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Books
So - St
SOUTHERN
RAILWAY HALTS: Survey and Gazetteer
by R.W. Kidner |
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64 pages of text including 47 photographs of stations, all on art paper.
Maps and full alphabetical history of Halts (description, opening and
closing dates, etc). A5 format. Two-colour Linson cover.
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LP156 |
ISBN 0 85361 321 4
ISBN 978 0 85361 321 3 |
£ 3.90 |
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THE
SOUTH SHIELDS, MARSDEN & WHITBURN COLLIER RAILWAY
by William J, Hatcher |
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The SSMWCR was originally built as a mineral branch
serving a coal mine on the North-East coast, and this it did successfully
for almost a century. Indeed here is where the story could have ended, for
at face value this was no different from the hundreds of other branches
which served pits in this industrial corner of the country.
Scratch beneath the surface however and it soon becomes apparent that there
was much more to the SSMWCR than the humble coal truck. The railway has its
own passenger service which (although not unique for a colliery branch line)
nonetheless boasted well-equipped termini and block signalling. Passenger
trains were capable of taking the public back in time, leaving Westoe
Colliery at one end of the branch, with its 20th century electric railway,
and travelling down to Whitburn Colliery at the other end, firmly set in the
19th century with steam the staple power.
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Then there was the rolling stock. This bewildering menagerie was raked in
from all corners of the land, mostly via the second-hand market and spent a
twilight existence on the branch line long after similar main line stock has
been dragged to the scrapyards. The locomotives (and there were 40 of them)
represented a full cross-section of early mineral designs from tiny Manning,
Wardle industrial tank engines up to the hefty ex-North Eastern Railway 'C'
class tender engines which were so indigenous to County Durham.
The most remarkable aspect of the railway, however,
was the state of almost constant change it underwent throughout its history.
It was built under wayleave as a mineral line, re-opened by Act of
Parliament
as a railway in the full sense of the word, and re-opened yet again at a
later date as an official Light Railway. The original stations were
demolished and rebuilt, signal boxes appeared on the railway, only to
disappear again and be replaced by other boxes, while at one stage, even
part of the railway itself was lifted and re-aligned. In fact so frequent
were the changes that an enthusiast visiting the railway could return within
a decade and find little to remind him of his previous visit.
The book is to A5 format, and consists of 128 pages
with more than 99 photographs, drawings etc, it has a full colour laminated
card cover.
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OL120 |
ISBN 0 85361 583 7
ISBN 978 0 85361 583 5 |
£ 9.95 |
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SOUTH YORKSHIRE JOINT RAILWAY AND THE
COALFIELD
By B.J. Elliott |
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The author’s
interest in the South Yorkshire Joint Railway and the coalfield it serves,
stems from a childhood spent in Doncaster and Rotherham, frequently walking
and cycling close to the line and through the villages it served. The line
opened as late as 1909, had withdrawn its regular passenger service as early
as 1929, but is still a very important mineral line. All this stimulated the
author’s interest and led him to write the first history up to 1970. This
revised and much enlarged edition brings the story to 2001.
The SYJR kept very
detailed operating and financial records, separate from those of its five
(later two) parent companies. These enabled the early management committees
to keep accurate records of the large profits (coal traffic) and small
losses (passenger traffic) of the single branch line, which unlike others
(at least until 1940) were not totally submerged within the accounts of a
parent company.
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Thus it is possible
to record in detail the unsuccessful struggle to operate a profitable
passenger service, leading to its eventual and early withdrawal. This experience
clearly indicates that unprofitable passenger services existed even in the
so-called ‘golden age’ before 1914.
The losses from the
passenger service were far outweighed by the profits from coal, which were
the line’s raison d’etre. Since the last great coal dispute in 1985,
this industry has contracted considerably. Of the eight collieries using the
SYJR in the 1930s, only Maltby, Harworth and Rossington were open in 2001,
but the last has almost ceased to use the line. The prosperity of the SYJR,
if not its very survival, is still closely bound up with Maltby and Harworth.
By reason of this mutual inter-dependence, both the rail and coal industries
have been given virtually equal study and analysis here.
A5 format, 208
pages, 165 photographs, maps and plans, perfect bound, full colour card
cover. |
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OL33 |
ISBN 0 85361 595 0
ISBN 978 0 85361 595 8 |
£ 13.95 |
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SIR WILLIAM STANIER - A New
Biography
by John Chacksfield
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Sir William
Stanier has had many books written about his locomotives plus two previous
biographical accounts of his engineering career in the railway sphere.
This new
biography has become possible largely by the unearthing of material (some of
it collected by Sir William and his immediate family) previously unused,
which has enabled the author to include many personal anecdotes of an
illustrious career and the associated family life. This has permitted a
deeper insight into his dealings with his many professional and civic
responsibilities and with those-close to him, both at work and at home. The
unique feature which enabled some personal quotes of Sir William to be used
in the 21st century was the receipt of a tape-recording, made in 1962, of an
interview with H.A.V. Bulleid. Without all this, some of Stanier's dealings
with specific matters could not have been covered in such detail. Also, much
of Sir William's comparatively rare writings have been unearthed which most
certainly .indicate how strong the impact of Churchward's forward thinking
was in his design approach throughout his life, particularly on the LMS.
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His travels
were extensive in the latter part of his life, with much of the journeying
being to the USA and India. .Detailed accounts of these foreign trips have
been included to show how wide his influence became within the Worldwide
railway sphere. It is hoped that this new biography will complete an account
of the life of a great engineer.
Produced to A5 format,
it consists of 168 pages of art paper with
over 150 illustrations.
