shows the empty trackbed, the original concrete and wire fence between the GWSR trackbed and their property (later replaced by the current leylandii hedge) and the original sectional concrete garage halfway up the drive. This was later replaced by an underground garage closer to the side of the house. Unfortunately, I don’t think I have any further information about the house that would be of interest to your members.

 

 In the early 1960's I lived in Hereford and frequently travelled to Gloucester with a school chum to train spot at the Central and Eastgate stations and at Horton Road shed. I saw 8491 twice in 1963 at Horton Road shed, and on the second occasion (early June I believe) managed a cab ride on the loco as it was being prepared prior to leaving shed for transfer freight duty. As you record, it was withdrawn from service on 13th July 1963 and I never saw it again. Interestingly, as you probably know, the Chalford service was usually an auto train hauled by either 14XX or 64XX tanks. Occasionally, when an auto fitted engine was not available, a standard tank and coaching stock would be substituted. One such instance is illustrated on page 156 of "Western Region Steam 1950 - 1965" by Mike Arlett & David Lockett and the engine photographed approaching Brimscombe Station on 22nd May 1961 is none other than 8491.

 

I was most interested to read your latest posting and in particular to see the pictures of Hawksworth pannier 8491.

When I retired in 2015, I decided to treat myself to a 5" gauge steam locomotive and bought a pre-machined kit for ...... a Hawksworth pannier tank. Completed in 2016 and painted black, it now has cab and smokebox number plates as 8491, with an 85B shed code. So, in a manner of speaking, pannier 8491still exists!! See attached photos.

 

 

 

Regarding the picture of 4161 heading the Oxford University Railway Society tour at Gloucester Central, this engine was a regular engine on the Hereford to Gloucester services. This line, with its tunnels, spectacular bridges over the River Wye and picturesque wayside stations was my favourite cross country route at the time, but sadly little now remains to show its existence. Returning to 4161, I was fortunate that on 7th August 1964 the Hereford driver of this engine agreed to give me a cab ride between Grange Court Junction and Ross on Wye - a memorable experience, especially the passage of the 771 yard long Lea Line Tunnel!

Best wishes,

Neil Evans




Derek's 1963 colour railway photographs

This week we're going to Derbyshire, with an exciting visit to a steeply graded railway line - the Cromford & High Peak Railway. Derek's got quite a story about it. He says:

During a day's shed bashing trip to Derbyshire in the second half of the 1950s with the local railway enthusiasts from Oxford, the organiser asked the coach driver to stop on the A6 at a point which seemed to be of no particular interest. He then got out and walked back a bit and gazed over the parapet of a bridge, got back on the coach and told us what he had been looking at. It being a main road with nowhere to leave the coach and the fact that we had an itinerary to keep, we had to be content with him telling us what he had been so interested in seeing. Intrigued, I subsequently bought a book describing the Cromford and High Peak Railway. It took me until the summer of 1963 to getting round to visiting the area and taking a week's holiday to explore the railway for myself. I took the train from Oxford to Matlock with my bike, and then cycled to my base for the week, bed, breakfast and evening meal at a cottage in Monyash.

The Cromford and High Peak Railway ran from the Cromford Wharf of the Cromford Canal to the Peak Forest Canal at Whaley Bridge. The idea being to provide access to Stockport and Manchester for industrial and agricultural products from the Midlands. In the 1820s when the plans for the route were drawn up the thinking was still towards it being a canal. The contours posed a considerable challenge with the route. The Cromford end was 277ft above sea level and the other end 33 miles away at Whaley Bridge was 517ft above sea level. Not too bad until you take into accounts the fact that at the highest point it was 1264ft above sea level, so many flights of locks would be required. Providing an adequate water supply was going to be a problem. It was not surprising then, with railways coming into play in other parts of the country at this time, it was decided to build it as a railway instead. However, the design of the route did have the same characteristics as a canal, with inclined planes, nine in all until a couple where amalgamated later on, and a tortuous route with many sharp bends. Work started in 1825 and the eastern half from Cromford was opened in 1830 with the rest of the line opening a year later.

