News

  • Political U-turns that saved the UK’s favourite steam main line

    Political U-turns that saved the UK’s favourite steam main line

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    By Geoff Courtney A series of previously unreported political U-turns and manoeuvrings in the Westminster corridors of power that culminated in the unexpected decision to keep open the Settle to Carlisle line – one of the most popular railways in the UK today for steam train operators, enthusiasts and linesiders – has been revealed in…

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  • Tribute to Eastleigh engineman extraordinaire Roy Sloper

    Tribute to Eastleigh engineman extraordinaire Roy Sloper

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    By Don Benn Eastleigh engineman Roy Sloper passed away on December 19 – he was 95 years old. He had a long railway career which started as a cleaner on the Isle of Wight, where he was born. He moved to the mainland soon after the outbreak of the war – being encouraged to make…

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  • Top heritage award for Leighton Buzzard

    Top heritage award for Leighton Buzzard

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    THE Leighton Buzzard Railway has carried off Britain’s top heritage sector award after opening its new £386,000 station at Page’s Park. The Heritage Railway Association confirmed at its board meeting on December 10 that the 2016 Peter Manisty Award for excellence would go to the 2ft gauge Bedfordshire line. This award is named in memory…

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  • Bedfordshire village to finally get railway station… 144 years late

    Bedfordshire village to finally get railway station… 144 years late

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    By Geoff Courtney THE quiet Bedfordshire village of Stevington is to get its own station… nearly 150 years after being ignored during the Victorian railway boom. The settlement of some 700 souls was located literally within sight and sound of the railway that linked the county town with Northampton, but the line’s nearest station was…

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  • Three Seaburn Pullman cars offered for sale

    Three Seaburn Pullman cars offered for sale

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    By Roger Melton SUNDERLAND City Council is offering three Pullman coaches for sale along with a BR Mk.1 TSO. The coaches formed part of the Pullman Lodge Hotel at Seaburn and the site has recently been acquired by the local authority. The three Pullmans – Rosalind and Padua with six-wheel bogies and Sapphire with four-wheel…

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  • The bell tolls for Britain’s largest locomotive class

    The bell tolls for Britain’s largest locomotive class

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    By Geoff Courtney Nostalgia takes many forms, and at its core are many subjects. It may be memories of family or friends, perhaps a long-remembered incident, a former family home, or a beloved pet. It is about recalling what once was, but may never be again. For many railway enthusiasts, at its heart is the…

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  • Subway car marks line’s 120th anniversary

    Subway car marks line’s 120th anniversary

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    By Hugh Dougherty STRATHCLYDE Partnership for Transport has turned out Glasgow Subway car No. 101 in a mock, historic livery as original car No. 55, complete with simulated trellis gates on the doors, to mark 120 years of the 4ft gauge system. The specially-liveried car joined in the celebrations on December 14, the exact 120th…

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  • NRM gives standard gauge wagon to Welshpool

    NRM gives standard gauge wagon to Welshpool

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    THE National Railway Museum has gifted a standard gauge wagon to a 2ft 6in gauge line. The Welshpool & Llanfair Light Railway is now the proud owner of the 1925-built GWR five-plank open wagon No. W108246. The York museum has made this vehicle available as part of a rolling stock collections review. The heritage line…

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  • Enthusiasts vow to fight shock closure of railway museum

    Enthusiasts vow to fight shock closure of railway museum

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    By Geoff Courtney A group of railway enthusiasts in Australia has vowed to fight for the survival of one of the country’s major railway museums, home to a prized collection of UK-built steam locomotives, after its dramatic and unexpected closure in November. As reported in last month’s Heritage Railway, Canberra Railway Museum closed its doors…

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  • ‘Le Mastrou’

    ‘Le Mastrou’

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    It is unusual for a well-established preserved railway to be forced to close, but fortunately, in one case, this proved not to be the end of the story. Don Benn reports on the revival of one of France’s best-known heritage lines. We have visited The Chemin de fer du Vivarais, or the ‘Le Mastrou’ as…

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