The book has a laminated colour card cover with
square-backed spine. |
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OL114 |
ISBN 0 85361 576 4
ISBN 978 0 85361 576 7 |
£ 11.95 |
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STEAMING THROUGH THE WAR YEARS Reminiscences on the ex-GER lines
in London
by Reg Robertson
LAST FEW COPIES AVAILABLE - Order now to avoid disappointment |
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Reg Robertson tells his story of life on the footplate in war torn London
and of the pressures that were put on both men and machines working
through the blackout, with the dangers of attack from enemy aircraft, or
the damage, destruction and loss of life caused by the ‘V1’ then later
‘V2’ rockets. Reg worked from Stratford depot, on trains from Liverpool
Street and into London’s docklands. He captures the spirit of life on the
railway and the companionship that was forged between footplate crews
despite all the hardships. The reality of this life are plain to see in
this compelling account. A5 format with a laminated square-backed cover,
and consists of 152 pages of text, which include 11 maps and plans, plus
32 pages of art paper with 61 photographs.
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RS3 |
ISBN 0 85361 472 5
ISBN 978 0 85361 472 2 |
£ 9.95 |
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STEEL WHEELS AND RUBBER TYRES
Vol 1: Transport around Oldham in the 1930s, Locomotives at Gorton in the
1940s and Leeds trams in the 1970s.
by Geoffrey Hilditch |
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Very few road passenger transport
professionals, and especially those involved in the now almost vanished
municipal sector, have ever taken the trouble to write down for
publication a record of their activities which would include an outline of
the engineering, operation and financial/administrative problems that came
their daily way, and what a story so many of them could have told.
Just what must it have been like to set up
and then run a brand new circa 1900s electric tramway system or to
cope later with the vagaries of those temperamental 1920s buses, or in the
1930s to start to abandon tramcars for motor or trolley buses or to engage
in the initial and quite unprecedented traffic court battles?
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Consequently here is the author's attempt to provide
present day passenger transport enthusiasts with just a flavour of what it
was like to be so involved from the middle of the last century through the
next few decades, when almost
non-stop change was the
name of the game.
Before one reached the dizzy heights of
finding the legend 'General Manager' affixed to your office door one had
to obtain a suitable start in the industry and thereafter try to make
progress as opportunity allowed. If anything, obtaining that first start
could be far from easy. Here then is the story of how one interested but
uninformed schoolboy tried to attain his early and overriding ambition to
see his name on the side, preferably of a municipal tramcar, against those
almost magic words 'General Manager'.
A5 format, 168 pages
which includes 138 illustrations, the book has a laminated card cover with
a square-backed spine.
Volume Two will be published February 2004.
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RS10 |
ISBN 0
85361 614 0
ISBN 978 0 85361 614 6 |
£ 12.95 |
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STEEL WHEELS AND RUBBER TYRES
Vol 2: A General Manager's Journey: Manchester, Plymouth, Great Yarmouth,
Halifax
by Geoffrey Hilditch |
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Volume One ended at the point where the author had,
with some reluctance left Leeds City Transport for what at the time seemed
to be a very uncertain future. On the face of things the chances of ever
holding the job of General Manager of a municipal transport undertaking
were just about nil, but one never knows just what this life is going to
bring, and if one is lucky enough to possess ambition, background and
appropriate technical qualifications then who knows just what might be
possible?
Achieving such a post in those days depended also on a whole series of
other factors, when good luck and a wife who never objected to
frequent household removals were of paramount importance.
In the event as you will read Geoffrey Hilditch managed to make it, but
once the chair was his he speedily found that life was very different to
what it had been as a lowly member of staff, or a departmental
head, or even a deputy General Manager. The buck really did stop here!
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A new General Manager,
in a strange undertaking, has to learn as quickly as possible where the
buses actually run, what local tribal customs are in respect of union
agreements, duty schedules, etc., and just what are the relationships
between your outfit and other bus concerns that impinge on your territory,
and even more important those that exist or otherwise with other
departments in the municipal structure, and their chief officers. Last but
by no means least, what do the members of the council come to think
about your efforts?
Two things become very obvious in no time at all. A considerable sense of
humour is a decided asset, as is a very thick skin, for here the pages
of your local newspapers will soon reflect what their readers think
of you and your managerial efforts Do you really base your
timetables on Old Moore's Almanac or the Liverpool Tide
Tables as some correspondents are sure is the case?
Our story starts on the afternoon of Sunday 1st November, 1953, as
the author caught a No. 9 bus from Oldham Star Inn to Ashton, and changed
there onto a trolleybus that took him to Guide Bridge station wondering
all the while just what the future would bring.
A5 format, 184 pages which includes 120 illustrations. The book has
a laminated card cover with a square-backed spine. |
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RS11 |
ISBN 0
85361 616 7
ISBN 978 0 85361 616 0 |
£ 12.95 |
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THE STOKE TO MARKET DRAYTON LINE and Associated Canals and Mineral Branches
by C. R. Lester |
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This history which began as a study of the Stoke-on-Trent to Market Drayton
branch and its canal antecedents, but just as one railway leads to another,
so research begets research and the end product includes some account of
other 'Drayton' railways, whether constructed or not. Chronologically,
however, pride of place belongs to the North Staffordshire Railway or
'Knotty' as it is affectionately known.
Originally published almost 20 years ago and long
out of print, this reprint is now reproduced on quality art paper throughout
with a four colour laminated card cover with square-backed spine. The book
consists of 72 pages with 40 photographs, plans etc. |
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LP142 |
ISBN 0 85361 293 5
ISBN 978 0 85361 293 3 |
£ 5.95 |
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