 

The gradient of the different inclined planes was between 1 in 7.5 and 1 in 14. All but the latter were double track and worked by steel cable, or when first constructed, by chain. At the top of each incline there was a winding house with a winding engine driven by a stationary steam boiler. Although one 'engine' at the incline at Whaley Bridge was a horse and a capstan. The idea was that, as far as possible, compensating loads would be going up and down at the same time. When first constructed the line was operated with horses but steam locomotives began to take over from 1833.

 

The line had many sidings serving quarries and limestone works, with the transport of goods associated with that. For a while there was also a passenger service, with a 'fly' coach attached to a train. The journey from end to end took five and a half hours and the passengers had to walk up and down the inclines.

 

The line also provided a means of supplying coal and water to the inhabitants and industry along the line and of course, not least for supplies to run the railway itself.

 

In the latter half of the nineteenth century the LNWR took over a central portion of the line, straightening it out and easing the gradients, and doubling the track, it then forming part of the line from Ashbourne to Buxton. With this development, parts of the northwestern end of the line were abandoned, there being an alternative route to Whaley Bridge and Stockport.

 

Looking at the Sheep Pasture incline at Cromford as an example, this was 1 in 9 and 1 in 8 and 1320 yards long. The descending loads were limited to a total of thirtyeight tons. The load would be prepared at the top of the incline and a couple of hefty pivoted blocks of wood would be swivelled under the wagon wheels to prevent accidental runaway. The trailing wagon would be attached to the steel cable with twin lengths of chain which would be 'plaited' round the cable with deft repeated flicks of the wrists, and finally two or three leather straps would be tightened round the ends of the chain. Signalling to the bottom end of the incline would be done by a series of bells and pointers. Once ready to descend, the pivoted blocks would be knocked away from under the wheels. There was a catchpit near the bottom of the incline where, if the points were not directed to the line around it, the wagons would end up in the pit, albeit completely wrecked. There was a pointsman in a cabin alongside here and he would be alerted to the speed of descent of the wagons by a gong which would sound repeatedly as the wagons passed triggers on the descent. The pointsman could judge if there was a runaway by the frequency of the gong sounding. There was an occasion when this catchpit served its purpose with not much left to recover from the wreckage.

 

There wasn't always a catchpit. There had been at least one runaway before this was installed. The wagons involved took flight at the bottom, clearing the canal and the mainline and ending up in the field beyond. Even after the catchpit was installed there was a runaway after the wagons had successfully passed it, with not quite so dramatic consequences.

 

My visit took me to those parts of the line that were still operational and also a look at some of the abandoned parts as well.

 

Here is a series of pictures all taken at Sheep Pasture incline. The first picture shows a run of two wagons just sent on their way with the chain plaited round the steel cable. The massive blocks of wood used to keep the wagons in place prior to departure can be seen in the foreground.

 

 

Then another wagon is sent on its way down.


Next is a wagon just about to reach the top.

 

Then (LH picture) near the bottom of the incline looking up, a run is ascending past the catchpit. Viewed from this angle the catchpit does not seem much but the business side is a bit buried.


This is followed by a run coming down passing the catchpit (RH picture). The pointsman's cabin is alongside the points where the line diverges.

The previous two views were taken from the bridge which carries the A6 over the incline. 

Derek also sent three more current pictures taken in 2002 

 

 

 

This one shows the catch pit near the bottom of the incline, with the A6 road bridge in the background, from which the pictures looking up in 1963 were taken. The little square hut features in both the old and the more recent pictures

 

 


 

 

 

 

A shot of the tunnel at the bottom, which is actually the A6 road bridge.




 

This picture was taken from the incline side of the road bridge, looking down to the foot of the incline on the other side of the bridge. If you zoom in on the picture you can see the rails that are in the picture featured above that one.

