|
Showing 1 - 16 of
16 matches in All Departments
This new title in the growing Recollections series takes us back
through the years using archive pictures of The Severn Valley
Railway, selected to show the line in day-to-day use, we see
pre-preservation scenes and preserved era scenes along the route.
The Severn Valley Railway that we can travel on today was closed to
passenger traffic in stages during the 1960's and early 1970 - the
final section from Bewdley to Kidderminster closing on 5 January
1970. That as we now know was not to be the end. In 1965 a small
band of enthusiasts met in Kidderminster and formed The Severn
Valley Railway Society. - Initial efforts succeeded in raising 25
per cent of the GBP25,000 purchase price for the closed 5-mile
section of the Severn Valley line from Bridgnorth to Alveley. By
1967, the first rolling stock, an engine and four coaches, had been
received. From this small 'base camp' the ever growing numbers of
enthusiasts started to climb the initial mountain and over the
ensuing forty years have scaled many more! The line has not just
reopened from Kidderminster to Bridgnorth it has restored, grown
and developed - with new station facilities, carriage sheds,
workshops, signal boxes etc., etc. For the enthusiast there are
classic shots of the railway operating during the year, but this is
not just a book for enthusiasts - memories are made of these
pictures. The station scenes, fashions, old carriages, wagons,
buildings, advertising, etc, will evoke memories of days past.
The second part of John Stretton's sixty trainspotting years
features his forays into the world of railways and other areas of
interest during the period 1985 to 2015.By now a very profficient
photographer John's submissions to the railway press coupled with
his increasing output of books for both Silver Link and Past &
Present publishing saw John visiting many new and past locations in
the pursuit of all things railways. The first volume covering the
first 30 years sold out within a month of publication and a reprint
is already under consideration.
Although published in 1999 when the WHR ran only from Caernarfon to
Dinas, John Stretton covers the whole route through to Porthmadog.
The remarkable archive views of the course of the old line serve to
illustrate what has since been achieved in reinstating this railway
through some of the most magnificent scenery in the British Isles.
'British Railways Past and Present' is a nationwide series of books
featuring photographs of railway locations taken several decades
ago and comparing them with the same scene today. Such is the
current pace of change on our railway system that even a few years
can reduce a busy and vibrant railway scene to a wasteland or
housing estate - or conversely can bring electrification and
up-to-the-minute technology to an outdated, run-down route. The
contrasts are often dramatic, while sometimes hardly anything has
altered in 30 or 40 years. Whatever the change, the comparison of
'past' and 'present' will intrigue not only the railway enthusiast
and historian, but also anyone interested in our recent history. In
this volume covering South Gloucestershire are over 175 photographs
featuring a wealth of locations on both Ex-Great Western and LMS
Main Lines during the British Railways era and before contrasted
with the scene in recent times. Many erstwhile routes and locations
closed in the 'Beeching years' and before are seen when trains
still plied their trade and the wayside station provided a local
service even over short distances.
This book both celebrates and commemorates the last four dramatic
years of steam, recording both working locomotives, shed scenes and
a selected number of routes, many of which closed during the period
of examination, by way of illustrating the disappearing steam age
railway. The views are nostalgic, poignant and cannot be repeated.
This was the year of the wedding of Charles and Diana, Ronald
Reagan became the 40th President of the USA. On the railways the
Tyne & Wear Metro opened, the HST network was expanding and
loco-hauled passenger trains were on the decline.
Having survived for over two decades as a horse drawn operation,
shipping slate downhill between Blaenau Ffestiniog and Portmadoc
and the empties back up the line, the Ffestiniog Railway was forced
by constantly increasing loads and weight to switch to steam
locomotives. Four 0-4-0STs - Princess, Prince, Welsh Pony and
Little Wonder - were received from George England Co. in 1863 and
immediately made their presences felt, producimg a step change in
the railway's fortunes. This continued over the next decade,
leading to orders for more powerful motive power, with delivery of
a further 0-4-0ST - Palmerston - and the first of what would become
the iconic emblem of the railway, Robert Fairlie's patent
double-engines. As has been asserted on several oocasions, the
Festiniog have always been at the forefront of forward thinking and
innovation and this has continued through to the present day. 2013
sees the celebration of 150 years of steam and this book, a third
vloume in Nostalgia Collection's Past & Present series,
features a focus on the locomotive fleet, as well as showing a
number of comparative views through the years, but there are also
views that deserve to stand alone on their merit. What the book
does show is both progress in the past by the railway and the
health of current operations to take them into the next 150 years!
