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#81
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Am Fri, 22 Feb 2008 18:47:17 UTC, schrieb Mizter T
auf uk.railway : As you know, London and Continental Railways (LCR) is about to be broken up into three parts - EUKL, HS1 and property interests. Thanks a lot for the additional details. Cheers, L.W. |
#82
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![]() "Mizter T" wrote Interesting stuff. I presume the trains that terminated at Kensington Olympia ran down from the GWML, using the now gone West London curve that linked the GWML and NLL? Curious readers might like to know that the West London curve got swallowed up by the now disused Eurostar North Pole depot - however one thing I am unclear of is whether there was just a link from the NLL to the GWML heading west, or whether there was ever also a link that headed east towards Paddington? Yes - the spur from North Pole Junction to Old Oak Common East Junction diverged to the right (travelling north on the WLL) using what is now the exit from the E* depot, running under the WLL (using more or less what is now used as the link between the two halves of the E* depot) to join the GWML facing towards Bristol. There were three routes from Paddington to the WLL. In 1906-07 there was a through train from Paddington to Brighton which took the Hammersmith branch at Westbourne Park and used the spur which used to exist from Latimer Road to the WLL. This was used by the 'Middle Circle' service (Edgware Road H&C or beyond to Earls Court or beyond) until 1940. There was a spur from West London Yard (where the eastern part of the E* depot is) to the WLL, used in 1967 by the 1000 SX and 1403 SX Paddington to Kensington Parcels. However, on Saturdays these trains took a different route, via Park Royal, the Greenford spur, and Drayton Green, to reach the WLL via Old Oak Common East and North Pole. Also, I'm just pondering summer specials in the south east. Southeastern run a morning special from Victoria to Ramsgate via Catford, Bromley South and Margate (and presumably a few other places along the way!), though there's no special return working. I can't think of any others that still run. You're out of date. Last Summer this train ran from Victoria to Ramsgate via Lewisham, Eltham and Dartford. It only runs from late July to the end of August; the rest of the year there's a Victoria to Ramsgate ecs working. The return has to be back at Victoria for the evening peak, so is too early for day truippers, who return on the ordinary trains. Most years there's also been a Hastings train, but last Summer this couldn't run because of the tunnel blockade at Tunbridge Wells. As in my previous post, in some years these trains have come into passenger service at such stations as Elephant & Castle or New Cross. Peter |
#83
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On Fri, 22 Feb 2008, John B wrote:
On 22 Feb, 14:36, Mizter T wrote: There is also a slim possibility that Stratford could be a terminus for incoming trains from the mainland. A bit like Ryanair stopping at somewhere other than the obvious airport IYSWIM... Still a lot closer to town than 'London' Stansted, Luton, or Gatwick airports - indeed closer to central London than Heathrow airport. Is there really a possibility that Stratford could be a terminus though - I can't see why there would be any need? Because DB, when they introduce their new mythical London - Berlin express (if only they would!), wouldn't want to pay the extra to go to St. Pancras? (Though being serious I can't see that whoever owns the CTRL/HS1 by then would really offer a discounted rate for stopping short!) BR once ran a cut-price train up the ECML to Newcastle (or maybe Edinburgh) that started from Finsbury Park. Not sure whether the logic there was to avoid taking up paths into King's Cross, or whether it was just about deterring 'normal' passengers from taking that train instead of the full-price ones. The paths reason sounds iffy; what use is freeing up a FP-KX path if the corresponding path north of FP is occupied? All you could do is run a KX-FP shuttle. Or KX-FP-Moorgate, i suppose! Ditto Stratford/StP. Oh well, the railway moves in mysterious ways, its wonders to perform. Either way, I'd've appreciated such a train when I was living in Finsbury Park with a gf in Edinburgh, rather than sailing past my house at 100mph and then getting home 45 minutes later... How on earth did it take you 45 minutes to get from King's Cross back to the Centre of the Universe? Was this before the Victoria line was built, and when the Piccadilly was still clockwork? Oh - or were you getting back after the last tube, and relying on the delights of the buses? Did you consider investing in a bicycle? Or is Mizter on the right track when he intimates that you might have had quite enough riding by that point? tom -- I think it would be a good idea -- Mohandas Gandhi, on Western civilisation |
#84
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On Fri, 22 Feb 2008 17:54:31 -0000 a message from "Peter Masson"