 

.

 

 

 

 

 

Now back to 1963:

This view is looking the other way down the incline from the bridge. This is the bottom of the incline with the line then curving away to the wharf.


Back at the top of Sheep Pasture incline 0-4-0ST 47007 is in the sidings. The line on the left leads to the incline. The top of the winding house can be seen behind the loco.

Loco 47007 looks a bit like an Austerity from the front, but was actually an 0-4-0 LMS design built at Horwich in 1953 for BR. It floated round Birkenhead and Derby for a few years, before finishing its short 10 year career at Rowsley shed. It was withdrawn at the end of 1963, a few months after Derek's visit. 

Middleton incline is the next incline along the line. This is 800 yards long with a gradient of 1 in 8.25. I didn't see any activity on the occasion of my visit but it was still in regular use then.


I believe the winding house and engine is now kept as a monument and is next to the start of a cycle trail along part of the former railway.

A bit further along the line is Hopton Tunnel.


Continuing west is Longcliffe. I mentioned the use of the line to supply water. Here are two ex LNWR tenders in use for that purpose with another unrecorded 0-4-0ST at the head.


Further reading: The Cromford & High Peak Railway by Alan Rimmer. Locomotion Papers Number Ten published by the Oakwood Press 1956.

Further viewing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UiCyDXG50qw&t=588s

 





Bratton Fleming station / Exmoor Associates Ltd

Bratton Fleming station is now in secure L&B friendly hands, and the tenant is in, and loves it there. Now it's generating an income too. As soon as there is better weather, and regulations allow it, they plan to hold an open day there. The site is very restricted and you can't park anywhere, so people may need to park in the village and walk down, much as passengers were once expected to do.

Exmoor Associates Ltd is a bunch of guys who clubbed together to buy, patiently, parts of the old trackbed for eventual reinstatement of the line as / when they come up for sale. So you might get many months without news, and then suddenly there is a burst of activity. And here comes an example of the latter!

Part of the trackbed that has become available to buy.
Quite a stretch of the trackbed (once chopped up into 100 or so bits in the 1930s) has just become available, but the little company exhausted itself on the purchase of Bratton Fleming station. They raised about 70% of the cost from new public contributions, but still had to cover the last 30% from the remaining resources of the company. Now the war chest is empty. And then, just as the first tenant moved in, another opportunity has arisen. Like the No.9 bus, you wait ages, then three come at once.

They don't want to say exactly what and where, as conveyancing is very slow at the moment and they don't want the deal to be snapped from them, but we can say that it is above Bratton Fleming, somewhere between there and the reservoir at Whistlandpound. They don't want it sold to someone else as a future ransom strip, so negotiations are always very delicate.


Here is the relevant extract from their newsletter, which shareholders receive whenever there is something exciting to say:

Another Opportunity for More Trackbed

After just recovering from the frantic efforts in purchasing Bratton Fleming Station and having a feeling of calm at last, we then had a phone call from a local land agent with whom we have dealt before, offering a considerable length of trackbed not that far from Bratton Station.

Having invested a considerable amount of money in the purchase of Bratton Station our bank balance is sadly now depleted, and coming so close to this massive expenditure we just haven’t had the time to replace those funds.

So we return to you for help once again; needless to say we don’t want to lose this vital section, and once again we are selling Exmoor Associates shares. We can go a long time with nothing being available then all of a sudden several sections become available at once.

Exmoor Associates will use all the platforms available to get the appeal out to the widest newest audience as possible. 

The Directors realise that everyone’s financial position is different as far as supporting us, so we have tried to put in place something to suit all.

Shares continue to be issued as usual in blocks of £100 but we are equally happy to accept £10, £20 etc. a month until £100 pounds is raised for a registered shareholding. See below for details.

These are very exciting times for Exmoor Associates but realise if our endeavours are to be achieved in the long-term we will need to have fresh ideas to tackle some of the more difficult sections of the former Lynton and Barnstaple Railway in the southern part.