The first volume in this series was published in 1999 when the
Welsh Highland Railway ran from Caernarfon only as far as Dinas, a
mere 4 miles, on tracks officially re-opened in 1997. Volume 2 took
the story on to 2003, when the relaid tracks had reached Rhyd Ddu,
at the very foot of Snowdon, 13 miles from Caernarfon and in the
heart of magnificent scenery surely unsurpassed on any UK narrow
gauge railway. But Rhyd Ddu was only the half-way point in this
phenomenal railway project. Ahead lay the final 12 miles to
Porthmadog, where it was intended that the reborn WHR would connect
with the Ffestiniog Railway at the latter's Harbour station. Now it
is 2009, and the dream has become reality. Thanks to the Heritage
Lottery Fund, the Ffestinog Railway and the mighty efforts of
contractors, supports and volunteers, the railway has been
completed to Porthmadog, and trains one more run through the town's
streets to the harbour following a spectacular journey across the
mountains from beneath the castle walls at Caernarfon. Now it will
be possible to make a staggering 40-mile narrow gauge railway
journey from Caernarfon to Blaenau Ffestiniog! Volume 3 therefore
represents the final chapter of this amazing story, with special
emphasis on the restoration of the new section from Rhyd Ddu. John
Stretton has selected further views of the original railway in
operation and in dereliction, but this time each view on the main
line can be paired with one showing trains in operation once more,
negotiating sharp bends, climbing severe gradients and passing the
foothills of Snowdon and on through Beddgelert and the famous
Aberglaslyn Pass. It provides a fitting tribute to the great
efforts of so many people who made it all possible. John Stretton,
well-known railway author and photographer, and contributor of many
titles to the "Past and Present" series, has chronicled the
development of the Welsh Highland Railway from its inception. He
lives in Ashchurch, Gloucestershire.
2006 was a landmark year in the history of the Dean Forest Railway,
with the opening of the extension to Parkend by HRH Princess Anne.
This title presents a selection of 'past' views' and contrasts them
with developments on the railway, which took place since the
publication of the earlier volume in 2002.
1975 was the year in which Margaret Thatcher defeated Edward Heath
to become leader of the Conservative Party, Charlie Chaplin was
knighted by the Queen and the Vietnam War ended with the fall of
Saigon. On the railways, two major accidents at Moorgate and
Nuneaton resulted in considerable loss of life, and the prototype
High Speed Train reached speeds in excess of 150mph on the London
to Bristol main line.
Authorised in 1845 and opened in stages between 1852 and 1853, the
Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway (OWW) built the line
from Wolvercot Junction, north of Oxford station, to Worcester and
Wolverhampton, via Stourbridge and Dudley, with Isambard Kingdom
Brunel as the chief engineer. After a rather chequered history, and
colloquially known as the 'Old, Worse and Worst' railway, the
length between Oxford and Worcester was inherited by British
Railways in 1948. More latterly known as the North Cotswold Line,
it was singled in places in 1971, with a view to cutting costs,
leaving just 11 miles of double track out of the 51-mile length of
the route. With passenger numbers holding up and the birth and
growth of the the Cotswold Line Promotion Group, that urged
development, Network Rail began assessing the possibilities in 2006
of addressing the capacity restraints. The 'Cotswold Redoubling
Project', GBP70 million scheme to restore a total of 21 miles of
double track between Evesham and Charlbury, saw preparatory work
undertaken during 2009, including major work in and around Chipping
Campden Tunnel, with removal of old material, a new drain installed
and a second track laid in readiness for the later part of the
Project. Elsewhere, approaching ten miles of track was
repositioned, to enable a second line to be installed; thirty miles
of new cabling was installed; and sixty sets of signal equipment
relocated. 2010 saw a number of possessions, as preparatory work
continued, including making ready the various level crossings
between Evesham and Moreton-in- Marsh; attention to an overbridge
just south of Evesham station; and, over the weekend of 2/3 October
a major achievement with the replacement of the existing single
line bridge east of Honeybourne by a brand new double width
version. 2011 saw second platforms being returned to Honeybourne,
Ascottunder- Wychwood and Charlbury; enhancements to passenger
facilities at most of the stations en-route; the freight line to
Long Marston from Honeybourne realigned; a re-instatement of a
group of sidings by Honeybourne station; and provision for the
eventual northern extension of the Gloucestershire Warwickshire
Steam Railway to pass under the Cotswold line, to gain access to a
new platform face at Honeybourne. The long campaign from the
Cotswold Line Promotion Group, local authorities and individuals
has borne fruit, with an increase in the numbers of trains
servicing the route, further enhancing the travelling experience
and giving the line a long term future. This volume looks at these
newer works against a backdrop of past operations, including views
of the engineering works involved and provides a fascinating
exhibition of the evolving history.
Even in 1973 much of the steam infrastructure was still to be
found, but as modernisation took hold diesels were being joined by
electric locomotives in increasing numbers. This was the height of
the 'loco-hauled' era on the main line. In the wider world hostages
were taken at the Olympic Games, and President Nixon visited China.
This new book takes up the story where Volume 1 left off. In the
intervening years much hard work has seen the line return to the
Snowdonia National Park as far as Rhyd Ddu, at the very foot of
Snowdon, providing a 13-mile trip through magnificent scenery that
is surely unsurpassed on any narrow-gauge railway in the UK.
|
You may like...
Ab Wheel
R209
R149
Discovery Miles 1 490
|