contained: "Paul Scott" wrote 'The Highwayman' - left Newcastle very late pm, took the coastal route through Sunderland, arrived FP about 0600. Travelled on it once in the late 60s - don't think it ran for long though, it was a bit like a fully seated sleeper... IIRC the Highwayman was a day train - though the routeing was as you state. It ran, again IIRC, in the early 1970s, and although it was something of a dead-end in development of rail travel it proved the need for lower fares for leisure travellers. Before then long distance tickets were basically limited to Ordinary Singles and Returns, though there had for many years been Mid-Week Holiday Returns (Summer only, out and back on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, return within one omonth of outward journey, but not in teh same week). After the Highwayman, Economy and 17-day Returns were developed, which were the forerunners of Savers and Supersavers. As for overnight cheap trains you may have been thinking of Nightriders which ran, IIRC, in the 1980s between Scotland and London. At one stage the Nightrider seated portion of the overnight Aberdeen to London train wasmarketed by and liveried for Stagecoach, this time as the forerunner of rail privatisation. From Modern Railways May 1971 (p245) quote "Highwayman" rides on The cheap-fare "Highwayman" between the North-East and London is to continue operation until November 6. The ER reports that it has carried some 150 000 passengers since its inauguration, but that summer business has been much more successful than that of the winter. Apparently the service is not regarded as a permanent summer feature, since the official ER announcement says only that if this summer's results repeat those of 1970, "it could well be" that the facilities will be reintroduced in the summer of 1972. The train will continue to operate between Newcastle and Finsbury Park with intermediate stops at Sunderland, Seaham, Hartlepool, Stockton, Eaglescliffe, Stevenage and Potters Bar, leaving Newcastle at 9.15 (14.35 SO) and Finsbury Park at 9.28 (15.00 SO), but the fare was increased to £2.25 from May 3. /quote A letter in the July 1971 magazine (p3) about the Highwayman makes passing reference to "the Starlight scheme of some years ago" which sounds like it might have been overnight. There is a poster from 1958 advertising the 'Starlight Special' between Edinburgh Glasgow and London at http://www.scienceandsociety.co.uk/results.asp?image=10174317. -- Chris Silke |
#85
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Peter Masson wrote:
In 1906-07 there was a through train from Paddington to Brighton Was that a quid pro quo for whatever GWR service ran to London Victoria, giving rise to the "Great Western Railway" lettering on the front of that station? -- http://gallery120232.fotopic.net/p9683649.html (53362 (Class 105) at Stratford Depot, 9 Jul 1981) |
#86
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![]() "Chris Tolley" wrote in message ... Peter Masson wrote: In 1906-07 there was a through train from Paddington to Brighton Was that a quid pro quo for whatever GWR service ran to London Victoria, giving rise to the "Great Western Railway" lettering on the front of that station? -- http://gallery120232.fotopic.net/p9683649.html (53362 (Class 105) at Stratford Depot, 9 Jul 1981) No; I believe that the GWR originally had some sort of running arrangements to Victoria as a second London terminus, though whether these were ever used, I wouldn't like to say. Brian |
#87
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![]() "Chris Tolley" wrote in message ... Peter Masson wrote: In 1906-07 there was a through train from Paddington to Brighton Was that a quid pro quo for whatever GWR service ran to London Victoria, giving rise to the "Great Western Railway" lettering on the front of that station? No - the GWR was, with the LCDR, a joint lessee of the Chatham side of Victoria. Trains, originally broad gauge ran from Southall. IIRC in the 1967 Paddington resignalling Old Oak Common box still called the West London Line the 'Victoria branch'. The 1906-07 through train was, I think, a response to congestion in crossing London, especially by people who did not trust the new-fangled tubes. It was about the same time that a Broad Street - Birmingham express was put on, and in the era when a through train from the Kemnt Coast conveyed through coaches to Manchester by two different routes, splitting at Herne Hill where one portion ran via the WLL and WCML, and another portion ran via what we now know as Thameslink, was taken back from Kentish Town into St Pancras, and attached to a Midland express to Manchester. Peter |
#88
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John B wrote:
On 22 Feb, 16:28, Martin Edwards wrote: I believe this is the train which was discussed on That's Life. BR wanted to get rid of it, but they weren't allowed to, because too many people used it. So they omitted it from all public timetables for a few years, but carried on running it. When this caused usage to plummet, they were then allowed to get rid of it. This would be approx 1980. Yes that's it exactly. My parents saw the programme. Note that this was just when Friedmanism was beginning to bite. Was there any indication given of /why/ BR wanted to get rid of such a popular service? Or was it just about too popular to shut, but nowhere near popular enough to make any money...? -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org I think it was a bit too complicated. It involved a switch from electric engine to diesel at Willesden. -- Corporate society looks after everything. All it asks of anyone, all it has ever asked of anyone, is that they do not interfere with management decisions. -From “Rollerball” |
#89
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![]() "Martin Edwards" wrote (Glasgow - Harwich through train) I think it was a bit too complicated. It involved a switch from electric engine to diesel at Willesden. It was electric-hauled throughout. I think it was before the ECML electrification, so the Edinburgh portion was diesel-hauled to Carstairs. Peter |
#90
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"Peter Masson" wrote in message
... "Martin Edwards" wrote (Glasgow - Harwich through train) I think it was a bit too complicated. It involved a switch from electric engine to diesel at Willesden. It was electric-hauled throughout. I think it was before the ECML electrification, so the Edinburgh portion was diesel-hauled to Carstairs. When was the NLL AC electrification? -- David Biddulph |
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