We will be shortly announcing one of those ideas and you will be first to hear.

Finally thank you in anticipation of your help with this. It is not ideal timing we know but out of our control.

A Go Fund Me page will not be used this time, as a precentage is deducted from donations, and there is a potential tax issue for the company. Share purchases are the simplest way at the moment.

So this is what you need to do, if you want to help buy the stretch of trackbed:

 

For existing share holders to purchase additional shares all that is needed is to make a BACS payment using the details below.

Exmoor Associates Ltd.

Sort Code: 30-93-08

Account No. 01550790

To set up a standing order use these details or send a cheque to the address below.

The Company Secretary

Exmoor Associates Ltd.

Edgemoor, Moorland Close

YELVERTON PL20 6DD

 

New shareholders should get in touch with the Company Secretary in order to receive a copy of the Shareholders’ Agreement, consent form, and data protection and privacy policy. By post or email to tony @ exmoor-associates.co.uk    (remove the 2 blanks)


Yours truly has answered the call with another bunch of shares. Once you are a shareholder, buying more is easy - just make a bank transfer. If you want to help save this piece of trackbed, then perhaps you'd like to do the same?

See you next time!

 

 

Wednesday, 13 January 2021

Turntable for disposal.

Disposal of the Ashford turntable.

The 70ft (we think) turntable that we recovered from Ashford, Kent in the early 1980s is now up for disposal. We were going to say 'sale', but in fact we are prepared to give it away to a good home.

Over the nearly 40 years we have had it we were never able to agree definitively to where it was going to go. There is no room at either end of the railway. Then, 10 years ago, one of the two wings was scrapped, leaving the other wing and the centre portion, as on the photograph. We also have the centre pivot casting, some of the wheels and the vacuum engine to propel it. So there is still a substantial part of it there.

The turntable on a wagon at CRC. Photograph by Jim H.
The decision to let it go was taken after various pressures started to arise preventing us from storing it where it is now. A secondary factor was that if we want to have a turntable, and we do - there is a spot penciled in on the new master plan at Toddington - then we ought to have a GWR one. Given the partial reconstruction required, we would be better off starting afresh, and building what we want. The GWR design is a shallow one and requires very little in the way of a pit.

So, sadly, it now has to go. We can't keep storing it where it is.

If anyone is interested in taking it over, get in touch with breva2011 (at) hotmail.co.uk.



Derek's 1963 steam photographs in colour

Continuing with the Oxford University Railway Society tour to Gloucestershire on 15th June 1963 here are three photographs of the train at Chalford. Derek can't remember the sequence of movements that took place for the train to change platforms and the loco to run round.

The first picture shows the special on arrival at Chalford. The guard is having a chat with the loco crew, while the members of the tour have got out to take this souvenir picture. One, in regulation tweed jacket, can be glimpsed on the right with his camera.

On the other platform is a poster advertising trips to Jersey, and one of those all wooden benches we managed to secure for Broadway. Built to stand indoors, or under a canopy, over their long lives they were invariably dragged somewhere outdoors, where they would start to rot, like here.

To prepare for the return to Gloucester the train was shunted on to platform 2 and the loco run round. A lady has now sat down on the bench in the sun.

Pannier 8491 is blowing off gently, ready to go. The loco is one of the newer 94xx class of which 10 were built by the GWR and another 200 by BR, many by outside contractors. This one entered service in 1952 and was withdrawn in July 1963, just a month after the picture was taken and after a brief 11 year life. Their duties had disappeared, as would Chalford station.

The third and final picture of Chalford was taken from the footbridge, just before the train departed. When the line between Kemble and Gloucester was opened in 1845 no station was envisaged for Chalford, but eventually one was built in 1897. It then became famous for being the terminus of the new steam rail motor service from Stonehouse in 1903, those new services also being the reason Broadway didn't get one straight away as there weren't enough of these revolutionary units available yet. A special corrugated iron shed was built for the rail motors here.

Sadly Chalford station was closed in November 1964. Presumably the decline of industry in the Golden Valley prompted this, leading to fewer goods being transported, and fewer workers. The line to Kemble and beyond, through Sapperton tunnel, is of course still there, so maybe one day it will be re-opened, as the valley is quite well populated.


Then back at Gloucester we boarded the 4:08pm for Hereford with 4161 in charge.

4161 was a local engine, being based at Hereford where Derek and the OURS members were going. It was a large Prairie, of which 140 were built by the GWR, with the last 20 even built by BR after nationalisation.  The loco is pretty dirty here, although it still had a good 2 years to go, before it was withdrawn from Worcester in 1965. The maroon carriages were strikingly shiny though. Of the 140 built a total of 10 survived scrapping, but not all are preserved. Five are currently runners; two became parts donors.

We had time at Ross-on-Wye for a photograph of our train....

Ross on Wye was an intermediate station between Gloucester and Hereford, and you wonder if the OURS didn't have some sort of an inkling about its future, as the line has not survived and Ross on Wye was closed to passengers in 1964, and to all traffic in 1965. The station buildings were demolished and the site is now an industrial estate. But - its design was used to closely inspire the new SVR Kidderminster station, so an echo of it survives.

 

 

 

 

 

  .. and to watch the arrival of a Hereford to Gloucester train headed by 5154.

 

This incoming train was also hauled by a member of the GWR 5101 class. Prairie 5154 entered traffic in 1930 and in the picture it seems to be equally as dirty as its classmate hauling the OURS train. Both locos were shedded at Hereford, so at the time there can't have been much money for cleaners there, even for passenger trains.

The picture, we recall, was taken on 15th June 1963 and 5154 was withdrawn a short while later, on 29th August 1963. The loco was scrapped at Cashmore's of Great Bridge in April of the following year, after a service life of 33 years.

 

 

 

 

 

Then a final shot approaching Colwall Tunnel on the way back home to Oxford on the 6:05pm from Hereford.

 

 

 

Derek managed this final shot of the day out of the train, as they entered a tunnel. It's near the village of Colwall, between Malvern and Ledbury. That line of course is still open, part of the Cotswolds line, being the Worcester-Hereford section.

Colwall tunnel closed though.... how is that possible? In fact there are two Colwall tunnels. The first one ended up rather too narrow for comfort, dating from the Worcester and Hereford railway time and being opened relatively early in 1861. It was found to contain some of the hardest rocks in Britain, and digging it was painfully slow.

In 1926 it was replaced by a newer, parallel bore which was much roomier. This is the one you see in the picture. Colwall (old) tunnel is still there, was used in the war, and even had a little n.g. railway run down the middle of it. After the war it fell into disuse again, and is now the roosting place for a large number of bats. An idea put forward is to re-open it for cyclists. It is 1567yds long, quite a distance for a narrow bore.


 

 

Also just off the presses is this news item, for which we will post a link to the BBC website:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-gloucestershire-55647029

Welcome news for this blogger, as we have so far not had the opportunity to help our railway with a specific COVID appeal. How ever did we manage without one? Look out for the formal appeal when it is launched.


That's it for today, more of Derek's pictures next week, when we pay a visit to the unusual Cromford and High Peak Railway.


If anyone is interested in the 70ft Ashford turntable, get in touch with breva2011 (at) hotmail.co.uk. If no interest, we may have to think of the ultimate solution, which we would rather not. But it has to go.



 

Wednesday, 6 January 2021

Full lockdown

Gosh - that was quick! Into tier 3 on Boxing Day, and we had to stop running, then tier 4 on December 30th, and a few days later on January 5th BANG! - straight into lockdown! No doubt we are now paying penance for the excesses of Christmas. Let's hope it's the 'last push' before we gradually all get the vaccine. We can't now run trains at half term, but possibly a COVID appropriate service in March. It all depends on how long the lockdown lasts, and currently there is no definite limit to this one. What to do?

Well, while we wait we still have Derek Palmer's wonderful pictures of steam in 1963 to look at, and in colour too. In June 1963 he was still on tour with his local OURS railway club, and this is what he saw:


Here is a view looking south from Bletchley No.2 signal box. The upper set of signals provide a clear view for approaching expresses unimpeded by the station buildings. The visit to the signal box was a continuation of the Oxford University Railway Society tour on 5th June 1963 featured in last week's blog. It's a pity that I didn't take a photo of the inside of the box. It's too late now! Also in the picture is a DMU which I think is about to depart on a service to Bedford.

The DMU is on the far left, there's another loco on the far right and one approaching the camera. Can anyone say more? Bletchley station lost some glory to Milton Keynes, but will no doubt see more traffic when the East West link is reactivated - it is just down the road from Swanbourne.

This view from the signal box must be quite rare.

Derek continues:

Bletchley was one of the haunts for me as a teenager. Just out of shot on the right there is some higher ground known as 'The Bank' which was a popular vantage point for trainspotters. The sight of double headed expresses thundering through was exciting to watch.

On another OURS tour on 15th June 1963, two photographs taken at Evesham of 3745 with the 12:24pm train to Ashchurch. If there wasn't a Sunday service then this was the last day of passenger services. (the station closed on 17th June 1963)

These two pictures will be of particular interest to our local enthusiasts. There was a second station just out of shot to the right at Evesham, where WR trains stopped on the Oxford - Worcester line. That is still there, but the platforms in the picture have disappeared and the station site now holds the tyre depot used by yours truly!

This second pictures shows the same last train at Evesham, now looking east, with the Railway Hotel peeping over the footbridge. The building was put up by the Midland railway after the line from Redditch arrived at Evesham in 1860. It's still there today.

Pannier 3745 of the Collet designed 57xx class entered service in 1937 and at the time of the picture was shedded at Gloucester, Horton Road, the GWR shed there. With much less work for it to do the loco was withdrawn a year later and scrapped by Cashmore's of Newport in April 1965.

The OURS headboard seems to have been affixed at every photo stop, and one very enthusiastic enthusiast must have lugged it around for the entire trip!

Then a last view of the same train at Ashchurch as we departed for Gloucester.

This is a view looking north, back at Ashchurch station, where the train hauled by 3745 has arrived on the curved platform at the end of the line from Evesham. Two boys can be seen messing about in front of the loco, and you can also make out a bucket by the loco on the platform - perhaps to carry some engine coal to a waiting room fire?

Also on the right you can see a wagon loaded with a military vehicle. This was for the MOD depot a short way up the line.

Here is 45700 with train in the sidings at Gloucester.

This Stanier Jubilee was built by the LMSR at Crewe in 1936 and entered service as 5700 BRITANNIA. When BR launched its new standard Pacific class in 1951 the name was usurped by the first one of the new series, and the Jubilee in our picture was left bare of nameplates. Luckily a new one was found: AMETHYST. This was in honour of a Royal Navy Frigate which ran the gauntlet of heavy fire down the Yangtse Kiang in 1949. 

At the time of the picture AMETHYST was quite far from home, being shedded at Derby. The engine is dirty, the BR crest on the tender is almost invisible, she is blowing off and there is nobody visible on the footplate.

The loco was withdrawn in July 1964 and quickly scrapped two months later.

5240 at Gloucester Central.

Another dirty loco near the end of its life. This was a GWR workhorse from Wales, where it was designed to haul coal trains down the hills, and empties back up them. At the time of the picture 5240 was shedded at Aberdare, so it too was some way from home. Just look at the protection for the crew in the cab - no glazed windows, just a sliding sheet of steel with a knob. That'll do yer! Now get to work, lugging.

A member of the 4200 class, itself a relative of 2807, this loco was built in 1924 and managed a respectable 40 years service, until scrapped in May 1964. So at the time of the picture not much maintenance, or even cleaning, was thought worthwhile. A chalked inscription can be seen under the bunker, the top half of which reads: 'KEEP OFF'. Strange, that.

The 4200 class has a certain elegance and power, and is one of your blogger's favourites. He is an enthusiastic supporter of 4253 at Rolvenden : https://www.4253.co.uk/  where a total wreck from on top of a coal mine in Wales arrived 9 years ago, and which today is almost fully restored. In fact the 4253 guys - who had never restored a Barry wreck before - have already started on the next project, a wreck that was so bare it consisted of just frames and a boiler: GWR 5668.

 

 

 

Lockdown Quiz 2 - Answers.

Little bit of sackcloth here, and a small scattering of ashes - the quiz was actually prepared by Jim, not Robert, as we proclaimed last week. We have used all of Robert's quizzes up, and since lockdown there have been no new ones. Sadly. 

So here are Jim's answers:

1. What are the four stations on the Rail Network which are at the most North, South, East, & West points of the compass?

N – Thurso, S – Penzance, E – Lowestoft, and W - Arisaig

2. Which of the above is the odd one out?

Arisaig. All the others are termini.

3. Which preserved railway offers you a “trip over the Alps”?

The Mid Hants Railway

4. Which is the longest standard gauge preserved railway in England and how long is it?

West Somerset Railway at 22¾ miles in length

5. What was unusual about Standedge Tunnels in the days of steam?

The tunnel was built on the only level stretch of the trans Pennine route and had water troughs

6. 76077, which is being restored at the GWSR, lost its tender whilst at Barry. However this survives, but which locomotive is it currently attached to?

76017

7. What is the connection between A3 2563 (BR 60064) and A4 4462 (BR 60004)?

In 1941 the name William Whitelaw was transferred from the A3 to the A4

8. What is the purpose of the Gibson ring?

It holds the tyre onto the wheel casting

9. What nickname is associated with the GWR 47XX class of locomotives?

Night Owl, as these locos spent the majority of their working life on night time freight trains

10. The unique 71000 Duke of Gloucester was specifically authorised as a replacement for which other locomotive?

46202 Princess Anne, which was destroyed in the 1952 Harrow accident

11. What name was carried by Jubilee 45700 Amethyst until 1951?

Britannia  (but you already knew that ;-)   )

12. Which LMS Royal Scot loco toured the USA in 1933 masquerading as 6100 Royal Scot?

6152 The King’s Dragoon Guardsman

13. What name was given to the Castle built at Swindon in 1924 and which incorporated parts from loco 111 The Great Bear?

Viscount Churchill

14. Four Black 5 locos 45154/6/7/8 were named. Loco 45155 also carried a name between 1942 and 1944. What was it called?

The Queen’s Edinburgh

15. In 1951-2 ten standard class Clan pacifics were built, nos. 72000-72009, for use on the Scottish Region. How many more were planned and for which regions, before the order was cancelled?

Fifteen more for the ScR to be named after Clans and five for the SR to be named after Anglo-Saxons

16. What locomotive was the 7000th one to be built at Crewe in 1950?

41272 - Bachmann made a OO gauge model of this engine

17. Between which two cities did the Mayflower express operate?

London Paddington and Plymouth

18. Which class of GWR engines were nicknamed matchboxes?

57XX 0-6-0 pannier tanks

19. What do you understand by the term “XP64”?

The prototype BR express passenger coaches in blue and grey livery introduced on the Talisman in 1964

20. Where and how high, in feet above sea level, is the highest summit on British Railways?

Druimuachdar (Drumochter) between Dalnaspidal and Dalwhinnie at 1,484 ft above sea level

 

Thank you, Jim, for a really interesting quiz! You learn something every day. We have one more quiz from him to show you, but will keep it for another day.